‘Vacancy in Glass’
To a palace made Of wind To a palace whose towers Are pillars of fire by day To an opal palace In the sky’s zenith heart The bird of pale air Flies In a swift white line On black space A brushstroke Signifying absence
Roger Gilbert-Lecomte (1907 – 1943) In ‘Black Mirror: The Selected Poems of Roger Gilbert-Lecomte’
‘These paintings came to me from, or as, an accident: suddenly the forms and shapes of hastily cleaning up a mess of paint on a surface suggested something that wasn’t a figure or a face, but rather both, or abstract. This is how the first ‘Fire by Days’ images arose. I had no intention to make this picture. It was an accident.’
‘As Paul Virilio once said, “Sublimation of the hunt…the course of painting imposes a cleared surface, a sublimation of war”. The speed of the action demanded a pure surface in which I found the perfect image. To roll in complete freedom and depth in the desert; this is far more exciting than passing through a delimited course.’
‘I wanted to then duplicate the pure power of the accident and through this image, multiply its freedom. By repeating the elements of the raw creation of a “disaster” and failing to keep it from unintentional “learned” gestures, I succeeded at arriving at something that violently pushed itself between figuration and abstraction, pushing through to make itself completely free. This type of freedom in painting only arrives for mere seconds, or rather for an immeasurable amount of time, but reveals infinite perspective.’
‘In these paintings, the moment – that immeasurable amount of time while the artist is allowed to hold “the foot of God” – produces an image that carries itself through the surface, through its depth to open itself to the next work that will also attempt to stretch “the moment” of peace in constant war’.
Rita Ackermann July 2012