What goes on in the mind of the artist
I "met" Bill Savage on the internet through a friend in Hong Kong. She sent me a link to Bill´s horse related website - all about gifts for horse lovers - and said perhaps they might put my website link there too. I looked at the site and liked what I saw as it was obvious Bill really loved horses. I wrote to him and we have been corresponding some months now and I have been reading his interesting newsletter Nose-to-the-ground once a month. In one of those newsletters Bill wondered what goes on in the mind of a horse-artist when s/he paints and added "any ideas, Leena?" there. So I sat down and wrote him an answer. To my surprise he wanted to publish my letter on his website. I thought I´d better save it on my blog as well.
http://www.your-guide-to-gifts-for-horse-lovers.com/horse-artist-leena-pekkalainen.html
"I got to wondering if there were some parallels between communicating with and handling a horse and drawing or painting one. To ride a horse well you want to "go with the horse". I wonder if in some abstract way the artist does the same in drawing the animal to achieve the desired result.
In a recent newsletter I was wishing our loud that I could get into the head of one of our contemporary equine artists to understand what goes through their mind as they are creating their art. My wish was granted in Leena Pekkalainen's response which I'd like to share with you.
I've not altered her words with the exception of deleting one small phrase which in no way changes the message. I've also underlined several phrases which "jumped out" at me as I read her reply. I believe you will enjoy what Leena has written and, if you are a horse lover, relate to it."
I Start With The Eyes ......
Hmmm... What goes through my mind when I paint a horse... Tough one.
If I have the opportunity, I go and take my reference photos of the horse myself. At the same time I try to get to know him a bit better. Interact with him. Watch him move, how he reacts with his environment and with other horses. Listen to the owner when s/he tells me about the horse. This way I already have a hunch what I am trying to show in the picture.
If photographing the horse myself is not possible, I work from the photos given by the owner.
In this case I try to ask as many questions as possible about the horse. (Thank goodness this is not difficult as the horse-owners seem to love to talk about their wonderful horses - and I never get tired of listening/reading about their horses).
I mean if the horse is a chili-pepper by character there is no point in painting a calm kind creature, now is there? Now I do know that each and every horse is the best one in the world, of course, so I try to convey that in my portraits too.
But the actual painting process... it starts with the outline. At this stage the painting doesn´t really "talk to me" yet. I start with the eyes usually. When I get the horse looking at me, I get the feeling he is alive. That´s when the "conversation" with the painting begins.
What is left is actually a much deeper discussion conveyed on the canvas - that of the feelings, emotions. At this stage I almost feel like I am in the mind of the horse I am painting. I get fleeting horsey emotions, the horse feels like a presence in my mind. I get glimpses through his eyes. I enter a timeless place. I literally forget there is such a thing as time. It feels like something paints through me and I observe it with awe. "Wow - how did the brush/pastel do THAT?"
Nothing is more important than getting that noble creature out into the canvas. The tiniest little brushstroke is more important than a year´s wage for me. I keep my breath so the movements of my body wouldn´t disturb the brushstroke. The color hues in a horse´s body are more fascinating than those of an exotic flower. The glint in his eyes - well... that is everything. That is where the soul of the horse talks to the viewer. And I paint until my muscles cramp, but I don´t notice.
I think the difference comes from intuitively contacting the horse I am painting, and the sameness is the pouring through of the creative energy which simply waits to be let out. But first I need to get over the mundane everyday thoughts, to quiet my mind, and then when I am in a relaxed stage of mind, it can really come through. Other people meditate. I paint. That is my meditation. I really respect every horse I paint and don´t see them as simply "animals". I do not know why I was born this way but the magic of the horse has been with me always. Thank God for that.
The relationship between a human and a horse is the relationship of kindred spirits. A horse teaches us connection to our own emotions. And when we are connected to our own emotions we are connected to the source of all life. We enter that loving, joyful place of the soul that tells us we are all worthy of all the good things in this universe. The difference between us and the horse is that the horse lives in the knowledge of this, but we humans are trying to learn to believe in it. But what wonderful teachers we have in our horses. One day we too shall move from learning to believe into full knowledge. And if my paintings can remind the horse´s human even of a slight glimpse of this sacred connection, I have done my job well. It is kinda hard to try to put into words something that cannot really be described with words. But at least I tried.
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