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LOVE WALKS NAKED
Cruel Tasmania, an island
of secrets, threats, lies; of an often pitiless exploitation of both its
own land and its own people, has wounded Richard Wastell into an
extraordinary response—a series of beautiful paintings and drawings
inspired by the ongoing clearfelling of Tasmania’s old growth forests.
For in Tasmania forest unlike
any other in the world continues to be levelled to the ground to produce
woodchips. After being industrially logged, what remains is napalmed from
the air to produce fires of such intense ferocity that the resultant
fireballs resemble atomic cloud mushrooms. Into the plains of ash that are
left are planted monocultural plantations, maintained by an intense regime
of poisoning and fertilising that has seen protected native animals killed
in their hundreds of thousands, water supplies poisoned, and the spectre
of a raft of illnesses draughting in the wake of these horrendous
practices.
To maintain such monstrosity, to
evade the ever growing public anger, the woodchipping industry has had to
exercise an ever stronger control over ever more aspects of Tasmanian
life. Both major parties in Tasmania, and much of the Tasmanian media
frequently give the appearance of existing only as a client of the
woodchippers. State interest and those of this industry are now so
thoroughly identified as identical that anyone questioning the
woodchipping industry’s actions is attacked by leading government figures
as a traitor to Tasmania. And not only the forest has been destroyed by
this industry. Its poison has seeped into every aspect of Tasmanian life:
jobs are threatened, careers destroyed, people driven to leave.
All this is background, but
necessary background to these paintings. After firebombing, what was once
forest is transformed into an extraordinary ruined landscape, which, if
not of conventional sylvan beauty, still has about it a spectacular power
rarely seen outside of the battlefields of great wars. Parts of the Styx
valley, which has been the particular inspiration for these paintings,
brings to mind images of Passchendale and the Somme, with their mud and
ash and charred and twisted trees.
Though they will have forever
after in Tasmania an undeniably political dimension, these are anything
but political paintings. They are intensely spiritual paintings by a
painter whose close technique becomes ever more capable of conveying an
enormous emotion.
And perhaps this is because the
particular agony of Tasmania is in the end neither environmental nor
political but spiritual, and it is merely one end, one highly visible end,
of a continuum that extends from the muddy ash of the Styx valley to the
blood spattered walls of Baghdad and the torture cells of Guantanamo Bay.
Could it be for this reason that
in these paintings of clearfelled forest coupes, there can be divined
images of torment and destruction of wider resonance? That in these
charred man ferns and twisted regnans can be sensed not only the bodies of
the slain of our new age of terror, but the guiding spirit of this age—the
horrific consequence of having allowed ourselves to capitulate to lies
promulgated by the powerful?
You can daily read much about
this world in the newspapers, follow its vicissitudes and horrors on a
hundred cable news programs and a thousand radio broadcast and an infinite
number of podcasts. But if you wish to know the truth about our times, I
doubt you could do little better than look at these extraordinary
paintings.
I don’t mean to say that such
grand ideas formed the ambition of this exhibition, which was conceived to
deal with seemingly limited matters: landscapes, textures, shapes, form,
composition. Painterly matters. But they do form its considerable
achievement. Somehow, as good art always does, these paintings have
escaped the artist’s necessarily narrow intentions.
There is about them the pain of
enormous rupture, the sense of an irredeemable despair. No solace ought be
taken from either the exhibition’s ironic title (echoing the famous Paul
Nash painting of the same name depicting a World War I battlefield) , nor
such paintings as 'Who Pays the
Ferryman? (Styx Valley, 2006)’
where a few hard waterferns are a promising green amidst the bituminous
black that so dominates this exhibition. This is Tasmania, not Europe. The
great forests are gone, and they will not return, and nor will the intense
human response we had to such places. Everything hereafter will be ordered
and imaginable, paintable and representable in a way that those wild
places never were, and we will be less.
These paintings represent
something new in Australian painting: they mark the point where we finally
acknowledged our connection with the land in the most profound way
possible: by acknowledging the spiritual cost of its destruction. Though
it is beyond my capacity to pass judgement on this exhibition, I suspect
that in the future it will come to be regarded as a landmark in Australian
painting in its rendering of the desolation with which our era feels
itself beset.
These paintings’ beguiling
simplicity belies their profound artistic and intellectual influences.
The Entombment for example, takes both its name and composition from
Caravaggio’s painting, as does The Betrayal. In the former, instead
of Christ we have a charred regnans embraced by other incinerated trees.
As Caravaggio brought a new
subject to art, the dirty and dissolute street people of his time, and
imbued the beggars and prostitutes and urchins with a radiant humanity, so
does Richard Wastell give the charred manferns and regnans and celery tops
an unexpected majesty.
There is a certain odd courage
in all this, a refusal to seek solace in any fashionable depictions. This
is steely eyed observation of the world as it is. The painstaking
technique is evident in each finely rendered charcoal square, every
charred lichen circle, in the determination to discover the world as it
is, to strip it back to its fundamental truths through rendering of the
most basic elements: mud, ash, smoke, charcoal.
As an exhibition this does not
have the reassuring sense of the familiar. Nor does it offer the
reassurance landscapes so often have, no matter how different the
aesthetic. But we live in a world that has deliberately shed itself of
almost everything that reminds people of their impermanence, their
fragility, their capacity and need for transcendence. Nothing is left to
balance the horror of life. Power and money are what are to be admired as
water vanishes, as seas rise, as forests fall, as life atrophies: except
when it can be bought and consumed, beauty is to be despised and the
contemplation of the world decreed as a sickness, depression, maladies.
Power and money are to be all
that remains, and politics is what ensures this is so. Politics places man
at the centre of life, and in permanent opposition to the universe. Love,
to the contrary, fills man with the universe. The history of love is a
record of the need to assert the idea of love against the force of
history. Art, at its best, is the chronicle of that history.
Richard Wastell’s subject for
this exhibition was forlorn, but still he painted these pictures. Why? It
seems not uncoincidental that as he was painting these pictures his
partner, Rosemary, was expecting their first child. Perhaps as he embarked
on the ultimate gamble of this life, that of being a parent, he sensed
that love is no guarantee. Maybe it is this that lends the paintings their
terrible and despairing force, for against the extraordinary resources
greed and power can now galvanise, against the lies and horror which we
must now daily swallow as bread, this collective portrayal of a universal,
inescapable agony seems only the more oppressive for the quality of its
execution.
And yet this would not be the
whole truth. The act of creative courage these paintings represent, the
fact of their existence, suggests an opposite force at work in their
making. The poet Rilke observed that true works of art can not be
apprehended through criticism, but only through love, because that is the
impulse out of which they arise. There is a naked truth about these
paintings, and if I had to give a name to this exhibition, I would call it
‘Love Walks Naked.’
For love is never enough, but it
is all we have.
RICHARD FLANAGAN, June 2006.
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