1998 eng on his way in a cage is a man [m fi 629]

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On his way in a cage is a man, his hands red. “Words are inadequate. What cannot be said is painted.” My lecture contains questions, but offers no answers about the whys and wherefores of painting. There are no such answers. A painting functions para - rationally, that is, beyond reason and beyond its own story. Words cannot contain its mystery. This is an attempt, and an incomplete one at that, to describe the journey of one who paints, of one who has been chosen - or forced - to paint. I will try to describe some of the innumerable mechanisms, or maybe they are predestinations, which force me on my way towards a painting. In any case, all I can do is wait for the painting, and so these words are no more than so much gravel scrunched under a traveller’s boot, moved about and ending up on the other side of the road. It is strange and yet so obvious. The older I get and the more I go along with the painting, the less I know about the how and why of the painting. How the painting comes to me and why it is so vital that I create it. What I have learned is that the less I know about the painting, the closer I come to its chastening mystery. After a lifetime of painting the only thing I know is what I no longer want. The painting decides. I am not free, I don’t choose the painting, the painting chooses me. It comes for me in order to be painted by me. I must wait for that moment. Painting means: waiting for a visit from a painting. No matter how much I long for it, live for it, no matter how much I paint, none of this is going to make the painting come. The painting comes in its own time, that is to say, when the need is at its most pressing. And Braque said: ‘l’Art est une blessure qui devient lumière’, and I think: there is no happy art, it does not exist. Art originates from a deficiency, from ‘le manque’, yes, from our deficient being. I wander, I am being moved on the road between two extremes: my longing and my horror. My longing - my admiration, my pleasure - I sublimate the way Renoir did, who said: ‘mon pinceau, c’est ma queue.’ My horror - my fearfulness, my demons - I excorcize like Goya who had to give shape to his terror in order to survive it, in order to cleanse himself of it. And so the artist wanders like a vagabond, like Prometheus, a dumb soothsayer, a seller of lucky charms, on that road between that which delights him ( after all, longing also denotes a deficiency), that which touches him and what he would want to touch and that which repulses and frightens him because it destroys him. Why is there no happy art, or why is art about happiness irrelevant, of no use? The answer is that we do not need to be cured of happiness. And art is a healer. And I wonder: What is the link between the image I create and the things I experience in life? And how does the image that I create heal the pain that living causes me? How am I regenerated through an image? And how does my image, my painting, heal the pain, the deficiency of another person looking at it, I mean someone who is willing to receive the image in order to be absorbed by it? Because I know that we are not looking at the painting but that it is looking at us. The painting finds us. And how does it come about that this other person standing between me and the painting is being touched, enchanted, burdened, comforted and healed by it? Art comforts us. Art heals people. Art results from the discontent and restlessness that have hounded man since the Fall. Art must lead the way back ( that selfexaltation from the mud) to Paradise and make him come to terms with his longing for it and with his nakedness, his guilt, his shameful powerlessness to prove himself to such a sublime being as God. Of course this is a metaphor. Nevertheless, the discrepancy between the spiritual and sometimes brilliant possibilities of man (and his longing for fulfillment, purification and enlightenment) and his limited realisation of those possibilities which are often circumscribed or even of a purely materialistic nature, is so enormous and final that man cannot but suffer and try to free himself.


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