In pain it's easy to sit in the present, it's easy to feel the weight of each moment. Go on in sweet idolatry and let your insides be slicked with a consuming nothingness that slowly covers your wounds. How can pain and fear be the only thing here and hereafter, I pray that there is a moment of release, beyond it all where you really do meet Jesus.
Tonight this feels like an especially apt painting. My intestines are full of pain and groaning. I suffer from ulcerative colitis, a rare disease in the colon. It means my colon is full of self perpetuating open wounds that never heal. Our world is a strange self perpetuating open wound that never heals, God is the balm.
Through indirect abstractions Caitlin McCollom wishes to represent the quiet panic of the disordered mind and the beautiful decay of the diseased body. The paintings are made using acrylic paint, oil paint, varnish, ink and watercolor on synthetic paper. Employed is a limited palette of neutral colors and red. Each color has a supreme symbolic meaning. Red always represents the physical body—blood, viscera, decay, and visual physicality of the body itself. The neutral warm and cool beiges represent the outward flesh, the reality of the world and the prison of the body. The anfractuous nature of the intestines is sampled in the deliberately curling strokes, and the pooling of the various flesh colored materials is meant to recall medical images. White, the most sacred color, is always about the existential void. White is the unknowable space that the mind contemplates. The whiteness of the paper always surrounds the painted image, so that each one is immersed in the chaos of the mind and appearing as a religious icon. The work however, though its conceptual matter is rooted in the presence of body and mind related distress, is meant to be a visual experience of beauty. Reframing the human reaction to disease with disgust into one of curiosity is a primary objective within the work.
The paintings are corporeal and existential in nature; reacting to the body, the greater reality, and the existential space that is explained in theory by philosophers, theologians, and mystics while exploring a personal existential pathology— a physical fear reaction to meaninglessness. Her work interprets the internal body, external reality, and the mysterious unknowable aspects of existence.
- Subject Matter: Abstract
- Created: 2015
- Collections: Blood and White