“There’s an innocence to a painting
that we don’t want to touch w
that we don’t want to touch w
ith words.”
Etel Adnan
Etel Adnan
The Art world can become a very demanding place when it
decides it likes you, everyone wants a piece of the action as the philosopher/poet/painter
Etel Adnan has recently discovered. Three
years ago at dOCUMENTA(13) her abstract
landscapes were discovered and since then she has had exhibitions in New York
museums and galleries, London galleries and Doha’s Mathaf: Arab Museum
of Modern Art.
And the stress of being pulled in so many directions at once
is starting to take its toll. Adan told the Wall
Street Journal that she is considering taking a break from painting, as she
said “It’s as if I can’t see color anymore.”
Adnan took up painting in her mid 30’s as an adjunct to her
teaching and writing. As she explained to an Artsy
editor “My writing and my painting started
totally independently. I studied literature and philosophy at three different
universities, and never went to art school. When I was teaching in a small
college in California, in 1959 exactly, the head of the art department
encouraged me to paint, as I was teaching Philosophy of Art (among other
courses), and she said, “How can one teach about art without practicing it?” In
a short while after I drew on small pieces of paper, then painting on small
pieces of linden practically picked up from the floor, she decided that I was a
painter. The two practices have remained independent, although on leporellos I
write poems that I mix with inks and watercolors, but when I do it I still
function as a painter.”
In an environment that is
usually enthralled by the big and shiny Adnan is somewhat of an enigma with her
small semi abstract and abstract paintings that often feature her beloved Mount
Tamalpais. As she says “Mount
Tamalpais, in the north of San Francisco, has been something like the pole of
my life, for half a century now. But I don’t paint it exclusively. Some of my
works are purely abstract, some make one think of nature without showing a
landscape, some are related to that part of California where I spent most of my
life. There is more to a painting than what the painter thinks she or he is
doing, and more than what a viewer will see. It’s endless, that’s what makes it
what we call art.”
Adnan’s current self-titled
exhibition is on show at the Irish
Museum of Modern Art until the 13th of September.
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