Page 8 - Art First: Joni Brenner: At the Still Point
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Pre- 2011               Emergent 2011           Setting out 2015

            British artist Celia Paul, in her catalogue for her show Stillness   again was gratitude, a thankfulness that frequently was without
          (2004:14) observes                                   words.
                                                                 It has been noticeable that over the years, as Brenner and I un-
            I think that stillness in a picture can only happen if it takes a long   dertake the ritual of the naming of the works for the next exhibition,
            time (and probably many scraped-off layers and changes). It’s like   we make recourse to poetry to help put into words the very nub of
            a newly-painted room still jangles with the presence of the dec-  the feeling that has been captured in the paintings. Shakespeare,
            orators, whereas an old room has acquired its stillness, however   Manley Hopkins, Yeats, Eliot – so often the portraits evoke a well-
            turbulent the lives of its tenants.                loved phrase from one poem or another. The two art forms truly
                                                               are objective correlatives for one another – and it so makes me
          The stillness of this cycle of portraits comes, one feels, from hav-  wonder that Leonardo had to make a case for their equivalence in
          ing taken a long time – and many scraped-off layers and chang-  the Renaissance. In the 21st century, it is almost as if one needs to
          es, as Paul says: the looking, the adaptations and accommoda-  make a case for the words, not so much for the image itself – ‘one
          tions needed to know a sitter well enough to represent him well   picture is worth a thousand words’.
          enough, the silent intimacy of attention, getting to understand the   This group of portraits of Scott Hazelhurst represents an ongoing
          mark-making needed to render some vital aspect of the man in   exploration – ‘ceaseless exploration’ Eliot would call it – which has
          the present, the appreciation of the gift of a busy man’s time as   one end, and that is to know the deep structures of the face and
          willing sitter. These portraits make me see feelingly why Da Vinci   body and the lineaments of flesh until they are as though one’s
          argued that ‘painting is poetry that is seen rather than felt.’ But   own. Some of the names of the paintings, Pre-, Emergent, Setting
          seeing is surely simply another modality for feeling? Seeing the   out, make reference to that exploration, to the finding of the co-
          poetry does not exclude the possibility of intense feeling – and   ordinates and of being able to set them out. A look at the dates of
          in the discussion with Brenner as we went through the ceremony   the works helps the viewer to see this process of coming to know.
          of naming these works, the emotion I saw well up time and time   The recognition comes – this ís the place, the face sought through


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