Please welcome Cheri Vause as she shares how art inspires her
work….
The Persistence
of Memory
The surrealist artist Salvador Dali painted an unusual
image and titled it, The Persistence of
Memory. The landscape is cold and stark, and yet it has an element of
warmth because of the warm shades of paint. Clocks are draped or strewn about
over objects, like a branch or a cut stone, some looking melted into
place, others set gently on the ground. All the hands are at differing times, and it elicits a unique mood when you gaze upon it, or contemplate its meanings.
place, others set gently on the ground. All the hands are at differing times, and it elicits a unique mood when you gaze upon it, or contemplate its meanings.
In my recollection of the first time I saw it, I wondered
about each image within the theme, turning it over in my mind, trying to
understand it, then, taking it in as a whole. Yet, it seemed disjointed to me,
the individual images fixed in time strange, one not having anything in common
with the other. But isn't that the nature of memory, to fix on a sight, sound,
or smell, and sometimes the most profound ones, a feeling? Perhaps because I
was young, I couldn't account for my odd thoughts, for I was still learning
about symbolism, about dreams, and art. Today, I see it with a greater clarity.
The painting asks many questions, but the one I keep thinking is, Why is it that our memories are too often
tied to things that seem to be of no value? Or are odd, unrelated moments in time? But then, are they? These
are the very things that impress us, mark our character, that have an intrinsic
value to help shape us into who we are to become.
I love using a work of art in my novels, and I like to
give the piece a life of its own, to lend an art piece meaning to my characters
and within the storyline. Sometimes it's the classic MacGuffin, someone in the
story pursuing it with vigour, but the painting has nothing to do with the main
plot point. And sometimes it's the core, that seed bearing centre of my story,
gathering momentum and greater meaning than even the characters themselves,
such as The Portrait of Lilith, my horror story presently in edit, and
causing me to wrestle with my editor. Throughout my stories I've used a variety
of artists from Magritte to Goya to Chagall, and some works that were painted
by artists who don't exist in reality, only within my story, like the beautiful
haunting Lilith. The why of it is because I love art and it's so much a part of
my life. I write what I know, and sometimes what I can glean from research, but
mostly from my heart. And while I'm in the creation process of devising an
intricate portion of a plot, visualising it step by step in my head, I find
certain memories creeping in and nagging at me, an image intruding, and it
makes me wonder why, that perhaps I should incorporate it, that it belongs in
the story.
Dali was right. Memory is persistent. Those moments are
draped in the time we experienced them, forever fixed like a fly in amber,
those hands never budging from their position. What he didn't say in this piece
is that we must learn to discipline our memory, as well as allowing it free
reign, to intrude into our writings, and hopefully give our work a greater
depth. As an author, I've had to organise, coax, and even flog memories
forward, but the ones that seemed to work were those persistent ones, the ones
that made me weep, or laugh, or feel uncomfortable. I write to change myself,
then present it to the world, hopefully changing it just a little. Each time I
confront those memories that make me feel uneasy, I find a truth about myself I
must face. Hemingway said a writer doesn't do very much, but sit down and
bleed. And it's those odd disjointed memories in my head that seem to make me
bleed the most. Does it make me a better writer? I can only hope so. All I can
do is put into words the images in my head, to create a world in words much
like the artists of the world, like Dali, paint them.
Cheri Vause ©2016
2 comments:
I saw this painting during a recent trip to New York (it's in MoMA) and was shocked at how tiny it is - maybe 12x18 inches. With all the fine detail in that small space you can really appreciate Dali's incredibly skilled draftsmanship.
Very intense observations. It makes me ask, "If I were to a choose a painting for my writing style, what would it be?" Maybe some futurist work or else Charles Sheeler (American Landscape).
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