Late
one evening last week I sat in a small room I had rented for the night in the
historic National Arts Club just off Gramercy Park. The venerable old club is
one of my favorite stops in New York City and I treasure my membership there.
It is filled with paintings, antique furniture, and a remarkable collection of
artifacts both decorative and exotic---it's a magical place. No matter how
often I visit, it has the effect of stepping through the wardrobe, similar to a
C.S. Lewis novel, into another world removed from the modern city just outside
it's interior.
This
night, I had stopped for a brief stay as I traveled back home from an exciting
journey to Paris. As the clock
struck 11:00 pm, I sat comfortably nestled in an old armchair near a well-worn
fireplace, the room dimly lit, and the air scented with a combination of stale
chimney smoke and a newly varnished wood floor. Across from me--- in a twin
chair to my own--- sat my mentor, hero, and friend Everett Raymond Kinstler.
America's preeminent painter of portraits had dropped by for a visit and for
the last two hours we had shared stories of clients, travels, and our favorite
topic of all---painting.
Nearly
synonymous with the National Arts Club, Mr. Kinstler has lived and worked there
for more than six decades. As usual, throughout the conversation I was hanging
on his every word. I listened intently to the stories and wisdom of a man
who has made art his life, now enjoying his seventieth year as a full time
artist. Yes, 70 years!
It is
never lost on me how incredibly lucky I am, "blessed" really (a word
Mr. Kinstler prefers over "luck") to spend time with this amazingly talented man and to have been learning "at the feet" of a master for
the past 20 years.
As we
sat and talked, I began to reflect on a recent portrait I had painted of
him. I was making one more pass,
one more series of observations before I counted my picture officially
finished. As is normal for me, I began to
worry if I had captured something of the man on canvas. I had felt this
way before on many portraits, but it was especially true of this one. Not
only because I was portraying a person who means so much to me both personally
and professionally, but also simply because his personality is so very large,
so intense, so focused that my small 24"x30" canvas simply paled in
comparison even before I placed the first brush stroke on it’s surface.
Unaware
that my mind had turned for a moment to despair about my picture of him, Mr.
Kinstler began to reflect on his own work in the studio and the restlessness that he
felt over a recent, nearly completed portrait. He had been pushing
himself, digging and digging at the painting as he attempted to wring out every
ounce of his skill and powers of observation onto the canvas. The last sitting with the client was to take place in the
studio the following morning and he was re-evaluating his specific goals for
the portrait and his last opportunity to review the subject from life.
It
suddenly occurred to me that this was the state of most artists no matter how
long they had been working! After more than two thousand commissioned
portraits and countless other pictures in his lifetime as an artist, Mr.
Kinstler, like all of us, is still looking for something more. It
reminded me of a quote I had read on my trip across the Atlantic only a few
days before in the wonderful Hart-Davis biography of Phillip de Laszo. At
that moment, I pulled out the book from my bag, found the passage, and read the
following lines aloud to my great mentor.
As I read, he gazed at the floor and shook his head slowly in
agreement.
Writing
in her diary, Mrs. de Laszlo recorded in part:
"Yesterday
he {Phillip de Laszlo} finished the portrait of the Speaker. He is not quite
pleased with it. His art makes him suffer so, really much more than I
realise....Always this dissatisfaction.... If a picture is still in progress,
one is always hopeful. How little I can do to help an artist to suffer less...
he would not be so great [an artist) if he suffered less."
No
matter how long I work at my portrait of Mr. Kinstler, or any of my pictures
for that matter, I realize I am never going to be completely
"satisfied". In the end, it is actually quite healthy--- this
state of unrest. Only those who feel contentment with their work will
cease to learn and grow. As the great illustrator James Montgomery Flagg
famously said, "Once you have arrived, you have no place else to
go!".
It was
getting very late and it was time for Mr. Kinstler to return to his studio
apartment and get some well-deserved rest. His packed schedule began
early the following morning and would have stressed any artist half his age.
As we said goodnight we gave each other a solid hug complete with
affirming pats on the back. At
that very moment I decided my picture was finished or as Robert Henri said, I
had found "a good place to stop." The portrait is a memory, a record
of this time and this place in my life as an artist and a protégé of Everett
Raymond Kinstler.
As I
watched him slowly walk down the hall, I knew that tomorrow we'd both go at it
again with every picture in our studio. We will step into the ring, put
on the gloves and duke it out with each new canvas. I smiled as one of my favorite Kinstler scenes came to mind---performed
for me many times before---with a pronounced stagger in my direction, leaning
onto my nearest shoulder and saying with a gasp and a grin... "What round
is it champ?!!".
Michael
Shane Neal, Artist
15 May
2012
Giclee prints on canvas of Mr. Kinstler's portrait by Michael Shane Neal will be available for sale by the Portrait Society of America. The limited edition prints will initially be offered to participants at the 2012 Art of the Portrait Conference in Philadelphia, Pa. along with a DVD video presentation of the start of the portrait recorded live on stage in 2011. Order information coming later this week!
Giclee prints on canvas of Mr. Kinstler's portrait by Michael Shane Neal will be available for sale by the Portrait Society of America. The limited edition prints will initially be offered to participants at the 2012 Art of the Portrait Conference in Philadelphia, Pa. along with a DVD video presentation of the start of the portrait recorded live on stage in 2011. Order information coming later this week!
2 comments:
Shane - Last year in Atlanta at the Portrait Society event, I was leaving the Hyatt and saw you and Mr. Kinstler leaving. It was the early evening and I could see your backs and your arm on his elbow as you were helping him maneuver the sidewalk and shrubbery. I struggled to get my phone from my purse to take a picture, but missed the moment. It's one I'll never forget, though. I loved your demonstration last year so much and the way you two bantered back and forth as you painted. I was just so happy to be there. What an incredible friendship and mentorship! You both are treasures in the art world! Blessing to you both!
Inspiring, Shane. Thanks for taking the time to share these impressions. We all benefit from Mr. Kinstler's contributions when those closest to him care enough to share personal insights. I'm forwarding this to other artists, whom I know will appreciate it as much as I do. Best. Candace.
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