The Bay Of Villefranche-sur-Mer

The bay of the historical Cote d’Azur town of Villefranche-sur-Mer has a special place in my heart. I have spent a vast amount of time over the last 12 years in this part of the world and the bay has always been of great importance to me. The bay, coupled with the climate and the light, have been a great source of fuel and inspiration to both my art and my imagination. It has given me so much in this respect. 

My painting is a homage and gesture of gratitude to this unique source of inspiration. When I painted the bay of Villefranche-sur-Mer, I did so in my own style with a special emphasis on capturing the spirit and essence of this place. In the same way that Vincent Van Gogh brought alive the spirit, electricity and subtle colours in his famous landscape paintings created in the towns of Arles and Saint-Remy-de-Provence in the south of France, I strove to also achieve this in this painting. 

In this painting, I wanted to execute the brilliance, clarity and different hues of blue of the bay with all the myriad of different boats and yachts that seem to have an almost permanent presence in the bay, especially in the summer season. And this brings a new energy and dynamism to the bay. The surrounding hills also have their own special energy. They strongly complement the bay and in the realms of colour alone, have more earthy, rustic and primordial hues. They support and ground the allure and glamour of the bay. 

Text by NIcholas Peart

(c)All Rights Reserved

27th July 2024

Image: Nicholas Peart, “The Bay Of Villefranche-sur-Mer”, oil on canvas

Painting As Visual Transcendental Poetry From The Eternal Source

I am sharing my artist statement, which I published in August 2019. I think it still holds up well today and is by far the best and clearest analysis of my paintings. To view my paintings, please click on the following link, which will direct you to them on my artist website. I have written and published several art related articles here on Latitude Post, including an earlier piece on my paintings from June 2016 entitled Spiritual Coding And Self Discovery: An Exploration Of My PaintingsNicholas Peart, 26th July 2024

When I paint, I paint as if I were writing poetry. Yet poetry not restricted by the straitjacket of subject matter. My paintings are not bound by events or issues, especially, those that are social or political in nature. Neither are they limited or boxed by identity. To be clear on the latter, I mean identity confined by race, nation, social class, culture etc. More broadly, they are not bound by time and space. Therefore, I refer to my paintings as visual transcendental poems, since the essence of my paintings is not limited by the fundamental universal boundaries of time and space.  

​This essence is completely free; like stars, or fragments of matter in the universe. Irrespective of whether it’s alive or dead, visible or invisible. This essence exists eternally, in alternating degrees of energy states. The carcasses of my paintings – the canvases and applied paint – are not eternal, but the essence of my paintings – the underlying spirit – is very much eternal. The paintings themselves are no different to physical living organisms in their permanence. And that’s fine. But at the very least, they are brief records of this eternal and unbreakable essence.

​My paintings are mirrors into my soul. Each painting I create is a tangible visual tapestry of my unconscious, or as I prefer to refer to this, the eternal source. And this eternal source pins down more clearly this essence I’ve been trying to explain. When I paint, I paint my feelings that originate from this eternal source. The ritual of painting enables me to materialise all my mental complexities. Each painting is a material, tangible document of these intangible and invisible complexities; whether they are my dreams or nightmares, feelings of happiness or sadness, moments of joy or pain, occasional senses of longing or nostalgia regressions, all my experiences, all my emotional complexities, my idealism, my romanticism, and so forth. The origin of those complexities derives from the true spiritual essence of my being, the eternal source.

When I compose written poems, just as my paintings, their essence originates from the eternal source. My best written poems originate when I am enveloped in a powerful and indescribable realm of magic, as if I am wading consciously through a fleeting secret world. And when I am unexpectedly thrown back down to a more superficial plain, then the written poems lose their power and connection to the eternal source. Whenever I attempt to write poetry in this more mono-dimensional vacuum, the results always feel forced and disconnected.

​My paintings share the same essence with my written poems, but written poems are constructed with written words. With words, I can also project this eternal essence, yet when I paint, I can project and translate this essence in a freer and more expansive way. Via my paintings, one is presented with the opportunity to be immersed into this eternal essence of my spiritual being, which is permanent and will outlive the carcass of my physical being.  

​In my most recent paintings, which I’ve been working on since 2018, I’ve been experimenting more with colour. In my older series of paintings, the eternal source never left me. The composition and energy of my older paintings has always been strongly connected to this eternal source yet there was less sensitivity towards colour. I have always been aware of colour, but not to the same degree as I am currently aware and sensitive to it, so much so that I view it with more innocent and less jaded and tired eyes. My current approach to colour is akin to that of a child seeing the moon for the very first time and trying to seize it.

​With my latest paintings I like to view and approach my newfound appreciation of colour as a brand new journey through light and as I paint I hope to continue to crystalize this light on the canvas.

By Nicholas Peart

(c)All Rights Reserved

Originally written and published in August 2019

Image: The Great Feast In The Parallel Cosmos (2019) by Nicholas Peart

REVIEW: Don Van Vliet “Standing On One Hand”

This is the moment I’ve been waiting for; the chance to finally see in the flesh the paintings of Don Van Vliet, better known as Captain Beefheart. I’ve been a fan of the music of Captain Beefheart for over 20 years. He was a one off with an incredibly singular vision and a style that was completely his own, without competition. And this is what attracted me to him; I’d never heard anything like him before. 

Through discovering and immersing myself in his music I soon also learnt about his paintings. Quite often when great musicians also produce (or in most cases “dabble in”) paintings, sculptures, etc, their works tend to fall short next to their songs. Bob Dylan is one of the greatest songwriters of all time; a timeless poet and a genius with words. Yet when I look at his drawings, I don’t detect anything special. They are far from bad drawings, but they don’t match his power as a towering wordsmith. David Bowie is another example. Even though he had an impressive and deep understanding of art, his paintings pale next to his magnificent body of music. 

What makes the Captain different is that his paintings are on par if not even better than his magical and highly distinct music. They are not divorced or different from his music. All together, along with his own unique and idiosyncratic being, they are a total work of art. Projecting the same rhythms, grooves and off beat time signatures that I hear on Trout Mask Replica. And this is why I love his paintings. When he stopped making music in the early 1980s, he devoted himself fully to painting. 

Looking at the paintings on display at the Michael Werner gallery in London, created in the 1980s and 1990s, one can conclude that his own vision, code and core never deserted him. When I focus and meditate on his paintings, I unearth so much. I see animal, human and other organism spirits of the infinite and asymmetric world. I also see a multitude of symbols each with their own irregular shapes and DNA. In the painting, Crow Dance A Panther, I see a celestial dog-like creature in a state of drifting metamorphosis with a raven head and an object in the form of a chair forming from its mouth in a weightless state of perpetual cosmic motion. The paint marks and elements don’t seem random. They each all have their own connection and balance in the composition. Paint is often applied thickly. The heavy white impasto marks have a physicality resembling frozen smoke and other forms of invisible moving matter; as if the paintings are always moving beyond their earthly boundaries.

The large painting, China Pig, has elements in it that remind me of some of the earliest cave art paintings found in South Africa and Australia. At the bottom of the painting painted in yellow is an extraterrestrial-like supernatural animal creation, a lively golden eagle bunny type of creature, riding on top of what appears to resemble a warthog or the Captain’s china pig! Elsewhere in the painting are pools of energy in non-stop flux; semi-buried faces, the dead, the living, the living dead, dynamic bodies and spirits, a myriad of colliding landslide landscapes; remnants of our dreams and nightmares without any filters. The golden eagle bunny keeps riding on its china pig through all these forever changes. 

The adjacent Feather Times a Feather painting appears to be on the same wavelength as China Pig and the next destination. The horizon and world of that painting is where the golden eagle bunny on its china pig feel like they should be heading towards. It’s the next stop in their no-return voyage. Feather Times a Feather is the Captain’s very own Garden Of Earthly Delights; hues of pink, yellow, orange, blue and green all representing symbols, cosmic fragments and morphing spirits, dominate the vacuum above and appear, perhaps deceptively, relatively gentle and calm. Below this area in the painting things are more unsettling. A distressed face bent below an ominous black crow symbol. An awakening crimson warrior to the right shows no mercy. In the far bottom left corner is a stagnant but ecstatically demented grey evil space cadet scarecrow figure – like a highly toxic deep sea creature. This painting is a veritable tripped out minefield. Pleasure and decay traps mingle hand in hand. 

In the painting Red Cloud Monkey, there are three towering mountain-like beings cunningly statuesque, but not too dissimilar to active volcanoes, they can erupt without warning. Meanwhile a frantic red figure features like a nimble devil, restless and insecure, in the bottom of the painting. In the night next to the volcanic trio, the figure is doomed. The Captain channels and strengthens this energy by his gift of creating bold hunks of space and discordant brush strokes. The black, yellow and green empty quarters are applied to the canvas furiously. Their primitive physicality is palpable. 

The other paintings that draw me in are the ones that have an afterlife kind of eternal calm; albeit a collapsing and destructive calm. I see this is the paintings, The Drazy Hoops #2, and Luxury Rack.  In the former painting, I see an extinct and dead frozen-in-amber type of creature with prominent and luminous yellow and purple gases forming from it’s behind well after it’s long gone. The yellow paint is applied generously to the canvas making it appear like it’s in constant motion. One can almost smell and taste these noxious gases. In Luxury Rack there is a beaming plankton type of silence. The Captain knows where to find the gold in the trenches of the deepest oceans. He doesn’t need a submarine. There’s no need for him to embark on some intrepid physical adventure or to travel to Mars. For it’s all present and well illuminated in his limitless and fertile mind. 

By Nicholas Peart

11th January 2024

(c)All Rights Reserved

Image: Don Van Vliet Feather Times A Feather 1987

Don Van Vliet: Standing On One Hand is on display at the Michael Werner Gallery London until 17th February 2024.

Mona Lisa Madness At The Louvre

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Mona Lisa frenzy at the Louvre museum, Paris

 

I don’t think I’ve seen anything else quite like this in any other art museum I’ve been to around the world. The Mona Lisa by Leonardo Da Vinci is arguably the most iconic work of art in the world and the most well known. Perhaps the only other work by an old master with an iconic status almost equal to (but not quite of the same magnitude of) the Mona Lisa is The Girl With The Pearl Earing by the Dutch painter Johanes Vermeer.

It is actually quite rare that a random member of the general public knows the title of a work of art by a famous artist. Everyone has heard of Picasso but how many can name the title of one of his many works? The same for Andy Warhol, the same for Jackson Pollock, Damien Hirst etc.

I am quite fascinated by the monumental popularity of the Mona Lisa. The stampede to even just catch a glimpse of this painting is akin to trying to catch a glimpse of a famous rockstar doing a signing at some small record store. As much as I wanted to get up close to see the Mona Lisa, I eventually gave up. Instead I channelled my energies into immersing myself into the nearby epic painting entitled The Cornation Of The Virgin by the Italian master Tintoretto.

But why is the Mona Lisa the most iconic painting in the world? Firstly its provonence. Since it was completed in 1519, it has been in the hands of French kings and emperors before finally settling in the Louvre. The genesis though of its current global popularity can be traced back to an 1867 essay on Leonardo by the English essayist and art critic Walter Pater where he dissected and wrote very passionately and poetically about the Mona Lisa (or La Gionconda as it was known back then). Pater’s essay is not only one of the most famous essays on any single piece of art, at the time it was seen as quite groundbreaking especially since art criticism was a fairly new concept back then. Since then the painting has been caught in the crossfire of a series of high profile events. In 1911 it was stolen from the Louvre. Picasso and his friend the French poet Guillaume Appolinaire (who once demanded that the Louvre be ‘burnt down’) were seen as two potential suspects. Eventually the thief was revealed to be a Louvre employee at the time, Vincenzo Peruggia. In 1956, part of the painting was destroyed when someone hurled acid at it. Then it was vandalised again in 1974 when a woman sprayed red paint on it. The painting is now kept behind bullet proof glass as can be seen in the photo above this post.

The painting has also been appropriated by other artists. Most famously by the father of conceptual art, Marcel Duchamp, who added a mustache to the painting in his 1919 piece ‘L.H.O.O.Q’. Later famous artists like Salvador Dali and Andy Warhol have also appropriated the painting in their work.

The truth is that the Mona Lisa has the greatest legacy out of any other single work of art ever created hence the unprecedented fascination in it. This painting would go for a whopping sum of money if it were ever released on the open market at auction in either Sotherby’s or Christies. The record paid so far for a single work of art to date is $300 million in September 2015 for the painting ‘Interchange’ by the abstract expressionist painter Willem de Kooning. I predict that if the Mona Lisa were ever auctioned (perish the thought) it would breach the billion dollar mark. It is that important and as a financial ‘security’ or ‘instrument’; tremendously desirable.

As for me, I like Da Vinci’s work but I’ve always been more interested in his mind, his ideas and ways of working than the actual finished pieces of art. His sensitivity to nature and the world as well his acute understanding of the anatomy of the human body have always impressed me.

His thinking was incredibly ahead of his time. His dreaming and vision had no boundaries. I love his sketches. Some of his skeches contain many of his inventions – one looking like a modern day helicopter. Incredible to think that these were concocted over half a millennium ago.

 

by Nicholas Peart

22nd September 2016

(All rights reserved)

Spiritual Coding and Self Discovery: An Exploration Of My Paintings

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Magma Matter Execution (2012) by Nicholas Peart

 

I am often asked by people to explain my paintings. ‘What are they about?’ is a common question. For a long time I found it difficult to translate the meaning of my paintings into words since the process is very personal and involves deep introspection. When people did ask the question I invariably gave them the reply, ‘My feelings. I paint my feelings’. This is one of the most succinct and sincere ways of explaining the meaning of my paintings yet I often felt that such a response just didn’t wash with some people.

All of my inspiration comes from within; through journeys into the deep chambers of my eternal, spiritual and immortal being. This is the part of me that is really me. The truth. In Hinduism and Buddhism this part of the self is known as atman. Yet often I feel very separated from this as I am immersed in the external environment of this life; a player on a stage where much of the cast has been programmed to be increasingly separated from their true being.

When I am immersed in the deep meditative process of painting, I feel increasingly connected with my true eternal being. It almost feels like it’s not me painting but my spirit. In my most inspired and transcendental moments of the painting process it is my eternal spirit which guides me. In these moments there is no chasm between my conscious and my unconscious. Being in this state makes me think of some of the earliest prehistoric civilisations. Back then, the world was a much less complex and complicated place to the one it is today. Especially the time before words. I think of the San rock art paintings found across parts of Southern Africa and Aboriginal rock art paintings from Australia. The San people of Southern Africa and the Aboriginal people of Australia fascinate me greatly since their culture goes back tens of thousands of years. But what’s more, their culture is profoundly spiritual and this can be seen clearly in their art; their oneness with the world and nature, and their high levels of awareness. In many ways it’s their lives and methods of working which inspire me just as much as the work itself, because of their deep spirituality.

 

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San rock art – Cederberg, South Africa

 

One thing that the San and Aboriginal people have in common is that much of their land is vast desert. For many people such a terrain is inhospitable and lonely; especially if one is very separated from themselves. In this state of being such a person would very quickly find the desert intolerable and isolating. It’s almost like the desert richly rewards those who are spiritually connected (and by extension at one with it) and makes life a living hell for those who are detached from their eternal soul. With a higher state of consciousness the desert begins to truly reveal itself. In a sense my paintings are like deserts, which only become alive as one becomes more connected with themselves. And this is sometimes a great problem I encounter as to some people my paintings appear quite alien and foreign to them. I fully expect this and it does not offend me when people openly tell me that they don’t understand them. My paintings are interactions with the spiritual world and these interactions take place during the painting process. One could then argue that in order to get to the core of my work it would be essential to observe me as I paint. You can do this and you can even do this without me being aware of being observed. But to really understand the processes would involve fully connecting with all levels of my consciousness.

 

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Wadjina Aboriginal rock art – Kimberly, Australia

 

I find that the paintings of the American artist Don Van Vleit (better known as Captain Beefheart) have much in common with the art of those early prehistoric civilisations. What’s also interesting is that when Van Vleit retired from making music and dedicated himself fully to painting in the early 1980s, he lived in a remote part of Northern California. And by immersing oneself in his work one can see the deep connection. Like the San and Aboriginal people, his true spiritual home was in nature. The place where his true being could glow white hot. Take him out of this environment and plop him in a studio in New York, London or Berlin, he would be like a flower without water.

 

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                                        Crepe And Black Lamps (1986) by Don Van Vliet

 

I like to call my painting technique Spiritual Coding. In the digital world in which we currently live the word coding is used a lot. This of course refers to computer programming. A language for this age. And when I look at my paintings I am also using my own language. A language created through interacting with my ‘inner being’ and this I call Spiritual Coding. My paintings are in many ways remnants of this. Tangible photographs almost of my eternal spirit. Although they don’t capture the processes of my work they are residue formations of intense spiritual journeying and internal searching.

 

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A Winter In Crowland (2008) by Nicholas Peart

 

Remaining on the subject of Spiritual Coding, symbols are important in my paintings. The American artist Philip Guston created his own unique symbols, language and world. Even if his world was very bleak and one of hardcore isolation. A dystopian spirituality. But through connecting with his paintings one can see that he embraced this insurmountable at-sea pain and isolation. Works offering no hope or salvation. For the majority of people (including myself) such a level of alienation would be intolerable and very difficult to embrace and accept. But it’s amazing how secure Guston seems to be in this vacuum. And that’s what makes his paintings very striking, visceral and distinct. They are pure undiluted archives of raw pain. I think of Van Gogh and how, even though he was often in the grip of profound sadness and anxiety, he produced some of the most beautiful paintings of all time. Yet Guston’s paintings are anything but beautiful. He was not looking to turn pain into beauty. He was more interested in turning pain into more pain. The painter Francis Bacon is the closest artist to Guston in this respect. Merciless insatiable masochists. Perhaps there is absolutely nothing of the spiritual in Guston’s work and he was always an enigma to himself but his comfort in the most acute thresholds of pain and loneliness is epic.

 

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Painter’s Form II (1978) by Philip Guston

 

Luck and chance play enormous roles in my paintings. My soul brothers here are the painters Jackson Pollock and Francis Bacon. And like them I never make sketches or engage in preliminary studies. And why would I? After all this is completely against my way of working and, more significantly, my raison d’être. I can’t plan what I am going to paint. If luck and chance weren’t integral parts of the painting process, I don’t think I would ever paint. Uncertainty is extremely important.

 

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                                                                           Jackson Pollock 

 

The work of both Jackson Pollock and Francis Bacon have their own unique and idiosyncratic qualities yet what unites them is their spontaneity. But there’s a more important quality which unites them and that is their energy. Wild, untamed, animal energy. Free of even the most minute inhibition. The primal way Pollock dripped paint and the ferocious and feral way Bacon attacked the canvas. Almost like a serial axe murderer taking a swing at his next victim. I can relate to this (not the axe murderer) since in much of my work when I first apply paint to the canvas either with a brush or a palate knife I literally lunge at it and let my inner self do the work. And sometimes I get so exhausted by the end of this process I need to rest.

 

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                                                                            Francis Bacon

 

I am still on my journey of self discovery. And as explained earlier in the text, I am just as conditioned and influenced by my external environment as any other being yet when I am painting I am far away from this external environment since painting enables me to get closer to the truth; of myself and the world

 

by Nicholas Peart

23rd May 2016

(All rights reserved)

 

My work can be found by visiting my website; http://www.nicholaspeart.com