For me nature is not landscape, but the dynamism of visual forces.
Bridget Riley
Focusing isn't just an optical activity, it is also a mental one.
I work with nature, although in completely new terms.
There was a time when meanings were focused and reality could be fixed; when that sort of belief disappeared, things became uncertain and open to interpretation.
Painting is, I think, inevitably an archaic activity and one that depends on spiritual values.
I used to build up to sensation, accumulating tension until it released a perceptual experience.
Painters have always needed a sort of veil upon which they can focus their attention. It's as though the more fully the consciousness is absorbed, the greater the freedom of the spirit behind.
I think this lack of a center has something to do with the loss of certainties that Christianity had to offer.
His failures are as valuable as his successes: by misjudging one thing he conforms something else, even if at the time he does not know what that something else is.
An artist's early work is inevitably made up of a mixture of tendencies and interests, some of which are compatible and some of which are in conflict.
In my earlier paintings, I wanted the space between the picture plane and the spectator to be active.
As the artist picks his way along, rejecting and accepting as he goes, certain patterns of enquiry emerge.
As a painter today you have to work without that essential platform. But if one does not deceive oneself and accepts this lack of certainty, other things may come into play.