Layby: how some of the best art collections in the world have been made.
The lovely boys, from a long time ago
It is such an honour, when someone trusts you enough to open up in front of you. Let’s you see inside.
The lovely boys, on my lounge wall.
I made this photograph in 1991. It hung in my mother’s house for a coupla decades. I’ve just hung it in my lounge.
I love this photograph.
I called it The Lovely Boys because they were my flatmate’s sons best friends, and they were wild, and lovely.
This photograph, it reminds me where I started from.
I was 21 and heavily influenced by Richard Avedon and Diane Arbus.
My favourite thing about it - apart from the dirty beauty of the boys - is the spit on the lip of the boy on the right. As a portrait photographer for over two decades, I was always looking for someone’s beauty, but as well I was looking for that extra thing within an image that couldn’t be constructed. Like the spit on the lip of the boy.
I’ve begun to miss people’s faces and what I saw there.
Maybe it’s because for the first time in about thirty years, I’m living on my own. Maybe it’s the deep connection I generally formed with my portrait subjects that I miss.
It is such an honour, when someone trusts you enough to open up in front of you. Let’s you see inside.
The lovely boys, closeup of print. 2018
See ya later
And so, the original “it’s beautiful here at the edge” has sold. It’s off to Nelson on Monday.
It’s new owner, B, has children and so I worked with my framer to come up with a solution to make it kid-proof and now it has a double frame and kick-ass museum glass. God it looks good
It's beautiful here at the edge, 2018 [original] with my workroom in the background.
And so, the original “it’s beautiful here at the edge” has sold. It’s off to Nelson on Monday.
It’s new owner, B, has children and so I worked with my framer to come up with a solution to make it kid-proof and now it has a double frame and kick-ass museum glass. God it looks good.
I told B that if she hadn’t already bought it, I may have kept it for myself… you can see every imperfect mark through the high quality glass and I love it.
Anyways, I’ve spent this arvo saying goodbye to it before I packaged it… I did weird things like take photos of it with me and in various positions. Yep, I am quite fcking odd…
Me and my artwork...
Then I packaged it... including hand-sewing corners onto it to protect the frame… Got all Rapunzel and pricked my finger and while I was sewing thought just how very lucky I am to be living this artist’s life. I actually get to spend time hand-sewing a corner in my favourite red-thread :-).
Check out the blood...
The last photo in this sequence is the end result of the the packaging… and it hasn’t even got the box on it yet! Safe to say this artwork is wrapped fairly well…
I’m going to miss having this artwork around but I’m also so pleased it’s found such good home. Thanks B, for deciding it was right for your family. And you might want to allow yourself a fair bit of time for the unwrapping. LOL.
A damn fine morning
http://www.fleurwickes.co.nz/studio-prints-2011-2017/its-beautiful-here-at-the-edge-2017
Been feeling sick as a dog for two days. Bad headache, shivery then hot. You know how a bad cold goes.
Dragged myself out of bed this morning and into my workroom. I was rewarded by seeing the most beautiful light hitting this artwork.
Not only that, two lovely women came to pick up the print they’d bought of this artwork. They’d bought one for their neighbour, too. J and S brought their neighbour to my place and she had no idea why she was here until I showed her this artwork hanging on the wall and said, this is the gift they’ve bought you. L was overwhelmed and I got tears in my eyes.
It was so lovely to witness the friendship between the three women.
There is NOTHING like the friendship between women. The strength and comfort and understanding and love and safety within it makes the world feel like such damn fine place.
Amazingly enough, buoyed by the lovely interaction this morning, I hardly feel sick at all now… although I may be crawling back to bed this afternoon, lol.
A new perspective
I’ve been doing a helluva lot of thinking lately - thinking about the shape I want to be in now, the shape of my work and life and love.
You know those times where the possibilities seem endless and you think you could just up and change everything.
I’ve been frustrated and lonely and wobbly and not feeling strongly my self, and looking everywhere but inside for the solution. Thinking a new man or a new home or a new studio or a new town might be the solution.
The last few days it’s dawned on me that I like my life pretty much as it is here in this beautiful small wee gentle place. My life is quiet and deeply felt and slowly unfolding at a pace which feels good to me. I’m grieving and living and loving and laughing. Sometimes in the dark, sometimes in the light.
I’m determined to find what’s beautiful in the righthererightnow rather than imagining that perfect life over the rainbow and giving up everything I have built to reach for something that’s not even real. There is no perfect life. No greener grass. You can leave and travel and go somewhere new and have the best new romance, but the thing is you always take your self with you, and all the difficult parts you don’t like eventually show themselves. Once again.
Your self is the thing you gotta get square with.
Forget Everest. Turning and looking inside yourself, prepared to face what you see there, that’s biggest challenge of all. And where the most wildly freeing change can occur.
And so, here I am this morning, rearranging my front room, continuing on at my snail’s pace, pushing my work and self forward each and every day. I didn’t leave town, I didn’t get a big studio or a new home. Instead I brought an old lightbox I did a few years ago out of storage. Setup a new table I can draw on, watch the river and the world go by from. It’s beautiful isn’t it. And it didn’t cost a cent.
I’m in exactly the same place but I feel like I’ve moved a thousand miles from the stuckness I’ve been in for weeks.
Fuck . Perspective is everything.
http://www.fleurwickes.co.nz/studio-prints-2011-2017/something-beautiful-i-found-it-here-blackboard-2015
IT’S A KIND OF LOVE SONG, 2018 [for you, N]
It's a kind of love song, 2018 [for you, N] // detail
I completed this painting this morning.
Well, it’s more of a drawing in paint than a “painting” in the conventional sense of the word.
Seen in entirety, and in the light of the world rather than a screen, it is delicate and quiet, just like my feelings about this beautiful moment in time are. It’s taken me two years to make a bit of work that fit the feelings I have for this, that suits the memory.
The words go like this:
When we stand
together
your hips
meeting mine
my fingertips gently
in the groove your spine makes
your hands flat
at the small of my back
when we stand up like that
together in the sunshine
it draws everything that’s important
between our two bodies close
it’s a kind of love song.
I’ve used the words “it’s a kind of love song” before. In an artwork for my mother, as the title of the show I did for her. In that artwork, the words had so much sadness wrapped up in them, because jesus christ when someone is dying you feel your love for them like a song but equally keenly feel the loss so dark and heavy.
This time, in this artwork, the words are light and gentle because standing in that sunshine with him that particular day was just one of those moments I don’t think I’ll ever forget it was so beautiful. Thanks, N, for those years we had. I don’t miss you anymore but damn the memories are good.
A new season
I have been working really hard, not sleeping well at night. It's fairly par for the course at this time of getting an exhibition mounted [yup, a private view opens in four weeks]. My head is whirring non-stop with ideas and to-do lists and I find it difficult to stop my bloody brain. I'm normally such a great sleeper, sigh.
On the other hand, man am I getting stuff done! It feels good to be focussed so intently, to feel like it's all going to come together in the end.
I have been working really hard, not sleeping well at night. It's fairly par for the course at this time of getting an exhibition mounted [yup, a private view opens in four weeks]. My head is whirring non-stop with ideas and to-do lists and I find it difficult to stop my bloody brain. I'm normally such a great sleeper, sigh.
On the other hand, man am I getting stuff done! It feels good to be focussed so intently, to feel like it's all going to come together in the end.
Today I've been thinking about Mum. About how during the years of her sickness, I really had the brakes on with my work because I know myself well and knew I couldn't manage a big workload as well as manage my own emotional fallout.
I remember well the day I got the news she was terminal. I was sitting working in the studio of my dreams that I'd only just rented, the studio I'd waited so long to have. I heard the news on the phone and felt my world crumble. From then on my work and that studio just kinda crumbled too and my work/life took a path the last couple of years I didn't quite expect.
I'm not saying I haven't done work for the last couple of years. My god, I have! I just mean the focus of my life has really been my son, and coping with the idea of losing her. As a result my life's been quite a lot smaller than I had imagined it would be. Work took a big backseat in terms of priorities. And you know what, I'm pleased it did.
I'm glad I took the time to focus on Mum. To be with her when I could, to process my own loss and grieve and sleep and cry when I needed to. There is nothing more important to me than the people I love, and that includes my work and any ambitions I might have for it.
It's five months since she passed. I think of her every day, I know she's with me always. In the early hours of this morning I put a pillow behind my back and pretended it was her cuddling me, even though she hasn't really done that since I was a child. It was a comfort for my tears.
But I was saying to a friend this morning that I feel like I've turned a corner in this sadness, got renewed drive and energy for my work. I've no longer got part of my heart wondering when she would leave me. She already has.
It's so very good to be feeling this new energy. I feel a lightness, and a kind of steely determination to do my work, and this new show. I feel my focus sharp and clear.
None of us know what life brings, eh. On the day this photograph was taken, that beautiful couple sure didn't know what the sixty years they had together would hold.
All I can say is that today I feel alive. Aligned. Awake. I'm hurting less, laughing more. I'm hopeful that a new happier season in my life has begun.
And that, my friends, is good enough for me.
These are our days
These are our days [let's live them fiercely, love]
These are our days [let's live them fiercely, love], in situ at F's house [Photo by FL, used with permission]
I've been asking for people to send me in shots of artwork they've bought off me - because I love seeing my work in people's homes, and I love how people buy my work for such different reasons and are such a wide variety of people. Plus my work seems to really come alive once it's got a place in someone's home [and heart], and I love to see it loved in a domestic setting.
This morning the lovely FL from Wellington sent in this gorgeous picture of a wee card I did a few years ago as part of a project I did for a year called the Fleur Wickes Monthly Papers.
When opened the message and saw what she'd sent through, the words really hit me.
These are our days
let's live them
fiercely, love.
Yes, I thought, these are indeed OUR days. Let's LIVE them.
Those of us who are still here with our hearts beating have a responsibility to make the most of the hours we have. To find ways to feel truly and properly alive. To live this life awake.
Getting this photograph first thing this morning made me feel awake alright.
I cried when I saw it because it reminded me of how my mother fought for three years every single day to stay alive because she loved us and we were what mattered to her and we needed her still. It hurt to think of Mum and her dying and her leaving and the gap she's left in me. It hurt like hell. But you know the other I felt when looked at these words? All of a sudden I understood that it's okay to be happy again. She'd want that. She'd want me to be happy. It fact it's all she ever really wanted for me my whole life. I cried again.
I love it how receiving this photograph opened my heart up. I love it how I cried.
If you choose to live this life fierce and alive - and I do - you get given the remarkable gift of being able to really feel. But mate, feeling so keenly hurts just as often as it gives you pleasure. One is inextricable from the other. But I tell you, it is so worth it. Every damn roller coaster minute.
Thanks, FL, for sending this beautiful photograph through. And thanks for being such supporter of my work over these long years. It means so much to me.
Start from where you are
Drew this on my desk this morning.
I'm about to start serious work on two projects I'm very nervous about. One's a commission, one's an exhibition. Both are going to push me to the limit, both are going to take me well out of my comfort zone.
Start from where you are, written on my desk. 23 January 2018
Drew this on my desk this morning.
I'm about to start serious work on two projects I'm very nervous about. One's a commission, one's an exhibition. Both are going to push me to the limit, both are going to take me well out of my comfort zone.
Around about this time in any project that matters to me, I find myself wanting to dive under my duvet... I get the im-too-scared-to-start vibe going on in my head. Lucky for me I've had loads of experience of this kind of sick gulping feeling, and know after nearly thirty years of working that it's usually a good sign, the yuk sicky feeling in my throat. Because it means I'm moving into new territory, pushing myself to go to places artistically that I've never been. Taking yourself to the edge of new horizons always pays off.
But how, how how to start? How the fck to begin when I so fcking scared?
It's simple.
Start from where you are.
That's all you ever need to do. All you ever can do, really.
Start from where you are, put one foot in front of the other, and see where you end up.
I can tell you right now that despite my brave words, right now I've got a pounding headache, a tight throat and a fast-beating heart. But fck it, giving in to fear never got me anywhere.
Here goes... 4,3,2,1 and I'm off.
Let's see what the next six weeks brings...
Aliveness
God I feel good today. I feel awake and alive.
God I feel good today. I feel awake and alive.
Slept in, got up, put my favourite t-shirt and raggy denim skirt and steelcap boots on, went to my favourite cafe, got two lattes to go, took them home and drank them one after the other. Sat on my green velvet couch, looked around me, saw quiet beauty everywhere.
Yesterday I had a long walk under whispering trees, excellent conversation, delicious kisses, then an evening laying with my dear old sighing dog watching Last Tango in Hallifax until midnight, crying occasionally because I missed Mum.
I'm seeing my wise friend for dinner tonight, and until then, for the rest of the day, I have the happy circumstance of being entirely in my own company. Bliss.
Contributing to the reasons I've got this good-day- feeling is the fact that I've had the luxury of a marvelously slow start to 2018.
Unusually for me, I didn't spend New Year's Eve & New Year's Day setting goals. Instead, I spent the entire day alone, took great pleasure in the solitude, let one day roll into the next with no real plan. I've realised goal-setting doesn't work for me. It's always been more like a stick to beat myself with, a measure for what I didn't get done. Screw that.
My son has been off having a great time with his father for the holidays, so I have had these last weeks off being a mum as well having time off from the making of artwork and a living. I've been able to relax properly. Time has stretched to my own schedule. I have eaten and slept and and cried for Mum and binge-watched tv as I've wanted to, without needing to have thought to anyone else's needs. The hours and days have felt like this liquid fluid thing playing to my tune instead of a hard and fast 9-5. It feels like a year since the first of January. There is something very special about once and while giving yourself permission to attend to your own self first and foremost. It brings you back to life in a way nothing else can.
The other day I listened to the marvelous Esther Perel on Debbie Millman's Design Matters podcast. Esther was talking of trauma, in this case of her parents and their friends who had survived Auschwitz. She said "there are two types of people; the people who did not die, and the people who came back to life. There is a world of difference between not being dead, and being alive."
Yes, I thought. YES. Aliveness.
I do believe I have decided that aliveness is my word for the year.
Here, my url-friends, are a few things that in the first few days of 2018, have made me feel aliveness.
And yes, I am aware that grammatically, that previous sentence sux.
Ain't it great to do what the fck you like with words.
What pleasure I take.
1. Walking a beautiful shoreline alone on a New Year's morning.
Taking a delicious dip, lying down in the shallows, feeling the water across my body. Not giving a flying fck about my hairstyle. Loving the feeling of sand gotten right in everywhere.
2. Recovering my workroom chair
Used my old dressing gown which has given me at least a decade of comfort, and upon which I had sewn the words chin-up which my mother always said to me. I made a photograph of those stitched words for the exhibition I made for my mother. Now I get to sit in this chair while I write, and have her words at my back. It's an appropriate place for them, since she's always had my back. That ain't changed even though she's gone. I miss her every day but you know what, it's okay to feel good again. To feel happy. She wants that for me.
3. Furry pink and delightful green against a wispy sky
Nah, I haven't been anywhere on my holiday, I've just been hanging out with myself at home. Ten doors down from me and look what I saw. It doesn't take any other resource except for your own self to feel a few seconds of pleasure right down deep in your bones. Breathing deeply and opening your eyes wide so you can see how beautiful this world is will usually do the trick.
4. A road-trip with my wise friend
Where we saw this girl jumping a chain fence into a rough ocean, with a seabird flying above. Then had lemon verbena tea at the home of a delightful woman I'd never met before and she gave me a green glass jar all the way from her home in Switzerland just because I told her it was beautiful.
5. 47 years old and standing in front of a mirror, looking at myself naked
And very much liking the body I see.
I love my hips especially. They are very wide, like my shoulders are. I always think I have a pacific-type body, rounded and well-shaped like those women Gaugin made all his paintings of, except I'm pale instead of brown.
For the last five years, I have paid increasing attention to my body. I have found joy in the sweat and grind of training, of truly being in my body for a few hours a week. I love feeling strong and fit. I love having muscles and being able to use them. I pay attention also to what I put in my body, and who I share it with. R.E.S.P.E.C.T. Just like Aretha said.
The very best thing about my body though, well beyond its nice looks, is that for the first time in my life, my body truly feels like my own.
Those of you who have experienced your body being treated as if it is someone elses will understand what I mean.
The day I took this photograph, I looked at my scars and skin and breasts and legs and hands and face and felt quite fortunate and lucky, that I could stand there and bear to look.
I know so many women who hide from their own bodies, ashamed. Who have bought into the story that no body is good enough, especially not their own.
What I see these days when I look in the mirror is a responsive sensitive body which has given me such deep and precious pleasure. A body which has carried me through the deepest of grief, the blackest of days.
Over the years, this body of mine has experienced trauma no body should ever have to. On the other side of that mofo coin, I have cried many times at the joy my body has shown me. Light and shadow, mate. Light and shadow.
Like it says in this photo, it is beautiful here. Right here in my body. Right down deep.
I went for a walk and I heard a man singing
I went to the most beautiful party last night. I lay on the floor on a cushion beside a kind man I didn't know, looking up at a grapevine-covered conservatory ceiling wound through with tiny lights, while listening to another man with a fairytale hat and a beautiful voice singing the kind of sad songs that make you feel lit up inside.
I went to the most beautiful party last night. I lay on the floor on a cushion beside a kind man I didn't know, looking up at a grapevine-covered conservatory ceiling wound through with tiny lights, while listening to another man with a fairytale hat and a beautiful voice singing the kind of sad songs that make you feel lit up inside.
I woke up feeling wide open, like the interesting people I spent time with last night made the walls I've been using to protect myself tumble down. It's not an easy space to find myself in. With the walls gone, I notice how grey I am right now. How I'm kind of blunted and the world is watercolour, not bright blue like I'm used to. I guess my brain is doing that sensible thing and shutting me down a little so I can deal with our first christmas without her. I figure the colour will return in its own good time. Just gotta keep going with this process. Can't go over it, can't go under it. Gotta go through it.
I went for a walk this morning. As I crossed over to the riverside, I passed a man. He had headphones on, singing. Beautifully. He smiled at me as we crossed paths. His singing - and the singing of the tui in the tree above my head - cut through my sadness, reminded me that there is always loveliness in this world, if you choose to look for it.
Two men singing in the space of few hours. How delightful.
In what's likely to be the last post of 2017, I want to thank you for bearing with me for the last few months. IRL, have had my close friends and family of course, but this writing I do helps me in a way I can't explain. The particular kind of grieving you do around death is new to me, and I'm finding my way through it blindly, with no particular grace. I feel fortunate to be able to write some of it out into the ether like this.
I went for a walk just before, wrapped in her jacket, having first attached the wee teapot in the photograph to my necklace with a dodgy bit of thin black wire. I wanted her as near to me as I could get this morning.
My parents went on a world trip when I was ten. My Mum bought a sterling silver charm bracelet to remember their travelling days by. This teapot is from that bracelet. It had fallen off and Mum gave it to me a couple of months before she died. I played with it as a child - it would be on her wrist and I'd be playing with the rotating enamel interior, fascinated by the movement in something so tiny. It seemed like the earth turning.
I know the holiday season is a lovely one, full of love and family and friends and fat men in red bringing new treasure to children. But no matter how happy we are, how much love we have, we all have our shadows trailing along behind us, seen most strongly when the light is brightest.
Grief for the love we've lost, for the love we never had in the first place. All those knife-sharp hurts that come just from the act of living.
That's why it's so important to treasure what we have that is good and lovely.
Even if right now that's only the sound of a man singing beautifully as you walk on by.
Word/
feeling/
entry/
drawing.
Every day,
2025.