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PETER WATTS
Light Through Color
paintings
and installation sculpture
PETER WATTS, painter and constructionist, has lived a life
experienced deeply in nature, with the vine-covered woods of Wellfleet summers,
and star-lit skies of winter. In his new show at the Berta Walker
Gallery, Watts offers us what feels like his Nature Opus, a symphony of two
major movements, his very recent paintings and the exciting gift of his
bull-briar, bamboo and stick constructions, consciously inspired by the “cargo
cults” of New Guinea. This is the practice of Pacific islanders, exposed
to military cargoes dropped by U.S. planes during WWII,
imitating the entire process in their attempt to get more of this
“manna” from heaven.
“My structures, an antenna (made of vertically stacked briar spheres) and a
satellite, ephemeral beings, are a continuation of
their idea of constructing life-size mockups of airplanes , control
towers and even landing strips out of straw. Working with vines and
sticks helps me move in this 'primitive' direction,” explains Watts, who like
so many modern Western artists before him (Braque, Picasso, Gaughin, to name only a
few), have been inspired by the so-called “primitive” (the “discovery” of
other aesthetics, particularly African and Oceanic, by the West).
But unlike these other artists, Watts has spent most of his adult artistic life
developing a deep understanding of the landscape he has lived in and painted
for decades. “I live in the woods,” Watts shares. And it is
in this context of living with nature
that Watts has created his own personal “primitive” iconography, both in his
painting, and over the last five years, in these constructions that flow from
these landscape paintings (note his mark making, reminiscent of, or made by,
sticks or branches, for example) and that come directly from what Watts forages
from nature. “I go around looking for trees that have yellow moss
for the color moss I’m looking for.” There is a recent introduction
of color as an additional element to the bull briar material that Watts’ refers
to as “nature’s own Velcro,” reflecting the painter as ever at work with color
even while working with three-dimensional material.
In a very real sense, the vine constructions are the simplification of the
paintings. Watts paints from nature, his source.
How natural then to “sculpt” literally with nature.
This
show reflects what an inventive artist can do with a major theme over a mature
lifetime. In the manner of almost every major artist in the West, Watts
has honed, mined, re-invented, and continually explored new ways of seeing what
is right before our eyes, moving toward greater simplicity and strength with
the raw plastic elements of modern painting: shape, color, and atmosphere, what Wolf Kahn referred to “as re-doing Rothko
through Nature. “I am a camera. I paint what I know not what
I see. The images are in my brain,” Watts shares. His landscapes are the
best of what physical and emotional memory can convey in a plastic medium, the
changing light and silhouettes of the seasons. They are “light
through color.”
This is an exciting show for the viewer’s ability to see how painting and
construction, seemingly different genres, are, in Watts
evolution, two aspects of the same whole. As he says of these mature
paintings (“Winter Valley,” “Herring River,” “Midnight Clear,” “Red
Berries,” “On the Edge,” and others): “I simplify, reduce the
composition, increase the contrast, to make the painting a powerful single
statement” -- comments that reflect his vine briar work, as well.
Working with continuous lengths of bull briar up to 20 to 30 feet long, Watts
molds it into randomly wrapped circles within circles, forming one sphere that
the viewer can look through and wonder at the human hand that could have molded
them. They intrigue, as they seem to reflect a physically
impossible feat, as well as invoke the magic that is inherent with real artmaking: when symbol becomes more powerful than real
life. “Primitive” hasn’t often looked this subtle
or conceptual, something the Islanders already knew.
As New York art critic Margaret Sheffield
wrote: “Watts’ best paintings are abstractions of nature, vibrations of
tone. Besides evoking heat, climate, and the awe of a particular light,
he evokes, like Rothko, a darker side of nature at once foreboding and
spiritual.”
Peter Watts has lived on the Cape since 1954.
Living at first in Provincetown and working at the Provincetown Art Association
and Museum, Watts later moved to Wellfleet, bringing his young bride painter
Gloria Nardin to Wellfleet year-round in
1970. In 1978, he joined the Board of FAWC,
and in 1980 he became a Trustee of PAAM on which he still serves.
This is Watt’s third exhibition at Berta Walker Gallery.