| This painting exudes (if that’s the right word) gravitas, an  ordered calm.  Glanced at in passing, it seems like a seamless  cloudscape. Looked at more closely it is divided into three sections that are  almost but not quite invisibly joined. Classic art opened a window on reality. Modern art since  impressionism has closed the window and treated painting as part of a wall, a  segment of flat surface.--Roger Shattuck, The  Banquet Years
 This painting has it both ways and in addition suggests an  internal time lapse.  I never think of it as a nighttime view, but rather a  monochromatic rendering of a daytime sky related to a series of graphite  drawings that Martina was working on at the time. 
 It’s not exactly  monochromatic; there are violets and greens and a not quite definable  black. The painted surface is thin, the paint is rubbed on or maybe rubbed off,  but it’s not transparent either; the dark areas are opaque and there is an edge of  brushwork on the top of the arc of the clouds. 
 Every inch of this painting is meticulously worked on and  constructed, because painting a cloud from life is actually impossible—they  change so fast. In Tristes Tropiques, Claude Levi-Strauss gives an excellent  reason for describing “those evanescent and ever-renewed forms” (and, by  extrapolation, for painting them:)  If I could find a  language in which to perpetuate these appearances, at once so unstable and so  resistant to description, if it were granted to me to be able to communicate to  others the phases and sequences of a unique event that would never recur in the  same terms, then—so it seemed to me—I should have in one go have discovered the  deepest secrets of my profession: however strange and peculiar the experiences  to which anthropological research might expose me, there would be none whose  meaning and importance I could not eventually make clear to everybody. In attempting to name the clouds that Martina painted I was  astonished to learn that it was considered impossible to name them or organize  them until 1802 when chemist and amateur meteorologist Luke Howard had the “insight that clouds have many  individual shapes but few basic forms.” |