
India
Story and Painting by Lehan Winifred Ramsay
The strange thing about failure is that you can work so hard to achieve it. I’ have painted and painted and painted, there has rarely been a time that I was not exhibiting my work, in a shop or a window. And yet I can honestly say that my career in painting has been remarkable in its lack of affect.
And then, I’ am doing it all wrong, and I know myself to be doing it all wrong. I do small paintings. I know that it is large paintings that capture people”””’s attention and I know that it is large paintings that you see in galleries and on the walls of homes. But I on’ly do small paintings. Partly I only do small paintings because I don’t know what I would do with a stack of big paintings, when they failed to sell just as my small paintings do. (Please forgive my lack of single apostrophes, this font doesn’t seem to have any) But, you know, you can’t make great big paintings without practice, and so it seems that at some point it is necessary to accumulate a stack of unsellable large paintings. That’s just the way things are.
I put my paintings in the window of the empty shop downtown and a number of people, after six months of silence, commented on them. That was good. They didn’t buy them, though. Since I have the impression that buying is the inevitable path one must take to critical success, I find that a little sad. I don’t really know what I need to do to make a change to this static situation.
I’ve put some on ebay, in my ebay store. This is because I have heard people say: you wouldn’t believe what people buy. I would like to believe what people buy, I would like them to buy my paintings. Nothing has happened yet, I suppose it may not ever happen.
Perhaps all this desire to have my paintings sell is simply good for one thing: keeping me painting. It fulfils some need for creative occupation, it satisfies my eye, it smells good, doesn’t cost so much money. So why not.
A thing that disturbs me is to look back at earlier paintings and see how much better done they are. Much more care for edging and lines and attention to (more) realistic renderings. Actually I can’t seem to be capable of going back to those paintings. Lines become faster and looser and rougher, a dog is barely a dog. Fascinating, disturbing and curious. I do love to look at my paintings, close up, at the paint textures and the pencil lines.
I saw these screens, in the discount shop. Room screens that fold into three, made of canvas. So you can paint a painting onto them. They are fantastic. But where would I put them, for years and years, until it was time to toss them into the pile for the second hand shop? Its very wasteful to fill unnecessary space.
Here. This one is called “India”, for no reason except the page I was turning at the time.
I am interested in what you say about the experience of lines not being as precise as earlier paintings and that a dog is barely a dog … you used the word ‘disturbing’. I have that experience. Surprised to find meaning. Baffled that there is any.
If your dogs are idenitifable as dogs regardless by execution of a simple line and varying the quality of the application of paint, the product is an illustration of attitoode, personality. In my book they’re surprisingly literal, interpretive as well and that’s for me interesting art. Reminds me of a scratch or a tickle that cannot be got at. These images recur and explain experience to me. I think I am a useful commenter in this respect because I don’t keep dogs. Your paintings help me understand what they are. I would seek to buy Sugar for an exhibition on an entrance wall if I owned my own home. I would be happy to rent Sugar if I was in the urban marketplace.
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You will have to do something outrageous. Something to achieve notoriety. That will make you paintings more valuable.
Why don’t you do some cartoons of Bill Shortbrain and Greg Flambe? Depict them with short trousers & toys…or summit.
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I was looking at the Rolls Royce website this week. They tell me that Rolls Royce vehicles never break down, they simply experience an incident of ‘failing to proceed’. Likewise they never experience brake failure, simply incidences of ‘failing to decelerate’.
So, I guess, the ‘failure’ isn’t a breakdown, it’s simply a ‘temporary experience’ in a system that made of better mettle.
I like the eBay store, I think things will pick up next year when consumer’s credit cards have been sutured, bandaged and massaged back into shape!
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Yes, that’s how it is, it is, it is.
I had some success in The Netherlands but only because they had a scheme supporting artists by buying up their works and exhibiting those works (paintings, ceramics,sculptures etc) around public buildings. Even galleries had support from the government by paying the gallery 15% of whatever the gallery sold with the artist paying the other 15% making a total of 30% to the gallery.
I believe that without some sort of Government subsidy or wage, it is very difficult to get an income from producing art. Most artists get by doing other stuff or simply live in poverty if their urge to do art is all encompassing.
I did paint large paintings, huge paintings, which I dragged from Australia to Europe and back here again. I hate to tell you what I finally ended up doing when we moved from the farm to here…
With music, the pubs provide a good venue for music to blossom which they do not have to that degree in Europe. One reason why the UK and Australia has produced top musical artists.
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