12 noon: ano kato was painted over earlier this morning and two dancing figures were introduced. the underlying painting from yesterday shows through in spots, adding movement and marks.
earlier today, i came across an interview with the director of the albuquerque museum, andrew connors, which you can find on new mexico PBS.
he’s talking about the museum’s newly acquired painting by the great american artist, richard diebenkorn. during this 9 minute interview, connors touches on many of the aspects of abstraction in painting in a manner that i found deeply moving. at it’s best, he says, rather than telling us it’s story, it allows us to discover our own story.
this simple, yet profound statement is one that sheds light on my own journey from realism to abstraction. during my 15 years in greece, i learned from and was mentored by two or three of the finest realist greek painters at the time. paradoxically, something i absorbed from them, especially tsarouchis, was exactly what connors says about abstraction!
tsarouchis, in his finest work, was allowing the viewer to discover his or her own story. somethimes, as is the case with these two paintings, he would leave sections of the composition “unfinished.” by signing them he’s letting us know that he considers them “finished,” indicating that he wants us, the viewers, to finish the story, making it more our story, emphasizing that it’s the composition that matters.