Liam's Choice Artists quotes

Liam's Choice Artists quotes

Monday, June 8, 2009

The Good Painting

I want to say more with less.

Like a great speaker who speaks slowly, one topic at a time.

The painting has one beautiful moment, a focus that is simple and bold, that looks at first glance like something anybody can do, but one can tell the mark of a master, because everything around it compliments, doesn't compete, doesn't distract. It's like saying the perfect thing at the perfect time, in the perfect way, but that perfect thing is real and flawed, beautifully so. It's a single sentence by a small voice in the perfect acoustics of a vast, empty auditorium: a triviality, an indulgence, and maybe even futile. But somehow that moment is captivating. Captivating and valuable, like the kind of thing they make documentaries about. That humanism is an affirmation of being alive and experienced, of being human.

There is a blank canvas that will one day be that good painting.

The Creative Spark

In the arts, there is no undisputed "best", but technical skill is something quantifiable, and most regular folks see people who can do realistic art as "the best" while laughing at modern, more mysterious art. Technical skill is always an asset, and the best artists always have great technical skill, but emphasis on technical skill is overrated, in my opinion. Why? The principal difference between a great artist and someone who can paint well is that the artist has the creative spark, the technician just has technical skill. Understanding what makes great art separate from good technical art is a fascinating pursuit; one that involves an open mind, education, and experience in the art world. But it's fun, and it's liberating.

Here's some golden nuggets I value:

The key to being a great artist is to know yourself. Oh, there it is. You bored yet? But it's true, and it's profound. If you don't know who you are, your work never really has an author! Why sign it? Who wants to buy some angst-ridden art from someone who doesn't know who they really are? Great artists are like great wine: We need time to mature. Of course, maybe I'm just speaking about myself? Hmn. Practically speaking, if you know yourself, it manifests as personal vision, as confidence, as a stronger mark, as a consistent body of work and not randomly creative.

Great art is like great writing or great music. It takes lots of practice and skill, but you don't always have to have something important to say, sometimes it's just the love of form, the act of painting or drawing that, with time and practice before it, produces something beautiful.

Great painting takes a great eye. Design and composition will destroy a painting that otherwise may have been drawn beautifully, or conversely can save a painting that has been drawn poorly.

Painting 1946
Sometimes you don't know what your major masterpiece is going to be. Francis Bacon, for instance, started this one painting called "Painting 1946" for which he is quoted is saying:


"It came to me as an accident. I was attempting to make a bird alighting on a field. And it may have been bound up in some way with the three forms that had gone before, but suddenly the line that I had drawn suggested something totally different and out of this suggestion arose this picture. I had no intention to do this picture; I never thought of it in that way. It was like one continuous accident mounting on top of another."


Bacon's "Painting 1946" is generally regarded as his masterpiece. The guy just knew how to make a great painting, albeit in his own brilliantly twisted dark vision. He made it work, making it up as he went. That takes more than technical skill, that takes an accomplished sense of vision, the ability to improvise, and a great eye. The creative spark.

The creative spark is that energy that a creative artist has. It's the enegry that is restless, pushing the artist to shoot for something new and different, even if it's only new to the artist. Something challenging, maybe risky. Something of personal vision. The pursuit of a vision is found in the great moviemakers, who will taylor their amazing technical facility to make each scene work to the service of good storytelling.

Again, The creative spark is like a jazz musician who will sacrifice ego to create a performance that doesn't showboat individual ability, but makes the song work. Vision is the key. The big picture, where thought and idea are all, and technical abililty is only is a means to an end.

Artists with the creative spark are not technically minded, though they have technical ability in spades. They'll do whatever it takes to make the painting work. Sometimes that means plenty of time and effort while drawing on that technical facility, and sometimes that means throwing that technical facility to the wind. The important thing is that the painting "works".

That creative spark commands attention. It keeps people off guard, not knowing what to expect. There's a sense of excitement. The creative spark can take one to a place where technical skill is challenged. The improvization of a jazz musician like Miles Davis, for instance, may not always be a flawless performance, but it can reach brilliant hieghts unavailable to the trappings of technical proficiency alone, but wide open to the artist who knows who they are. An artist who can draw from personal vision and communicate that more essential humanism.
Robert Motherwell, untitled, 1971 etching
Robert Motherwell, that enigmatic and genius abstract painter, once said that even after a lifetime of painting, he could still do a bad painting. I love that. That's my kind of artist.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Latest Paintings

My latest horse painting, this one has a more traditional brush technique:

My latest installment in the "Voices In Harmony" multipanel series:

And my latest abstract painting, titled "Through It All"


Liam Jones Fine Art on eBay
Liam Jones Fine Art website