8.31.2011

Artwork: the breakdown



I have often said that I’m grateful that Gavin was an artist and that he left a concrete legacy — that he made a difference to literally thousands of people who look at a painting or drawing by him every single day. I say, it made it easier to throw out clothes like his old socks (although… he really did like his damn chinos). Because of the tons of artwork he created during his life time, I didn’t have trouble with which objects mattered to him or which ones would matter to me.

But that’s kind of a pile of garbage (as are many other things) now that I’m moving the last things out of his studio. Because when you get past the many layers of treasures that he created, there is still a lot of junk that was secondary. And even as great a genius as he was (Not really) (Gimme a break, I was married to him), it’s not worth saving every little thing he ever scribbled on. Except for some of it.

Let me give you a list of just a few of the categories of “stuff” and what has been their fate so far:
  • Actual artwork, large sizes: went to professional, climate-controlled, secure art storage facility.
  • Actual artwork, small sizes: moved to flat files which have been moved to my new home.
  • His notebooks, letters, and sketchbooks: to Smithsonian museum libraries for their collection of “papers of American artists,” in hopes someday someone will write about his work.
  • Sketches that were unbound, some rough, some finished, some with markings to help him enlarge them.
  • Artwork by his friends: some hangs in our home, some will be sold. This work falls into subcategories: pieces I really like that hung in our home, pieces I didn’t like much that hung in our home, pieces that didn’t hang in our home, pieces I have never seen; pieces by people I never met, pieces by friends that were in loving trade, pieces by friends that were “gifts” that might not have made it in a situation of natural selection, pieces by people I actively disliked. Pieces he bought during “good years.”
  • Art materials. Paint, not only the type he used. Turpentine. Half-dirty turpentine (fine for housepainting). Color pencils (a child of the 60s, he wouldn’t ever say “colored” pencils), boxes of broken conte crayons, soft pencils, hard pencils, china markers, 24 boxes of oil pastels that must have some story behind them. Most of all this went to the local college art department, whose 2 senior professors were his classmates there. Sheaves of luscious 100% cotton paper, pristine, wrapped up like nuns. FOR SALE!
  • Furniture. Tables made specifically for his work, the right size, unfinished plywood and 2x4s. Two “puzzle” desks he built from a pattern in Popular Mechanics 30 years ago. Shelves for tools. The dust from 500 punk rock and opera LPs that I sold long ago for $1 each.
  • Tools. Extra sets of screwdrivers (sets!? Who am I fooling.). Five hand saws. Thousands of nails and screws of the type no one ever needs. Extra brackets, nuts, clamps, and containers that I didn’t already claim for the new house. A compound miter box he felt obliged to buy when he was very, very ill.
  • Art-related tools. Matte cutter. Copy stand. Two lightboxes. A projector.
  • Empty frames. Frames with cracked glass. Replacement glass for frames that I don’t know where they are now. Frames that must be checked, lest a drawing is behind an old matt.
  • Slides of most of the work he created during his 30 years, which were scanned and stuck on Flickr. Slides that are snapshotty… will be tossed.
  • Snapshots. Includes snapshots that were source material for artwork, made and unmade. Snapshots that were “active,” on his desk, in the top drawer, for work that was finished in the past few years and for work he was contemplating. (Many are being scanned.) Family snapshots. Albums of family photographs, most of them without name or date information.
  • Books. Do not get me started on the damn books.
The last items to be removed from his empty studio — just yesterday — was a clutch of large drawings stashed in his drafting table (which I didn’t even know had a compartment). Some I’d seen before, some I hadn’t. Strange that items from the “valuable” category showed up long after empty frames and packing material had already been given away. Spookily enough, this group includes his piece for September 11, which I knew was SOMEWHERE around here. Right. On. Time, dear.

Clearing this out has taken forever, and called up a complicated tangle of emotions: I get only fog. There’s some justice seeing things go where they “ought.” The frustration of friends who don’t seem to care for relics of their own relationship with him. My anguish over deciding which papers to send to the museum, and which to recycle. (They’ll do no one any good in our attic).

(Yes, it would be a hell of a lot easier if I believed the house sale would actually CLOSE. But I'm in permanent skeptic mode after what I've been through this summer). 

There’s slight zeal in throwing out pieces that I know he wanted to destroy. One evening a few months before he died, he came upstairs saying, “some day I really need to burn some of those early paintings.” It was practically his only intimation that he knew he wouldn’t last forever. I found this batch behind the hot water heater (I’m pretty sure those are the ones he meant). But I felt a passive aggressive compulsion to photograph them before bending them up, as if I wouldn’t even let his ghost escape their primitive colors and compositions.

I had no such compunction tossing out oversized newsprint pads of figure drawings from college. Several large unsatisfying, unfinished paintings were figural too…. Figures were always his least successful pieces. Even when he cloaked them in allegory and myth and removed them into abstract or performance realms, no one really responded to them. (With one notable exception.)

There are literally crickets chirping among the oddments that remain, furniture that’s claimed but not picked up yet, my checklists and tools to bring home, some packing materials, and six identical empty frames.

And I’m oh, so tired.

9 comments:

Anne said...

Oh SupaFresh, I had such difficulty with this, I was so overwhelmed. I cannot even tell you. Although you are perhaps the only one who would understand.
I have it mostly resolved, but I still have some work to do.
Some day I really must find you and meet you..... (we have contacted each other before, my late husband was an artist also)

Supa Dupa Fresh said...

Anne, I always remember you! I have to say I wondered if this would resonate with ANYONE and look, you turned up. It's very emotional to me, but comes across cold to those who aren't surrounded with this particular odd type of responsibility/pleasure.

Yes, we MUST get together. Can you ever come here? We're just a few hours to the South.

X

Supa

Anne said...

Hi Supa,
Yes, I will. I always love a road trip!

Anne

Supa Dupa Fresh said...

And I HATE to drive!!! LOL

Jill Schacter said...

That sounds incredibly difficult! But thanks for the slide show; I loved looking at Gavin's work. Send some to me! :)

carolyn said...

Ohmygod, woman, you made me cry again, first thing in the morning - the miter saw - EXACTLY the kind of thing Jeff would have done. Did. In fact we have a $600 brand spankin new maple (and thus verrrry heavy) carving bench UPSTAIRS that he all prettily arranged with his carving tools and never, ever used.
But then I laughed a little bit - the paintings behind the water heater, and the books. DO NOT GET ME STARTED ON THE BOOKS.
Love you.

Michele Neff Hernandez said...

I love your list. It's like an accounting of the heart twisting closure that is accompanying the sale. Love to you.

Kim said...

I have become the archivist and historian for Brian's children as there is no one else to do it. He had an artistic legacy built out of sound waves and data bytes. I get you, honey. It is wonderous and hard and beautiful and sorrow-filled. Big love, mama.

Hira Animfefte said...

Please. Tell me about the books!
;)

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