Faucet Repair

29 June 2026

“Then” (1979) by Gregory Orr

I THEN

My parents and the parents of others were pillars of meat the sky's blue roof rested on. Around them grew flowers with stalks so thin they bent double with their own red weight, their blossoms brushed the dust.

2 THE CHANGE

All that summer a gray flotilla of clouds drifted above; clouds that had hauled up into themselves all earth's tears. Clarity of air. Each dusk I watched them lower their anchors into the parched fields: heavy glass statues of women.


27 June 2026

Clefs: a rewarding painting. Based on some tiny paper Earth lanterns I saw receding into Tyler's room from the staircase at our flat. Delicate duplicate planets hanging in the thick summer air, intermittently nudged by the wind from a fan out of sight at the other end of the room.

Ordinal data is a categorical, statistical data type where the variables have natural, ordered categories and the distances between the categories are not known.

I've been looking at a lot of Bellmer's drawings and prints again this week, specifically his engravings from his Mode d'Emploi (1967) portfolio. There's one particular piece from the seven in that collection—a small one (roughly 4x6 inch plate) titled Ways of Daring—that I think I can trace a lot of the thinking around this work to in retrospect. Its weblike line work masterfully gets at something I'm trying for: employing structures that allow planes to interact beyond their pictorial functionality. Or, more simply, how line can be a simultaneously cohering and fragmenting force. It's also emotionally bare yet confounding in the way that I like. In the bottom right there appears to be a baby (or two) engrossed in something. A step up and to the left are two more figures wrapped around and bound to each other (think Christo), possibly in a sexual position (probably; it's Bellmer). Up and to the right from them, almost in the middle of the composition, is a more muddled group of figures, an orgiastic heap. Pulling away from yet tethered to them toward the top right corner is an inscrutable, knotty, limb-like cluster. And at the top left, almost floating but for one planar line by its knees, is what looks like a kneeling figure with a beaked nose. The whole thing is an upward growth and a deconstruction with phases linked and estranged.

Back to my painting—it occurs to me that a part of it could also be a swipe at the emotional register of time passing in the 5,000 mile space between two opposite poles. Here are some selected lyrics from “Picture of Return” by Superfan:

The time that’s blowing me through Deflated surroundings Putting appearance underneath the skin

Breaking at the corners The room acting as my witness To manipulated order I’m wishing his face was never a picture of return


25 June 2026

I have just learned, (through the press release from Liam Halvorsen's 2024 show The Prepolitics at 100 Bell Towers in Montreal), about Dr. Julius Neubronner's invention of pigeon photography. The German apothecary apparently had a flock of pigeons, and in 1907 he filed a patent application for his pigeon camera, which he would put on a timer and strap to his birds so they could take photos (some of the earliest aerial photos ever) as they flew.

The images they produced are wonderful. Rooftops of homes and buildings, streets curling through cities, looming hillsides and lonely trees, people barely and unrecognizably pocking urban landscapes as blurred smudges. Always at strange angles, and often with parts of their wings flapping into frame like a finger slipping over a lens. Whimsical and arbitrary, but infused with a starkness both peaceful and sort of post-apocalyptic. Something very relieving about the dense and unbothered emptiness that is left once humans exit the eye.


23 June 2026

Saw Shao Fan's show Refrain | 复沓 at White Cube this morning—wonderful work. First time in a while that such large paintings have felt justified. Deep sensitivity in all aspects, a practice of looking and re-looking, and a lived engagement with antiquity that generates work with an intensity that truly honors his subjects both human and nonhuman. There are a few stunners, but Fruit 1924 (2024) and Rabbit Portrait 1025 (2025)—both large ink on rice paper works—are with me the most right now. Fruit has an almost paper-like two-dimensionality; it's an apple sliced in half to reveal a core that becomes a network of overlapping planes and openings. Starts to become a skull-like memento mori the longer you look at it. Rabbit manages to achieve an unflinchingly direct and confrontational quality through symmetry without locking itself off in any way (which is something that usually doesn't sit well with me)—the odd strands of hair/whiskers whimsically trail off beyond their defining limits, and certain elements like the white of the rabbit's ears remain true to the eye rather than an ideal, so my feeling is that the impressive balance comes more from an endearing emotional groundedness than a technical fastidiousness.


21 June 2026

The walls in my room at my flat are covered in Anaglypta Shelburne vinyl wallpaper. This is a catalog of markings/imperfections I can see on the south-facing wall from where I'm sitting.

A long (maybe two feet in length) and thin air pocket line snaking from halfway up the right of the wall down to the top of a stack of laundry on my floor. It actually looks just like a snake. A collapsed pocket of air, maybe six by three inches, that has cracked on top—it looks like an oyster shell beginning to open. Six subtle but visible perfectly straight vertical lines (looks like the individual panels that comprise the whole wall) spanning from ceiling to carpet. Three little blotches of what looks like dried blood, perhaps from past tenants killing mosquitos or other bugs or just getting blood on the walls somehow. Seven small holes from where people have put pins or screws in, two of which I am currently using to hang a piece of artwork (my father's sketch of a flint rock) and a bright red-bordered dollar-store mirror (the reflection is wonky from far away but accurate up close). Three more large air pockets creating a U-shape arcing up from the bottom left of the first air pocket line I mentioned—these ones are pretty flat, so they sort of disappear in lower light and I'm noticing them more now in the daylight. A long, irregular line of white paint running the length of the wall at the top near where it meets the ceiling that looks like it might be covering a messy sealing job that was done before I moved in. There's a similar line painted just above the door frame (which is embedded on the far left of the wall I'm looking at).


19 June 2026

Attempted a painting today based on the fragmented reflection of a plane on wet tarmac that I saw while boarding a recent flight from London to Venice. Primed the panel with a left-to-right gradient from a bright yellow to a dense black—the idea was to then slowly layer loose/thin form lines over the gradient from bottom to top in a relatively monochrome gray-blue palette and see what rhythms and shapes cohered as the whole thing took on a sense of motion. An okay idea, but it just didn't work, probably because it was too determined. Having a practice means constantly rewriting one's own rules, and it feels like I've done a bit of over-defining in recent days that made me rigid in my approach. So it's time for a break from the studio for a while in the interest of recalibration and refocusing.

But what I can say now, for when I resume, is that there needs to be some kind of reckoning as far as my handling of color and its relationship to the logic I've been discovering. Destruction as well as building, (while it now feels overly representative to me almost eight months later), is perhaps a good work to go back to. That one set a baseline for accumulated tactility in conjunction with early watercolor layers that are constantly shifting underneath and weaving in and out of the topmost oil layers so that there's an optical softness even with clarity of form. And when I think about the work I now want to make, which is work that is free to break away from my visual references by way of every formal element considered in a delimitation stack while still remaining true to an invisible structure of observed logic, that might be a place to restart. Forms that float, reorganize themselves and react to each other, cause friction between background and foreground as well as flatness and depth, and ultimately create a self-regenerating mesh of lived-in experience and presence. Now I'll forget everything I just said.


17 June 2026

Support (working title): some Courbet colors—Self-Portrait with a Black Dog (1842-44)—isolated and repurposed for this painting based on a lounger and a leaf that I saw outside a window with Yena in Lido. I remember the pillowy cushion bending to the empty weight of dried foliage.

I think the main organizing factory/inquiry with this one was trying to achieve a simultaneity of receding and confronting (in feeling and space), but I also ended up with something of an echo or a mirror. And a lesson in line. Worth noting to self that, as exemplified in the process for this one, I’m noticing how much more I seem to be working things out ahead of time in the drawing phase now. Of course there’s a certain (large) portion that needs to remain unknown before I begin painting to make it worth doing, but I’m also realizing more and more that I still feel fulfilled when the surprises happen earlier in my sketchbook. I suppose the most satisfying is when they happen in both phases.

Anyway, I think this one is asking some worthwhile questions and gave a good shot at fragmenting them further, but I think the color is a bit too binary still. So I think the next problem to solve has something to do with combining this more dynamic approach to line with a more interesting/nuanced/subtle approach to color so that they’re complementing each other rather than merely coexisting and the whole thing can reach a harmony that extends beyond the kinetic further into silence.


15 June 2026

Image inventory: a jagged wet reflection of a plane on a tarmac, collapsed and dismembered mannequins in an abandoned shop front window display, a group of pigeons on a sidewalk (half in light, half in shade), a marshmallow-looking lounge chair, two white doors loosely bolted together (one with covered-up graffiti in a block of gray), a phone booth with etched graffiti, a dog blurred and lunging towards a hand, dried yellow mimosa flowers on a nightstand (small dead explosion), a sliver of blue sky between two terracotta buildings with laundry lines, a white rectangle building floating on top of a full frame of ocean water, a dark cloud that looks like a face in profile over a small fluffy luminous cloud, a reflection of train seats, a small concrete sphere balancing on a brick ledge, two boats speeding through a canal towards a horizon, contrails shooting upwards out of two cut tree branches, a small red home and a small white bridge from above, rain drops in black water, wood grain three ways, pastel colored ceramic bowls at varying heights on a wood floor with dappled light, ivies encroaching on an upturned table, a yellow lost cat sign (name: Falco), shells organized by color (mostly whites and gray-blues) on a beach.


13 June 2026

Read Paul Klee's Pedagogical Sketchbook (1953) based on his Bauhaus lectures for the first time today before getting to work and felt reinvigorated by it. Evergreen. Over time I’m planning to sit with each of its subdivisions (below, as organized by Sibyl Moholy-Nagy) in depth…

I: Line as point progression Line as planar definition Line as mathematical proportion Line as coordinator for the path of motion

II: Line as optical guide Line as optical reason Line as psychological balance

III: Line as energy projection

IV: Line as symbol of centrifugal and centripedal movement Line as symbol of will and infinity Line as symbol of color mutations and kinetic harmony

…but for today I’m noting the first principles he lays out because they’re helping me think through the spatial inquiry that’s starting to happen in my studio (the Delimitation Stacks). With the caveat that I’m trying to submerge these things after learning them as I make—their relationship to intuition feels very important to preserve.

Anyway, to begin with, I think the categorization of active, medial, and passive lines (with respect to their cause, impact, and effect) relates to what I’ve arrived at recently in thinking about the goal of an optical essence of a space as a stack (vertical for now) of independent elements, which can then be individually (and endlessly, though not aimlessly) augmented to arrive at new structures. Which, when done well, seem to point towards inner relationships. Which Klee traces to nature—how we can think of line as it relates to the rhythms, patterns, and forms of human anatomy, plans, and earth, water, and air.

And so I think what’s crucial to implementing his teachings is to internalize them to the point where I can take an “active line on a walk, moving freely, without goal,” yet still honor certain instincts of the eye as they relate to emotional honesty. The toggling of delimiters through active, medial, and passive lines can be a playful, exploratory exercise. Even the simple notion of finding a space between an active and passive plane feels like it could be generative for an entire painting—an active/passive gradient—or a single choice to move something stagnant into a more dynamic range.


11 June 2026

From last night's crit at the courthouse: foregrounded plane(s) sliding off of the background (up or down), kinetic overlay, the subject deadened then revisited then layered on top of the potent original (failed) state. Sharon brought up Calder, which seems like such a logical reference now but I admittedly need to spend more time with the work (and I will). She also made a nice point about the potential value of mixing richness built up over time with the immediacy and intentionality I'm drawn to. Which in the case of Sink relates to background and foreground, but can really be applied to any constituent element. Good fuel for moving forward.