ARTSENSE Acrylics Collection. n# 18.
The lace-maker.
Acrylic on paper glued on hard wooden panel. Size: 17" x
22" (43 x 59 cm)
Lace-makers nowadays live in China, India or other countries paying
less than half a dollar an hour. For sure, some housewives in the
Western world still practice lace-making, but it's not to put bread on
the table.
I spent on average 50 hours on each of my acrylic ARTSENSE serie and I
feel some kind of sympathy for modern lace-makers. My situation is
different for sure, I'm not obliged to sell out to eat this evening.
But if I was in that kind of a situation, I'm not sure that I would
even reach the level of wages that are given to MacDonald clerks.
Art is a dead-end economic proposition in rational capitalist
societies.
It was already the case in Van Gogh's time and it seems not having
gotten better since, it even seems that it got worse with the
absorption of absolutely everyone and everything in the sphere of
influence of the logic of capital. Van Gogh could survive in his time
in Provence, there was always a subsistence farmer to give him a piece
of bread, some cheese, a glass of red wine and he always found to sleep
on the hay in the barn. There was always a country doctor to accept to
help him out. All that is gone now. There are no subsistence farmers
anymore in any part of the Western world, they have been taken over by
industrial agribusiness concerns and doctors are speeding from one
customer to another if it is not the customer who has to speed to go to
the doctor's office. Nowhere in the Western world can one find a
remaining open soul ready to share with a stranger. Accumulation of
material possessions freed the genie of fear, fear to lose...
I experienced the last years of subsistence farming in Belgium in the
fifties. Farmers walking behind the horses pulling their plows had all
the time in the world. When someone appeared in sight, they stopped the
horses and went for a talk. I rediscovered an identical relationship
with Chinese farmers, they have all the time in the world, they observe
what's going on around them, they like to chat and to share what is on
the table. They joke and laugh, they seem a lot more happy than the
people who have to pay monthly installments for what they already
consumed.
Our societies experience extreme difficulties at recognizing artworks.
They are in search of merchandises that generate immediate financial
returns. Nowadays, the nearest to a visual art work is an interior
design merchandise that is known, accepted and integrated in the
collective psyche. A Van Gogh print for example. One hundred and twenty
years after his death critics, gallerists, curators and other art
specialists eventually came to recognize what the guy brought to the
visual art scene of his time but let us never forget that during his
life he never could sell one painting. So today Van Gogh's colors,
lines and vision are accepted and prints of his works can be seen
everywhere. His original oils are out of price, they are worth a lot
more than their weight in gold... What an incredible misery!