Diebenkorn was a distinguished American painter, draftsman, and printmaker
Still from the video Richard Diebenkorn on Beginning a Painting |
"Notes to myself on beginning a painting" by Richard Diebenkorn
Richard Diebenkorn was an introspective man who remained skeptical of his success as an artist throughout his life. Over the years he spent countless hours sitting in a favorite chair in his studio, contemplating and looking. Perhaps it was there that he wrote thoughts that came to mind on nearby pieces of paper, some torn from other uses. The Diebenkorn FoundationThese notes were found on paper in his studio after his death.They're listed BELOW.
You can also see a digitised version of the handwritten notes in the link above.
- Attempt what is not certain. Certainty may or may not come later. It may then be a valuable delusion.
- The pretty, initial position which falls short of completeness is not to be valued – except as a stimulus for further moves.
- DO search.
- Use and respond to the initial fresh qualities but consider them absolutely expendable.
- Don’t “discover” a subject – of any kind.
- Somehow don’t be bored but if you must, use it in action. Use its destructive potential.
- Mistakes can’t be erased but they move you from your present position.
- Keep thinking about Pollyanna.
- Tolerate chaos.
- Be careful only in a perverse way.
I first came across them
on the RA website
in relation to their exhibition of his work in 2015.
They're not the conventional dictums which appear again and again in many
instruction books about painting. Some are impenetrable to people who are
not Americans or not of a certain age
For example "Keep thinking about Pollyanna" only becomes clear when
you understand that Pollyanna is a character in a 1913 novel by Eleanor
H. Porter AND that she is an orphan with an unjustifiably optimistic
attitude.
To me they're indicative of the characteristics of right brain thinking and an aversion to the factual, structured, linear, systematic approach associated with left brain thinking.
In fact they're the complete antithesis of "step by step" instruction. It's about an attitude of mind which seeks to be open to possibilities rather than learning systems for creating a painting.
Richard Diebenkorn: The Catalogue Raisonné
A two-volume catalogue raisonné of prints will be published by the Yale
University Press in 2024.
Exclusive @TheArtNewspaper: “The Richard Diebenkorn Foundation has launched an encyclopedic digital platform...and in 2024, plans to release a new catalogue raisonnĂ© documenting Diebenkorn’s printmaking.” Photo by Leo Holub © Richard Diebenkorn Foundation https://t.co/9yAQlJXRVz
— Richard Diebenkorn Foundation (@Diebenkorn_fnd) October 7, 2021
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