An
Infinity of Blues: Art as a Form of
Attention
Susan
Glickman
Before I learned to write I learned
to draw and, to some extent, I still see the former as a more nuanced and
sophisticated version of the latter. Making art is a way of representing the
world to yourself; of looking closer so you can see what’s really there. The
eye as microscope; the page as time-machine. Sharpen the focus. Slow everything
down. Then copy what you see as accurately as you can.
There’s a radical honesty required
from both writing and painting because copying what you see, not what you are supposed
to see, challenges convention. To write what you feel and think, not what you
are supposed to feel and think is even more subversive. This is how art frees
the constrained and vindicates the powerless. It turns the bystander into an
activist.
I cannot remember a time when I wasn’t
a bystander; when I didn’t feel apart from things, observing them. I suspect this
is typical of anyone drawn to the arts. A person fully immersed in the world isn’t
compelled to scrutinize it, but if something or someone has flung you out of
the centre to the periphery you necessarily inhabit a space of exploration. This
is frightening but also liberating, which is why we continue to make art
despite loneliness, frustration, lack of response, and lack of remuneration.
Until I went to university, the
visual arts were just as important to me as the literary ones, but then I moved
into my head – a space even smaller and more cluttered than a library carrel - and
writing took over. There no longer seemed to be any way paint and charcoal could
represent the honey and vinegar of reality; only language, parsed into metaphor
and allusion, quotation and dislocation, could build a second world with
anything like the variety and terror of the first. Words have been my medium
ever since. I have worked as an English professor, a creative writing instructor,
a mentor, and an editor; written poetry and fiction for adults and children,
scholarly essays and dissertations, and book reviews. For recreation, when I
wasn’t hungrily devouring other people’s books, I played Scrabble and Boggle
and did cryptic crosswords. I even read Roget’s Thesaurus for pleasure! I was
completely besotted with language.
Part of this intoxication was
childlike: I loved playing with the sounds and textures of words. And part of
it was more adult and urgent: if I only learned enough, maybe one day I could
write something true. Daily life hurt; it made no sense. But literature would
save me, if only I could write my way in to the truth and then out again, to
offer it to others.
Then in September of 2015, exhausted
by literary disappointment and juggling family demands, employment, too many
illnesses and deaths, I took a break from writing and went to art school. And
in drawing and painting and sculpture I’ve recovered the joy of making stuff not
as a path to “the truth” -- which I no longer believe in -- but as an end in
itself. When a model is posing in the middle of a room and twenty people are
working at easels in a circle around him you invariably get twenty versions of
“the truth,” each dependent on the painter’s height, angle and acuity of
vision, hand-eye co-ordination, native skill, learned technique, quality of
pigments and brushes, knowledge of other painters’ work, emotional state that
day, life experience …. In the art studio it is immediately obvious that everyone’s
view is partial, as is everyone’s ability.
This is something writers too often
forget, but remembering it would help us be more generous not only to others,
but also to ourselves. There is so much vitriol among reviewers of Canadian
poetry these days. Maybe it is fueled by the reviewers’ own frustration at trying
to make work that is not only authentic to their individual experience but
somehow revelatory of a larger “truth”, not merely well-crafted but somehow
canonical. What if we relieved ourselves of that burden and acknowledged that
the task is impossible, and that none of us will ever get it right? Would that
make the poetic enterprise more enjoyable?
For me it has.
Studying the laws of perspective,
gradation, and shading, mixing pigments to emulate the colour wheel, trying to
understand spatial relationships -- all of this is bringing me back to poetry
with renewed faith and energy. I’m no longer worried that I’ll never write
anything great, I just want to write something good. I can never capture
everything I know about a person when I paint their portrait, but if the
subject is recognizable and my own feelings come through, I’m happy. The past
few years of incessant feuding in the Canlit scene and of my style of writing
falling out of favour made me doubt that was sufficient. But art has always
been my way of paying attention, and that attention connects me to the world
and makes that world liveable. Without it there is just clutter and noise;
conflict and appetite. With it, cobalt, pthalo, indigo, ultramarine. An
infinity of blues.
Originally from Montreal, Susan Glickman is a recovering academic
working as a freelance editor and creative writing instructor in Toronto. She
is the author of 6 books of poetry (a 7th due out sometime soon), 3 novels for
adults, 3 novels for children, and a book of literary criticism.
Yes Susan, all views are partial. There is no finality, just an eternity of expresssions. And there is always the possibility that style can assume the sublime, transcending its epoch and attitude.
ReplyDeleteWritten like the scholar you are and the artist you've always been.
ReplyDeleteBeautifully written, Susan. Thank you.
ReplyDelete