Showing posts with label quotes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label quotes. Show all posts

02 May 2021

A Search for


"More and more he will be governed by what others want him to do, thus increasingly falling prey to conformism."  -Viktor E. Frankl, Man's Search for Meaning
 
* * *
 
Is permanence possible, and can it take form, in a transitory existence?  Most will argue no.  I am convinced otherwise.  While elusive, permanence does exist, but it is only present in the deepest recess of the human experience: the state of assured meaning——that is, purpose.  
 
To know our purpose in life——to pursue meaningful work in spite of its hardships and suffering——is to have permanence in an ever changing landscape.  It is what courses through our finite bodies to move us beyond ourselves.  With this knowledge, we are bound to a higher something.  As a result, our fleeting condition is given a permanence that transcends time and space.
 
I met my purpose many autumns ago.  Yet, I spent the greater portion of the last two years attempting to trade in its very truth for a life of practicality, for that which is considered conventional and socially acceptable for a thirty-something-year-old.  

There is an insidious nature to conformity.  As someone who is much too stubborn and headstrong, it seemed my purpose and values were safe from the impact of external noise.  It was not until my desire for meaning over financial security was being challenged consistently that I found myself confronted with doubts——doubts that started off inconspicuously small, but gradually grew to an obstructive size.  Critics purported my work as a painter was impractical and short of prestige.  Instead, they insisted on the importance of what I had long deemed empty and vapid: monetary accrual, socioeconomic status, and running in the "right" circles.
 
Unfortunately, over time, I——as well as my work——became affected by the unsolicited advice.
 
This wolf, a stealthy predator, had found its way into the sheep pen. 
 
 * * *

Society's ill-fitted, one-size-for-all ideology pressures us to renounce dissenting behavior and harms the outliers who swim against the current——the individuals who consciously choose meaning over a life of material stature.  At birth, we are handed a timeline for the milestones that must be reached at each age.  To stray from it is to subject oneself to continual scrutiny and shame.
 
For the past two years, I have struggled to drown out the voices of the naysayers, of those determined to kill the better part of me——the only part of me I have ever known to be true.  I lost several battles in the process and suffered a high degree of debilitation.  However, as I learned from Viktor E. Frankl, meaning is found in suffering, too.
 
* * *

It was a Friday in early October.  The year was 2010.  I was twenty-six, and it was my birthday.  The highly anticipated exhibition, Van Gogh, Gauguin, Cézanne and Beyond: Post-Impressionist Masterpieces from the Musée d’Orsay, which I waited well over a year to see, was finally open to the public.  I spent that afternoon with Vincent at the de Young.  
 
Seven of Vincent's paintings were on display.  I must have stood in front of Bedroom at Arles (1889) for an hour.  Seeing his actual brushstrokes from 120 years ago in person was an experience I would not soon forget.  I was intent on taking in every minute detail.  What were you feeling when you painted your bedroom, Vincent?  I imagined him sitting on his bed, turning his head towards the window and peering out into the world.  I thought about him suffering for his purpose, for the very thing of which he was so certain, but which many mistook for far less.  And I remember standing there, a mere few feet from his painting, sharing an internal conversation with a man who lived and died a century before I was even born——the full impact of its resonance bringing me to tears. 
 
* * *
 
How can anything be permanent when we are living in a constant state of impermanence?  How do I reconcile practicality and expectations with meaning and the responsibility of fulfilling a purpose so few understand?  I am not sure.  Answers come and go for me.  Yet, amid the uncertainty, I do know this much: poorer my life would be without art and its enriching experiences, and poorer this world would be had Vincent ignored his life's calling——had he listened to his critics, taken the practical path, and done what was easier. 

There is a reason painting cuts me as deep as it does and why the need to continue painting is unrelenting: it is both the means and the end to my existence.  Painting is the vehicle by which I can reach and serve others——those who are yearning for resonance and connection, those who are searching for the greater meaning in their own lives.  Sharing hope, even the smallest grain of it, with my fellow humans has been the driving force behind this impractical journey from the very beginning.  It is what gives my days meaning, and it is what provides a sense of permanence in a world that is ever fleeting.


-OH
 
 

30 April 2019

Subtleties


AS: No. 2
mixed media on paper, 2019
24" x 22"

"That's what artists do, that's what poets do . . . we all do it.  We start with something, and sometimes we destroy everything that we've made in order to get to the core place where we started from."
-Patti Smith

---

Returning to that core place . . .
 
(Alexander Supertramp series)


23 January 2018

Finding Shelter


Memory, No. 0118
mixed media on paper, 2018
21" x 24"


"Knight is able, after all, to interact with another person, and do so in the most open and vulnerable way.  And right then, I come the closest to understanding why Knight left.  He left because the world is not made to accommodate people like him . . . There was no place for him, and instead of suffering further, he escaped . . . The forest offered him shelter.

I think that most of us feel like something is missing from our lives . . . But life isn't about searching endlessly to find what's missing; it's about learning to live with the missing parts.

For Knight, his camp was the one spot on the planet where he knew he belonged."

-passages from pages 182-83
The Stranger in the Woods: The Extraordinary Story of the Last True Hermit

 

05 December 2017

A Cabin for Me, A Cabin for Us


Memory: Intentions
mixed media on paper, 2017
21" x 22"


"Some people want a huge house filled with luxuries and cars.  Others just want a tiny cabin alone in the woods away from those kinds of people."
-Jim Carrey

02 November 2017

What Good Amid These, O Me, O Life?


Memory, No. 10-07 (i)
 mixed media on paper, 2017
21" x 24"

 
"That you are here—that life exists and identity,
That the powerful play goes on, and you may contribute a verse."    -Walt Whitman




30 September 2017

You are You, and I am I


Memory, No. 9-29: Gestalt Prayer
mixed media on paper, 2017
21" x 24"

 
I do my thing and you do your thing . . .
You are you, and I am I,
and if by chance we find each other, it's beautiful.

 
-Fritz Perls


21 September 2017

Alexander Supertramp


September 1, 2017
CA-152, 6:37p


"As to when I shall visit civilization, it will not be soon, I think.  I have not tired of the wilderness; rather I enjoy its beauty and the vagrant life I lead, more keenly all the time.  I prefer the saddle to the streetcar and star-sprinkled sky to a roof, the obscure and difficult trail leading into the unknown, to any paved highway, and the deep peace of the wild to the discontent bred by cities.  Do you blame me then for staying here, where I feel that I belong and am one with the world around me?  It is true that I miss intelligent companionship, but there are so few with whom I can share the things that mean so much to me that I have learned to contain myself.  It is enough that I am surrounded with beauty . . . 

Even from your scant description, I know that I could not bear the routine and humdrum of the life that you are forced to lead.  I don't think I could ever settle down.  I have known too much of the depths of life already, and I would prefer anything to an anticlimax."

-Everett Ruess



12 April 2017

The Fragrance of Forgiveness


(Redwood Regional Park, 04.02.17)

"Forgiveness is the fragrance that the violet sheds on the 
heel that has crushed it."

-Mark Twain

---

I am at home here
among your wild trees
My safe place
this sanctuary.


17 March 2016


  • humansofny “I don’t enjoy observing people as much as I used to. Everyone acts like they’re on stage. People used to come to The Village sheepishly. Nobody was sure if they belonged. We didn’t know if we were artists. These days everyone walks around like they’re contributing something. There’s no angst anymore. There’s too much certainty. And that’s a shame. Because all the best art comes from people who feel like they don’t belong. Art is a way of proving your existence. When I was a young man, a person that I respected told me that I was an artist. It was one of the worst things that could have happened to me. I stopped walking into museums or galleries with a sense of awe. I walked in feeling like an ‘artist.’ My arms would be crossed. If I liked a piece, it was ‘good.’ If I didn’t like a piece, it was ‘bad.’ I didn't feel vulnerable anymore. I lost my humility. And that’s when growth stops.” 

    +Humans of New York 


27 October 2015

The Giant Mechanical Man




"Sometimes I just feel invisible.  And I heard someone say something recently, that it just takes one person . . .  Just one person to make you feel like you belong.  To make you feel special."
  
Three years ago, I watched the Giant Mechanical Man come to life for the first time.
Three years later, I'm still touched by the honesty and sensitivity of its characters.
Tonight especially.
I think, just as it takes one person to make us feel a little less invisible, it also only takes one person to make us feel invisible. 
 

05 April 2015

Reflections




"Every man has his secret sorrows, which the world knows not; 
and often times we call a man cold when he is only sad."

-Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
 ---

Easter Sunday 2015.

Consider kindness.  Consider compassion.  Consider selflessness.  Consider forgiveness.
Above all, consider love.


Thank you for showing us the meaning to all of these, Lord.

10 November 2013

No. 9, Painter



In the midst of winter, I found there was, within me, an invincible summer.

And that makes me happy.  For it says that no matter how hard the world pushes
against me, within me, there's something stronger--something better, pushing 
right back.


-Albert Camus