Monday, 8 June 2009

Action Painting Frozen in Time

Shinichi Maruyama: Kusho

His statement: As a young student, I often wrote Chinese characters in sumi ink. I loved the nervous, precarious feeling of sitting before an empty white page, the moment just before my brush touched the paper. I was always excited to see the unique result of each new brushing.

Once your brush touches paper, you must finish the character, you have one chance. It can never be repeated or duplicated. You must commit your full attention and being to each stroke. Liquids, like ink, are elusive by nature. As sumi ink finds its own path through the paper grain, liquid finds its unique path as it moves through air.

Remembering those childhood moments, of ink and empty page, I fashioned a large 'brush' and bucket of ink. I get the same feeling, a precarious nervous excitement, as I stand before the empty studio space. Each stroke is unique, ephemeral. I can never copy or recreate them. I know something fantastic is happening, "a decisive moment", but I can't fully understand the event until I look at these captured afterimages, these paintings in the sky.









It was love at first sight. Know what it feels like? It's something like, I close the window my mind is still with the stroke. He made wonder.

Monday post, a reminder of the force to bring it along for the whole day! Oh, or perhaps the whole week.

Via: Spoon & Tamago

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