On the backend of 2018 an agreement was made between two artists to duck into the woodshed in the tradition of Jazz musicians and (in my case as soon discovered) in the spirit of Jack Whitten. Our aim was to shut out the world or as Agnes Martin would say “Turn our backs to the world and paint”. This meant disengaging from most forms of social media, limiting all distractions, settling in and focusing purely on the work. The rest was established as the year progressed. Shortly after our pact, Whitten’s own ‘Notes From the Woodshed’ quickly came in to my purview. The insights into his practice, his cosmology, and his meticulous observations of the natural world were like a homing device. For example, the following (imperative) objectives of Whitten’s from his studio log in ‘98 (not typed in situ):
1) Remove the notion of me.
2) Don’t wallow in the past and with God’s help avoid Romantic Nationalism.
3) The painting is not an illustration of anything.
4) Don’t succumb to populist aesthetics.
5) Accept the fact that there are multiple dimensions in time.
6) Don’t ever beg for anything.
7) Accept God’s guidance and forever be FREE.
8) Learn to live by the philosophy of Jazz.
9) Only fools want to be famous avoid at all costs.
10) Avoid Art-World strategies.
11) Erase all known “isms”.
12) Balance the Apollonian and Dionysian at 50/50.
13) I MUST CHANGE THE COURSE OF ART HISTORY.
14) Don’t ever use the phrase Avant-Garde.
15) Learn to hate the history of art and above all don’t trust it.
16) THE PAINTING AS OBJECT MUST EXIST ON ITS OWN TERMS.
17) Use science as metaphor.
18) REMAIN TRUE TO MYSELF.
What ensues are reflections from my own woodshed year. 2019 was filled with joy, curiosity, exploration, hardships, heartbreaks, hard-fought wins and lessons, lessons, and more lessons. It is too much to condense into one little post—I’ve processed and output some combination of over 9,000 images/works which by no means implies all of these images/works are noteworthy or even salvageable. Where applicable I’ve included writings that coincide with the particular month’s output. In many cases, while a decent way to augment and document one’s practice, the writing lapsed primarily because the preference and overall aim in my own practice remains to create a lasting visual lexicon. In those instances I took another cue from Whitten and noted where I had “gone wintering” aka gone star-gazing. In these instances, I have provided words from sources of study.
Cataloguing this Woodshed year is a massive undertaking, as such the major works and projects created during this year will have their own tabs for you to poke around in as you see fit. They may or may not be in any particular order depending when you land on this page. Some of course will be stand alone projects and others are just what the best of that month had to offer and may be one offs.
image to the left/above:
M Theory (These Go to 11)
Acrylic, flashe software output, digital processing on fiberglass fabric
36x60