“To see the
world the way a painter must,
Responsive
to distances, alive to light,
To changes
in the colors of the day,
His mind
vibrating at every frequency
He finds
before him, from wind waves in wheat
Through
trees that turn their leaves before the storm,
To
string-bag pattern of the pebbled waves
Over the
shallows of the shelving cove
In high
sunlight; and to the greater wave-
lengths of
boulder and building, to the vast
Majestic
measures of the mountain's poise;
“And from
these modulations of the light
To take the
elected moment, silence it
In oils and
earths beneath the moving brush,
And varnish
it and put it in a frame
To seal it
off as privileged from time,
And hang it
for a window on the wall,
A window giving on the ever-present past;
A window giving on the ever-present past;
"How splendid
it would be to be someone
Able to do
these mortal miracles
In silence
and solitude, without a word.”
All first-rate
art is a “window giving on the ever-present past.” In his final lines, Nemerov
expresses every writer’s envy of the visual artist’s gift. We’re stuck with words.
1 comment:
Visual artists don't see the world any differently from you an I. Van Gogh didn't see the world in swirls of brush strokes. He saw it the same way we did. It was the work of putting it on canvas that produced the "vision".
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