|
Interviews with American Artists David Sylvester |
Willem de Kooning
Perhaps I am more a novelist than a poet...I always like the word in
painting.
DS: You mean you like the forms to be
identifiable?
WK: Well, they ought to have an emotion of a concrete experience. I mean,
like I am very happy to see that grass is green. Like at one time, it was very
daring to make a figure red or blue. I think now it is just as daring to make it
flesh-coloured. I found that out for myself. Content, if you want to say, is a
glimpse of something, an encounter, you know like a flash - it's very tiny, very
tiny, content.... I still have it now from some fleeting thing - like when one
passes something, you know it makes an impression.
I was never interested in making a good painting. or a perfect work. I didn't want to pin it down at all.
DS: thats one of the big differences isn't it,
between post-war and pre-war thinking: that we now accept imperfection and we no
longer have Flaubert as an ideal but Dostoyevsky. You
just threw it out and let it go and you knew it was imperfect.
WK: I worked on it, not with the idea of perfection but to see how far one
could go... Anxiousness and dedication to fright maybe, or ecstasy, you know,
like The Divine Comedy. To be a performer; to see how long you can stay
on stage, with that imaginary audience.
DS: The pictures done since the Women, are they all
landscapes..?
WK: ...They're emotions, most of them, the later ones. Most of them are
landscapes and highways and sensations of that, outside the city.
DS: But in the parkway pictures you really
wanted to convey the sensation of something seen from a moving car?
WK: Well, I didn't intend to do that but, when I was working on this
picture, this thing came to me: it's just like Merritt Parkway.
DS: Is there always a desire to make the
painting correspond with a remembered experience?
WK: A lot of it yes. More like that now. I get freer. I feel I am getting
more myself in the sense of I have all of my forces......I never intended to
succeed with it (the painting) but the emotion must be there.
|
"The pictures of Willem de Kooning... have an air
of authority-in-crisis ... The dilemma is one of time - how to charge the
abstract image with the emotional shock of the form distorted from nature, and
how to make a natural form soak up all the potentialities of a mature, modern
style. Sorry, I can't remember who said this. |
Robert Motherwell:
The process of painting
is a series of moral decisions about the aesthetic.... Art is basically a moral
enterprise. And artistry, if you want to put it that way, is the beauty and
completeness with which a moral position is asserted. But the very nature of
this beauty is dependent on the moral position.
DS: So that painting becomes a clarification of what really are one's
attitudes?
RM: Yes, one learns a lot from it.
RM: I think the so-called 'abstractness' of modern art is not that it is about
abstract things, but that it's an art really in the tradition of French
Symbolist poetry..... an art which refuses to spell everything out.
DS: But to what extent are you aware of such references, specific references,
while painting a painting?
RM: I think there's always mainly a sense of overall meaning. That is, of,
quite simply, one's life...That one's existence in some way makes sense. Its an
act of faith. That one's being is meaningful.... So that, except when one's
asleep (and maybe even in one's dreams), one is constantly reflecting,
contemplating, shifting, having flashes of clarity.
RM: ...in a sense there are no criteria (in painting) except authenticity of
expression.
Robert Rauschenberg:
Now, you can put an
awful lot into a picture if you keep in mind that this painting could actually
be a little larger but it isn't, so that the edge of the canvas is just a
stopping, a termination of activity that's been going on.....
I prefer the attitude of the picture just evolving rather than working towards
some kind of conclusion ....
Sometimes when I can't get started I just simply draw a line all the way across
the canvas. And then my activity is doing something in relationship to
that line, but very simple-mindedly like working above or below it or on it, or
in some cases to do something to cover up the line. But I think any of these
excuses is to get started and is just an aesthetic, as an extremely recognized
noble intention.
Cy Twombly:
It's instinctive in a certain kind of painting, not as
if you were painting an object or special things, but it's like coming through
the nervous system. It's like a nervous system. It's not described, it's
happening. The feeling is going on with the task. The line is the feeling, from
a soft thing, a dreamy thing, to something hard, something arid, something
lonely, something ending, something beginning.
Jasper Johns:
I think that one wants from painting a sense of life. The final suggestion,
gesture, statement has to be not a deliberate statement but a helpless
statement. It has to be what you can't avoid saying, not what you set out to
say.
I am interested in things which suggest the world rather than suggest the
personality. I'm interested in things which suggest things which are,
rather than in judgments... the most ordinary thing - it seems to me to exist as
clear facts, not involving aesthetic hierarchy.
DS: except that the form you begin with is usually conventional. And your marks with which you work are personal.
In a painting the processes involved in the
painting are of greater certainty... of greater meaning that the referential
aspects of the painting. I think the processes involved in the painting mean as
much or more than any reference value the painting has.
Philip Guston:
We were talking about the picture
plane, and to me there's some mysterious element about the plane...there's an
existence on this imaginary plane which holds almost all of the fascination of a
painting for me. The true image only comes out when it exists on this imaginary
plane. I think that when its eliminated or not maintained intensely, I get lost
in it.
(Painting) remains the most puzzling, enigmatic
thing. But when this thing happens, this very peculiar and particular thing does
finally happen....when you have these few lucid moments
DS: And when it's going, you really can stay there? You don't have to get
away from the canvas and see how the picture looks?
PG: I don't even know what I'm doing at that time. It's a peculiar moment
to talk about... you could see the whole thing as a moral test. I think, and you
know precisely when you are kidding yourself.... I don't think it has anything
to do with spontaneity either. And if it is freedom, it's a very peculiar kind
of freedom.... its a freedom that must be achieved.
| "But there was also in it the curious ecstasy which comes from "feeling" the mind work smoothly and imaginatively upon difficult, complicated problems. The excitement of the ruthless pursuit of truth which, perhaps, never entirely leaves one, but which is so intense when one is very young. And finally that astonishing and astonished happiness described by Keats which comes to one when some new constellation of thought, some new vision of a profound truth swims into one's kin" Virginia Woolf |
|
The Lovely Bones, a novel by Alice Sebold read an excerpt |