Once
apon a time my dictionary fell open to the Morse code entry.
It had a tiny translation of the alphabet into the dots and
dashes. It reminded me of Boy Scouts and spies, of the railroads
early
western expansion, of dueling cryptologist in the theater
of world wars, the rhythmic fist signatures some retreating
Viet
Cong patrol. Morse code was the tom-tom drum of the industrial
revolution, and like all the obsolete tongues, falling on
hard times and deaf ears. I started painting these dots and
dashes
into knobby grid-like landscapes recounting in the Morse
code the memories and stories of people in my life. Juggling
the dots
and dashes into a nests of colors and punch drunk patterns
I paint my memories of the ones who raised me, loved me, in
a language
meant to be heard, not seen. Like a P.O.W. tapping out news
to an empty cell as the turnkey laughs I accept that the original
text is lost, slowly encrypted out of my control with the
constant
layering of revised intrusions. Where the drama of somber
and prime colors in rigid or hapless designs sets the tone
of the
narrative. In the end I am left with an undecipherable painting
of colors and pattern, conveying to the viewer that hidden
here, in the mystery of code, is the story of a life hopefully
well
lived. I strive for a painting that makes amends for forgetting
and spitting at its elders, that rises face first out of
the mud carrying a limp and bruise in every incontinent brush
stroke
and color.
Link: www.scottystevenson.com