Voyage is a collection of paintings made by Impey since returning last year from a journey by sea from Eastern Australia to Singapore. This physical voyage took him from the Coral Sea through the Torres Strait into the Gulf of Carpentaria, stopping briefly in Darwin. From there, he sailed on across the Arafura Sea into the Timor Sea. Sailing on to Bali, then into the Sunda Strait then northwards past Sumatra to his final destination. A passage through treacherous seas still occupied by pirates, and historically frequented by pioneers on routes of trade and in search of new lands to colonise.
The existential pull of such elements is clear, as
Impey states: “21st Century mass communication, the relentless, total,
banal, vapid tedium of the seeming need to communicate, or be communicated
to, all the time, winks out of existence out there on the ocean. A mind can
breathe, and observe, and reflect, away from the shrill desperation of a culture
that, having forgotten that it is better to say nothing than something about
nothing, invents ever-new ways to fill every single space with less and less.
So a certain empathy with earlier travellers ensues: the sea is still the
sea, as it ever was, direct and uncomplicated, and the stars are not a great
deal older. The specific aroma of an incipient landfall is a shared experience
with those who have gone before, as is the bending of a sail to the wind,
as is the chart… The sea renews the land, and the possibilities for
life, for my life, are renewed, enlarged by the landfall after the sea. The
land is better for being arrived at, and I am better for arriving”.
The paintings in this exhibition follow numerous themes
– the ‘Constellation’ series of works are meditative studies
of the stars, or the glint of the sun on the vast expanse of ocean, fleeting
images that are at the same time perennial, remaining long after the boat
has left those waters.
There is also a series of works that incorporate charts and extracts from
notebooks. As Impey states ‘The chart is a compendium of knowledge,
of successive generations of endeavour and experience. I use charts in some
of the new work as an acknowledgement of that, and an appreciation of the
aesthetic, but most significantly as a personal aide memoir, which combine
with logbook notes, painting and photography to provide a specific recollection
of time and place.’
The monumental ‘Sumba’ refers to the witnessing
of plumes of black smoke rising from the islands coastline, darkening a luminous
sky – whether an aboriginal burning of the land, a ritualistic ceremony
or a forest fire remains unknown but such impressions become indelible.
Although Impey has used photography as source material
in the past, many of these new works contain an interesting change, incorporating
the development of a photographic image within the painting process. Self
evident in some works, and entirely obscured in others, the possibilities
inherent in the combination have invigorated the artist :- “the photograph
is not an accurate description of a moment, neither is a painting, nor a memory.
But to coalesce these elements within an object, perhaps… it’s
a lie to tell a truth.”
Slightly separate yet clearly related are a series
of beautiful yet eerie paintings of Orford Ness, a feral and remote island
just off the Suffolk coast, In the past the area was used as the site of a
secret Cold War military testing ground. A symbol of warfare, but a phantom
that seems all the more to illustrate the impotence of our temporary concerns.
It would be simplistic, albeit understandable, to
view these paintings as a record of this odyssey, but for me these are not
paintings of the sea, the land or the stars, they are a reflection of mans
insignificance when faced with the awesome and sublime might of nature and
the cosmos. They are a personal ‘rite of passage’ that stands,
already, as a ghost of what has been witnessed, been and gone but exist as
a monumental human response to the fleetingness of man’s existence.
The voyage is life through to its brief and inevitable but defiant end. To
face it, and to live it is to be liberated. As Henry David Thoreau once wrote
‘I did not wish to take a cabin passage, but rather to go before the
mast and on the deck of the world, for there I could best see the moonlight
amid the mountains. I do not wish to go below now’, I am sure that such
a journey does much to open your eyes, making you very aware of your place
within the cosmic order.
Joseph Clarke
Voyage |