A New York based writer, Edward Rubin’s writings have appeared in many magazines such as Art & Antiques, ArtUS, dART International, Canadian Art, ArtNexus, Flash Art, Hispanic Outlook, and Sculpture, as well as foreign magazines and online venues. He is an active member of the prestigious International Association of Art Critics (AICA). As a curator, his exhibition, “Anne Ferrer: Billowing Beauty”, was presented at the The Lab Gallery in New York City. Rubin’s photographs and collages have been exhibited at museums and galleries in the U.S. and Europe.
It wasn’t until I visited the Doge’s Palace in Venice and came face to face with “Paradise,” Tintoretto’s large painting that hangs majestically in the Ducal Hall, that I discovered, that Tintoretto was still alive. Yes, some artists’ voices live forever.
Here he was, some 400 years later, looking down at me looking up at him. I didn’t have to read the painting’s label which no doubt listed the artist’s name, the title of the painting, and the date it was executed.
I didn’t have time. I was pulled right past the words into the heart of the matter. Communication was instantaneous. I knew immediately that this seething mass of humanity, posing as saints and angels on canvas, all 23 by 72 feet of it, was transmogrified flesh. Tintoretto’s.
The Artist was Alive and Breathing
There was no doubt in my mind that the artist, in the early 70’s when he plotted out and painted this masterwork, by some extremity of genius, had very cleverly crossed from one dimension to another and painted himself alive into the picture. Blood was coursing through its veins. Here was Tintoretto alive and breathing. He knew it and I knew it.
Whether it was being in Venice, or standing under the elaborate Veronese ceilings, or the visionary aspects of Tintoretto’s painting, with its heady mixture of Michelangelo’s structure and Titian’s color, that transported me from one state to another, I soon found myself totally overwhelmed. Finding it difficult to breathe, with rapid heartbeat, deep breaths and tears flowing, I was forced to sit down. Uncontrollable sobbing followed. At the time I was quite surprised by my own reaction.
Picasso’s “Diaghilev” Triggered an Instant Recognition
Some years later, 1980 to be exact, at the Picasso retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, once again I was startlingly reminded that art has a mind of its own. As I passed by Picasso’s cubist portrait of Diaghilev and paused to look at it, a flash went off in my head.
Despite the fact that Diaghilev was embedded in the picture, while I was free to roam, we shared the immediate recognition that both of us were alive.
While one could argue that it was the artist’s arrangement of various planes, his clever placement of clues that allowed me, though a series of internal juxtapositions to visually reassemble Diaghilev’s portrait, which in turn triggered this instant recognition, I could not help feeling that an intelligence verging on life was signaling to me.
These phenomena, so often relegated to Science Fiction in popular culture, as a way of demeaning their import (though in my mind, a lot less strange than Black Holes or the Big Bang Theory), are not the isolated incidents they seem, but everyday occurrences. The fact that they go unrecognized, has less to do with the frequency of their occurrence than the laws, written and unwritten, that have come down through the centuries as received wisdom.
It is this government of thought that both determines and controls, in the main, how we think, talk and look. Bearing this in mind, it may just be that we are being taught not to fly.
The World has been too long turning on the timeworn ideas of Darwin, Mark, Freud and Einstein. When we pay attention, and that is the caveat, what is a more sensitive instrument for measurement, for weighing results on a daily basis, than our own minds. Our own hearts.
Artists Must Take Back the Power
I would like to see artists, who have long taken a back seat to scientists, politicians and religious leaders, take back the power that they so inadvertently relinquished. It once was that being an artist was a gift from god, but somehow now that gift is dispensed by diploma, and truth and beauty have been superseded by fame and fortune.
Artists must tear down walls, abolish dimensions, redefine boundaries, always with an eye toward more freedom not less.
Movement must be studied, beginning with that of our own bodies. It is time to rethink our universe.
Rethink the picture. What is up. What is down. Front. Back. It is a mistake to think that seeing involves only our eyes, words are needed to speak and knowing is not in our bones. It is equally wrongheaded to think that the future is ahead of us, the past behind, that mathematics is the last word or that a fact is a fact.
Certainly, more often than not, a fact is only after the fact. I want writers whose words leave the page, painters whose art heals, canvases coming alive, and voices like Tintoretto’s, voices that go on forever.
Andrea Robinson says
I love your reply Adriana J. Garces… and I can’t really add much to your response. Thank you for sharing this Renee – your articles always make me think more critically and analyze my work. I decided a long time ago that I couldn’t be painting the same artworks as those I see reproduced over and over in galleries and art shows. I see artists and gallery owners being conditioned that certain styles are “popular” and therefore that is all that is considered acceptable for exhibiting and purchase. The article is affirming and uplifting. Thank you!
Leanne Fink says
So well stated. Artists allow the viewer a glimpse into their soul and heart through their creations. It is a calling, a gift, to be an artist. With that comes a constant thrumming to express a vision. It is not for everyone. We leave a bit of ourselves in each work of art we create. I like how E. Rubin recognized with sensitivity the spirit of each artist whose work he viewed.
Adriana J. Garces says
Mr. Rubin, thank you! It’s so refreshing to feel the energy springing from this article, “leaving the page” as you phrased it regarding writers. Inspiration such as this is not an everyday occurrence. Truly, I thank goodness each time I am faced with the good in people, the angels amongst us. I agree that we as Artists should task ourselves to see beyond what eyes can see, because we truly can. We can take back our rightful place amongst the Humanities because Art is one of the eldest institutions to exist-beyond the formality of walls. “The human condition” may be a paraphrase often used in describing the subjects of today’s artworks. Yet, isn’t it that very condition we are often seeking to define when we express artistically? I agree with you because I believe that ‘talent’ is a gift. By grace and definition, I believe. In response I have accepted your challenge to we who make up the Artistically inclined population. It was accepted quite awhile ago and I am glad to say that I intend to keep creating in that way: as an acceptance to the challenge I have been ‘given’ by the hand of fate, to express truth and beauty as opposed to the contrary. Current trends aside, I’ll keep riding in my own lane, while I hope no one minds. Thanks again for enlightening us a bit more about you and ourselves Mr. Rubin…equally to you Ms. Phillips.