Seeing

If people could see properly, and see whole, they would all be painters.
— Pierre Bonnard
Since childhood, I have longed to see the way the Tonalists saw; the way the Impressionists saw; the way the Ashcan and London and Pop painters saw.

Maybe it has something to do with the fact that I suffer high myopia.
By painting, I’m learning how hard it is to “see like a painter;” to see “properly and whole,” as Bonnard described it.
It’s really hard.
But not to see like a painter would disappoint me—and not to see at all would be insufferable.
That last fate befell the late painter Lennart Anderson, subject of Lennart Anderson: A Retrospective, now at the New York Studio School.
Anderson suffered macular degeneration, which left him virtually and legally blind in his seventies. But blindness didn’t deter the painter one bit.
As sight failed him, Anderson began to paint “fictions,” as art critic John Yau describes the artist’s later pieces.
As a young man, Anderson had studied with the tonal painter Edwin Dickinson, a member of Charles Hawthorne’s Provincetown School.
He’d learned from Dickinson to master subtle tonal shifts.
“One could draw a line of thinking and seeing from Hawthorne to Dickinson to Anderson,” Yau says, “a lineage that the art world seldom acknowledges.”
That thinking, as best summed up by Hawthorne, asserts that, “Anything under the sun is beautiful if you have the vision—it is the seeing of the thing that makes it so.”
Through his whole early career, Anderson strove to “see things,” to find all the beauty under the sun; and did so with noteworthy success.

But his breakthrough came when he lost his sight.
That’s when his paintings became ghostly, hovering images—pictures of floating objects nearly vaporized by light.
His is a highly myopic world where, as Yau puts it, “form and dissipation meet along the edges of one another.”
If you can’t get to his retrospective in New York by month’s end, you can learn more about Lennart Anderson here. And don’t miss this joyful video interview with the painter.
Hat Tip: Thanks go to my teacher Milena Spasic for introducing me to Anderson’s work.
Above: Beer Cans by Robert Francis James. Oil on fiberboard. 8 x 10 inches. Still Life with Lion Head Mask and Spider Plant by Lennart Anderson. Oil on canvas. 14 x 14 inches. Lettuce #3 by Lennart Anderson. Oil on board. 11 x 13 inches.
Below: Still Life with Lion Head and Artichoke by Lennart Anderson. Oil on canvas. 16 x 20 inches.

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