Sketch Book for the Artist

(singke) #1
FIRST PORTRAIT
For sorre forgotten reason, the
hair of my first portrait was most
important. Eyelashes take up as
much of my attention as the head
itself. I now think this is a picture of
proximity, reflecting my experience
of looking closely at my father's
face. Even though it is made by
a toddler this image would be
recognizable to anyone.

On a particular afternoon in September 1974, at age two-and-


a-half, I was sitting with my mother. She gave me a notepad


and a red crayon and asked me to draw her "a picture of


Daddy." Until this day, I, like all toddlers, had happily


scribbled, enjoying the physical sensation of crayon on paper,


and the appearance of my strikes of colors, but I had never


yet attempted to figuratively picture my world. The image


above is what I gave back to my mother, and she kept it as


my first step beyond the delighted realms of scrawl.


MAKING OUR MARK


It seems reasonable to assume that we have engaged


in pictorial mark-making for as long as we have made


conscious use of our hands. In cave paintings like the


one opposite, we see our oldest surviving images, created


by societies of hunter-gatherers, who in their day-to-day


hardship made time to picture themselves and the animals


on which they depended. Cave art was not made for


decoration but as a fundamental part of life, an expression


of existence, power, and belonging to place.


WHERE


WE


BEGIN

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