Page 9 - Art First: Joni Brenner: At the Still Point
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Lucid Stillness 2015

          the layers and changes. But, as much as each painting is an end,   ing considered the multiple meanings of the word, point: the first
          it is also a beginning, giving rise to new questions that demand   is the one we all would immediately engage with – the imaginary
          new  answers.  Satisfaction  is  there, but  always  partial,  the  end   mark of position in space or time (or both), the axis of the turning
          often less certain than certain.                     world, which itself does not move and yet which forms the pivot
            Other of the paintings’ names refer to the recognition of some   for the dance. But ‘point’ has a secondary meaning. It also means
          aspect of the sitter that has emerged and made itself felt during   the main or particular idea: the silent purpose of this body of work
          the making of the work. Brenner has spoken of how, unlike her   is far larger than the individual works themselves. In looking at the
          other sitters before, Hazelhurst does not engage in conversation.   works during the naming, Brenner wished that the portraits could
          The phrase that came to mind as she spoke was Yeats’s ‘compan-  always be together as a single, composite work. If one spends
          ionable silence’ – he is there, present, giving of himself perhaps   time looking slowly from one to the other, it is clear that, beyond
          as only a mate can. Lucid stillness (2015) is one such of these,   the calling of love for the sitter, the calling of love for the very act of
          where the sitter’s presence, his gravitas even is unmistakeable. In   making is also the point of the works, the intrinsic purpose.
          her Master’s thesis, Brenner spoke about the desire to reproduce   It would be remiss only to talk about the portraits, when
          the actual contours of the sitter’s face and body, and in a portrait   alongside them there are also some evocative new paintings in
          such as this, one sees it in the assured arcs of the collar bones, the   Brenner’s skull series. Her approach to exhibitions has been to
          confident rendering of neck and forehead, the bold brushmarks   view an upcoming exhibition as a moment of summation, as a
          of the hair. The ineradicable desire to capture the present – to   point of selection from the array of works produced since the pre-
          be conscious like that is nót to be in time – at least for that instant   vious one. While we were looking at the skulls on canvas, she
          squeezed between future and past which pervades these portraits,   commented on how an observation by South African artist Penny
          and Brenner’s work strives always to be at that conscious interstice   Siopis had made her rethink her approach to putting together an
          before its inescapable reduction into the past.      exhibition. Siopis, in her catalogue,  Time and Again,  (2015:
            I have so often used Eliot’s phrase, ‘the still point’, without hav-  251–252) writes:


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