JWH painting updates

Speaking visually by JW Harrington

This month, I retired from my university position, receiving the title Professor Emeritus.  My goal now is to become a person, rather than an occupation, living rather than preparing for a next step.

There is so much and yet, so little to say about our manifold crises.  A friend called me recently, overwrought with emotion, and said “the most important things cannot be said, but must be shown.”  A philosopher, he cited the final proposition in Ludwig Wittgenstein’s Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus:  “Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent.”  But the Tractatus was concerned with the limits of logic expressed through verbal language, and specifically omitted other forms of expression.  I’m glad I’ve now moved my focus from words to visual expression, for I have no words for the longstanding conditions that manifest themselves in our current crises.

 I spent the spring indoors, refashioning my classes for remote instruction, grading, painting, working on university issues, and grading some more.  My painting focused on interior scenes – walls, ceilings, and floors.  Here’s a photo of some of those Divoc paintings, all on 12”x 12” wood panels. 

Interior Divocs.jpg

Here’s another set of Divoc panels, which replace rectilinear forms and perspective for two curves.  An insider note for newsletter readers:  all four of these compositions are based on the same two curves in the same relationship with each other.

Hanging four Divocs.jpg

Finally, another panel, this one depicting a surreal landscape I call Red Giant.  I take some solace from the fact that despite pestilence, genocide, and ecological destruction, the earth itself will remain for another 4 billion years, until our sun expands to become a red giant, likely engulfing the three innermost planets, including our own. 

Red Giant, acrylic on hardwood panel, 12” x 12” x 1.5”

Red Giant, acrylic on hardwood panel, 12” x 12” x 1.5”

I’ll end this message with hopes that you find ways to use the current crises to grow and to help us all thrive.

and then our world changed by JW Harrington

Note that I didn’t title this “and then the world changed.”  Most elements of our physical world have not changed – the buildings and mountains still stand, birds and insects move about and reproduce, and we certainly still have weather.  Continuity abounds.

John and I are fine and grateful.  I do most of my academic work and my painting at home anyway, and I have always cooked most of our meals.  I’ve reformatted my courses to be accessed entirely through a “learning management system,” but the fine-tuning and grading continues apace.   

I’ve started a series of paintings in my current favorite format – smooth 12”x 12” hardwood panels, cradled atop a 1½“ frame, so they present well without any further framing.  The series is Dovic, and generally entails straight-sided figures in muted colors, with the shape and shade of the figures implying spatial relationships. The minimalist approach seems in keeping with these fluid, shape-changing times.

"Twixt Cup and Lip" at Gallery 110 by JW Harrington

From Wednesday 5 February through Saturday 29 February, Seattle’s Gallery 110  (110 Third Ave. S) features its annual juried show.  This year’s show is “twixt cup and lip,” which was an oft-repeated phrase by my mother’s mother, and the reason I often catch myself saying “I’m going to…” and change it to “I plan to…”

Amanda Donnan, curator at the Frye Art Museum, served as the juror for the show, which includes one of my pieces, The Impossibility of Knowing (17) . Gallery 110 also has a few of my small paintings on wood panels.

The gallery is open Thursday - Saturday from 11AM - 6PM. See the show during Pioneer Square’s First Thursday Artwalk on 6 February, or join me there from 5-7PM on 7 February, for a reception and prize announcements! Free parking is available on both nights.

 

Works at UW Tower by JW Harrington

Just after New Year’s, I delivered 19 paintings to the University of Washington Tower (4333 Brooklyn Avenue NE, the main administrative building) in Seattle’s University District: 13 in The Impossibility of Knowing series and 6 paintings on 12”x 12” panels. Facilities staffers Alfonso Escobar and Hector Pardo did a great job of hanging them; we all had a good time in the process. (I have a good time any time someone else does the hanging.) Jennafur Williams, chair of the Tower’s art committee, has been really helpful throughout.

The paintings are up through March; on Wednesday 22 January, I’ll be there for a reception from 4:30 - 6:30pm. In anticipation of that, Peter N. Kelley of UW News interviewed me and published a fun piece in our University press.

Hope some of you can see the show!