In 1988 I made my first
round painting. Working on a suite titled Nine Mysteries, I was challenged by
the problem of creating a successful composition to express the ideas of mysteries
on a vertical rectangle. The corners were so troublesome! My stretcher maker brought
me a scrap, a round panel left over from making a larger tondo (a Renaissance
term for round panel.) All my problems vanished when I began working on that first
circle. I have never looked back.
Many artists will tell you how terrible the tondo tends to be. Not me. When I
began working on this magic form it felt as though Id arrived home.
Yet round forms are rare enough in the art world to cause wonderment. Why is round
so radical? Roundness
reminds us of our remote origins. It reattaches us to the whole world. The round
form complements and rhymes with architectural and spatial forms. It creates synergy
in a room, contributing not only to the flow of chi but also to the balance of
energy. The tondo form is presentational rather than re-presentational. It presents
qualities that underlie the visible world, those things of profound, essential
importance. From my perspective,
the Western tradition of the rectangle reaches back to physical references. During
the Renaissance, artists began to work less on site-specific work such as frescoed
ceilings and mosaic applied to walls between architectural frameworks and began
to produce work that was designed with its own independent support. Frames to
support a canvas surface were necessarily based on right angled construction.
Windows are framed in this same manner and much has been written about the space
of Renaissance painting its depth and accuracy according to this view
out the window.
A few artists created tondo work for specific sections of altar panels. Many hybrid
rectangular works were also produced as parts of altars, works with an arched
or pointed top. Rose windows continued to be produced to solve the empty architectural
space at the apex of the triangle in cathedral facades. Very few artists have
embraced the tondo form for its own aesthetic qualities, separate from architectural
necessity. My work is
centered on the souls experience in the physical plane. Over time I have
produced a large body of work that reflects the experience of being in the world
a reinterpretation of the landscape tradition. My newer works use gilding
extensively. Working with silver, 23k gold, copper and aluminum leaf, I uncovered
attributes of the material unavailable in oil paint. Gold leaf possesses a trans-substantial
quality it is at once very physical and also as ephemeral as the wind.
Several years ago I created a small group of paintings called Entropy Undone.
They were ruminations on transformation: what happens at a point of transformation?
What does physical transformation look and feel like? The title refers to our
world our entropic, physical plane. Things tend to degenerate in our world,
yet there are moments when this degeneration stops or is reversed, when something
transforms. All these works stem from that idea imagining the point when
entropy becomes undone. Embedded
as we are in this physical world, we often see in a limited, literal sense. From
the time I was a youngster Ive experienced being in the world not just as
a sensory excitation, but also as a spiritual-emotional-thinking-feeling being-ness.
When I am in the world in this way, I understand a wide, deep sense of connection.
It is, to a certain degree, ineffable. Poets have spent their lives trying to
articulate this aliveness, and feeling that they failed to do so.*
For me, painting is the language that allows communication about this kind of
experience. And roundness allows the language to go narrow, to go deep, without
the distortion due to confusion with the physical coordinates of our world. The
circle is free from gravity, free from the associations of standing embedded in
a vertical rectangle, and free from the horizontal associations with the land
we live on. If there is such a thing, the tondo form is a telescopic bridge between
the heavens and our earth, between the visible and the invisible.
Over the past several years, roundness has begun to suffuse the design world.
Its visible in upholstery fabrics, floor coverings, furniture design. Round
mirrors have been around for a longer time as signature pieces. It is time for
the tondo to assert its special qualities and to be embraced as the powerful form
that it is. *
Czeslaw Milsoz, comments on this in his Nobel prize lecture of 1980.
-Karen Fitzgerald © 2008
See more of Karens
round work at www.Fitzgeraldart.com  Sparks
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