Agnes Martin whose work is being seen right now at LACMA is the subject of several review articles here and abroad. Her art which is a combination of hand penciled grid lines and the subtle use of color in and out of these lineal restrictions produces a calm, a peace of god that passeth all understanding, as the good book says. Nothing much to look at, my husband says, but yet I can look for hours, gaze, wordlessly, speechless, slowly surrendering tot her spell. She was known to be a woman who pursued a silent and lonely life by choice. Silence is, as they say, golden. I have trouble with it having been raised in a household where polite conversation was routinely imposed upon us whenever we children were together or with grownup. I was one of that kids who commandeered the best lunch table at school with my ferocious chatter. I married a woman for whom talking was an effort, an architect, like Agnes Martin more at home with grids and planes, silent reminders. She sat with a drink at parties in our house with her slight smile and generally saying nothing. I sometimes grew angry "at her lack of cooperation." Now she is dead but first we were divorced. Her mother said to me "You took your laughter away." I used to feel triumphant at that observation but later on I wondered if my ex-wife cared. She must have blissed out in all that quiet. Later I joined forces with a man who as I slowly perceived disliked company and talking as much as she. We have been together twenty six years now, actually married in a church when it became legal. We live in Sarasota where we have almost no friends--we just don't seem to have anything in common. I mean we are culture vultures, me pretentious high culture, Richard middlebrow culture, but those we meet don't seem to expand their horizons o reading and writing and playing going and music listening so we don't connect. Richard is in ecstacy at that thought of another day without speaking to anyone when I go up to Manhattan where I have lots of friends and we talk and talk. When I am in Sarasota I am trying to learn the peace of god that comes with monastic silence. It is a great revelation to see that French documentary film about the monks of Chartreuse I believe who have taken a vow of silence. It is a kind of wilful experience of living death. Blessed Quiet, a new way for me.
I will be extra special wordless until the First of July as we fly off this morning and return the end of June.
I think I would like Agnes Martin's work. It reminds me of some of Sol LeWitt's work at Mass MOCA, have you seen it? http://massmoca.org/sol-lewitt/
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