• Cecelia Rembert

    Date posted: December 12, 2006 Author: jolanta
    Image In my work this year, I have become increasingly interested in the area outside our field of representation.

    In
    my work this year, I have become increasingly interested in the area
    outside our field of representation.  I want to gesture towards things
    that have no objective shape: feelings and memories on the edge of our
    language, both verbal and pictorial.

    I
    don’t know why I am constantly drawn into this arena, this wordless
    place.  How do we point to those ephemera?  What can I say, or would
    want to?  I know only that I am drawn constantly to this challenge by a
    recurring feeling of poignancy, which I feel in my everyday life, and
    which I want to replicate and express to others.  For somehow it must
    be a key to our shared experience with life, the beauty made tragic by
    our keen awareness that everything, including our very selves, is
    impermanent.

    Thus,
    I work to present this feeling to others.  In general, this array of
    feelings includes poignant and melancholy feelings about our passing
    through life, the stamp we make reaching out into the world.  The
    shared human desires for love, comfort, freedom from pain and fear. 
    These feelings are universal, and while they are often evoked in
    narrative scenes, they are essentially intangible. I try to approach
    them directly, without the vessel of presentation or metaphor; but to
    explore their manifestation directly on the canvas.

    In
    addition to approaching these feelings I want to use a visual language
    that is emotional, not intellectual. To this end I employ the mark and
    line which reveal my “hand”, in a physical attempt to touch my viewer. 
    Color is of course a tool of the emotions as well, and I have certain
    colors, in the outside world and in my mind which are especially
    emotionally resonant.  As well, the use of line, twisting and
    meandering as its own entity, a small voice heard.  Line is even more
    spontaneous than mark; it is action made manifest, preserved.  I think
    of them as my trilogy: the atmosphere and harmony of color, the power
    and expression of mark, and the present-ness and  spontaneity of line.

    I
    have come to believe in the power of the mark as a direct utterance. 
    Form is often narrative, evoking shapes of the outside world.  But the
    mark seems to me to retain its clear ringing expression.

    I
    see the mark as a physical event, one body contacting another, perhaps
    arbitrarily or intuitively.  Yet the idea of the mark as caused by
    something else- the arbitrary bump of life’s events- reveals it to be
    an instrument of life, of intuitive communication.  As opposed to
    representation form, which employ recognizable shapes in a narrative. 
    Or to abstract form, which approaches the canvas through formal
    qualities, the mark is human, intuitive, unfettered by an official
    purpose.  And yet, in the lack of a purpose, the mark can be imbued
    with such emotion and physical presence, such that it communicates
    powerfully and directly the presence and intention of the artist.

    How
    can there be a connection between the hand, brushing on the page, and
    the genuine heart of sadness?  Yet the relationship seems ordained,
    primal, innate.  The movement of the brush, the mark, the line
    expresses the deepest human utterance.   Roland Barthes writes: “There
    is a kind of sign, entirely without abrasion or lesion, that I would
    hazard to call “sublime.”  The instrument that makes its trace (a pen
    or a pencil) descends toward a sheet of paper and simply lands upon it,
    that’s all.  It doesn’t even hint at biting in, it simply comes to
    rest.  The almost oriental rarefaction of the slightly smudged surface
    (that is the object) is responded to by the extenuation of the
    movement. It grasps nothing, it finds its poise, and everything has
    been said."


    In my explorations this year, the question has ceased to be ‘what to paint’ and is now “how to paint”.   I will continue working with the trilogy, unearthing the clearest utterance I can, and bringing it to land on the surface of the canvas, in one moment of infinite emotion.

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