Thursday
Jul222010
Heat Map. Sunset, Thursday, 22 July 2010
William Van Doren. Sunset from Stony Point, Albemarle County, Va. Oil on watercolor block, 13 x 19.
The kind of heat we’re having, in a non–air conditioned farmhouse, can make a painter want to attack the canvas without thinking, without waiting, without mixing, without preparing – without caring. It may not be quite the same as the Zen of no-mind, but it’s the Zen du jour for sure.
In other developments, Moment & Horizon has a new Page on Facebook.
Posted on
Thursday, July 22, 2010 at 10:11PM | by
BVD | in
A Painting A Day,
Sunset Paintings,
Sunsetology | tagged
Blue Ridge,
Facebook,
Zen,
painting process,
weather | | Comments Off
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Ways and Means of Meditation
Three people have written to me recently, independently of each other, about what they regard as a ‘Zen’ or meditative quality of this daily ‘practice’ – the ritual or practice of painting the sunset. One person, an art consultant and Buddhist, expressed surprise that I’m not Buddhist. Another, someone I lived with when we were in our early 20s, wrote, “In Zen they say that the Universe is Scripture, and I sense that it is much the same for you.” A fellow artist now says, “Making a commitment to loyally paint the everchanging sky ... somehow reminds me of the Tibetan monks and their intricate sand mandalas.”
These three friends make me realize, first of all, how much I have yet to learn about what I’m doing. An interesting thing for me is that I never thought about it in anything like these terms. I feel an affinity with eastern religions such as Hinduism and Buddhism, but have never felt drawn toward formal study or exploration. I’ve never even read my age- and peer-group’s required Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, although, like just about everybody else, I have a copy somewhere. I’m not sure which deterred me more, the ‘Zen’ part or the ‘motorcycle maintenance’ part. (I’ve always been mechanically challenged.)
Yet I realize there has always been what might be called a meditative center to my experience, a homemade, routine sort of meditation without a system or a name.
Lately I’ve been writing in these posts about having to cut more firewood at the end of the day, and this has been going on pretty much every day in fact. (It happens late because most of the day is spent working toward an editorial deadline.) What I realized, standing next to some dead tree and watching the sky approach sunset, is the ‘Zen’ state that can sometimes be produced by sheer physical exhaustion. Maybe that’s part of the reason for the physical labors of certain Buddhist monks – I don’t know.
I found myself thinking of a painting that used to be popular as a print, “The Song of the Lark,” done in 1884 by the French artist Jules Breton. The image is now in the public domain:
Some people would probably say it shows a peasant woman transported at sunset by a bird’s song in spite of her physical exhaustion. From my own experience, I would suppose it shows someone transported because of their exhaustion – because, in that state, you can easily find yourself drained of all thought and wide open, with no defenses against the beautiful world everywhere around you.
I wrote about this sort of thing almost exactly 15 years ago, without realizing that’s what I was writing about. I hope you’ll cut me some slack – I was a mere kid of 46 (and I mean that quite seriously). The style, I now realize, was somewhat like a chant belonging to the state of being either too tired or too absorbed to stop a sentence and start a new one.