"Now painting is different. It's something recollected in tranquility"
About this Quote
Levine’s line swerves away from the romantic myth of the painter as a live-wire transcriber of reality. “Now painting is different” lands like a corrective aimed at the age of immediacy: the sketch from life, the hot take, the documentary urge. He’s drawing a boundary between raw experience and the strange, slower chemistry that turns experience into a picture. The second sentence borrows the cadence of Wordsworth’s famous definition of poetry as “emotion recollected in tranquility,” but Levine’s tweak is telling: he doesn’t say painting is emotion. He says it’s “something” recollected. That vagueness is the point. What returns in the studio isn’t the event itself but a distilled residue: forms, power dynamics, the mood of a street corner, the moral stink of a room.
Coming from an artist known for satirical, socially charged scenes, tranquility doesn’t mean serenity; it means distance. It’s the cooling-off period that allows judgment, exaggeration, and compression. Memory becomes an editing machine, stripping out the clutter and saving what can be pushed into caricature or symbol. The line implies a workflow that’s almost journalistic in reverse: you don’t paint to record what happened; you paint to understand what happened, after your nerves stop buzzing.
It also sneaks in a defense of artifice. If painting is recollection, then distortion isn’t failure - it’s technique. The studio becomes a place where time, not eyesight, is the primary reference.
Coming from an artist known for satirical, socially charged scenes, tranquility doesn’t mean serenity; it means distance. It’s the cooling-off period that allows judgment, exaggeration, and compression. Memory becomes an editing machine, stripping out the clutter and saving what can be pushed into caricature or symbol. The line implies a workflow that’s almost journalistic in reverse: you don’t paint to record what happened; you paint to understand what happened, after your nerves stop buzzing.
It also sneaks in a defense of artifice. If painting is recollection, then distortion isn’t failure - it’s technique. The studio becomes a place where time, not eyesight, is the primary reference.
Quote Details
| Topic | Art |
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