What Keeps the Water in the Sea?
In this series, the imagery of water represents the unpredictable and ever-changing nature of the human experience. What Keeps the Water in the Sea? is a metaphor for the things that hold an individual together as they move through uncertainty. The bedrock of the earth and gravity keeps the water in the sea. Similarly, everyone chooses their foundation or means to help them navigate the unknown. Their personal “bedrock” could be an ideology, ritual, connection to a place, person, the divine, and so on.
I used tools such as a garden hose, large brooms and mops, buckets of water, and the force of motion to create abstract marks. I also let nature dictate what would happen to the paintings and left them out in the rain to create different textures on the canvas. This process was a playful one, where I investigated the physicality of paint and how to make it move like water.
The uncertainty of the creative process, the wild sea, and the year this series was created (2020) have one thing in common. Each leads us to think about the motivation that keeps us going when we don’t have a clear path forward. T.S. Eliot’s poem, Dry Salvages, helped to inspire some of these works and at the end of the poem he tells his reader to not say farewell but to “fare forward, voyager”. This body of work investigates the spirit of moving forward despite the uncertainties that we may encounter.