|

Every morning
at half past eight, Willem van Goor disappears into
his studio where he works most effectively to the
accompaniment of either classical or meditative,
serial music. ‘A single instrument or a lingering
bass tone filling my working space creates the right
atmosphere for mixing paint, cleaning brushes and
adding dots and stripes. Each day I begin with a
clean slate and perform a series of routine actions:
light-grey values must be made lighter and dark
greys slightly darker. I also cover whole areas with
regular shading, which is built up layer by layer.’
When his attention flags, he usually works in the
garden: ‘Inspiration strikes at unexpected moments
and is always connected with what I’m doing.’
Span of tension
Willem van Goor (Zwolle, 1948) believes in the
philosophy of craftsmanship: ‘The painting has to be
well made and this entails a lengthy process. It
takes a great many layers before the work begins to
resemble what I had in mind. Generally I put a panel
away for a while so that I can complete it at a
later point in time.
Each day and each painting involves a span of
tension. And when I create a series of canvases for
an exhibition, that tension ensures that I can
maintain my concentration until I’m done.’
For the past eleven years, Van Goor has been living
and working on Achill, an island that is joined to
the west coast of Ireland by a narrow bridge.
‘After my wife, my daughter and I had spent two
years scratching together a nest for ourselves, I
experienced an intense need to record the beauty of
our surroundings. In fact, the landscape’s
overwhelming splendour was the reason why we
emigrated here.
But
the march of progress has also reached Achill Island
and everything is changing at a breakneck speed.’
The constantly shifting light in Ireland means that
Van Goor has to make numerous photos and sketches.
‘I have a good visual memory but I often go back to
check whether my interpretation of a place is
correct.’
Craftmanship
The people of Achill still fish with curraghs, those
typically Irish boats comprising a thin skin of
canvas and tar, which can be picked up with just one
hand. The painting ‘Curraghs’ shows fluffy clouds
heralding the threat of a storm: ‘The weather on the
coast is a melting pot of misery, clear skies and
many shades of grey.’ As has been the custom for
many thousands of years, the curraghs lie upside
down in specially constructed hollows and are
weighted down with stones attached to ropes. It’s as
if they’re hunching their shoulders and hiding their
heads in the bog in anticipation of the approaching
storm.
Apart from prefab, plastic traps, the local
fishermen continue to use their hand-made
equivalents, a number of which can be seen on the
rugged concrete quay in ‘Lobster Pots’. ‘You
virtually need microscopic vision to see between all
those bits of string. I could have created the
suggestion of the baskets at the back by making them
greyish and rather vague. But I felt that this
wouldn’t do justice to the men who make and repair
them with so much skill. It would have been wrong to
have just dashed them off: everything had to be
depicted in an extremely precise and detailed way.’
Hence, with his love of craftsmanship, Willem van
Goor is effectively giving something back to the
craftsman.
Van
Goor’s ‘Seaweed, Stones and Mud I’ was a
commissioned work. ‘My client lived with us by the
water for a while and wanted the view from her
cottage to be immortalised. At the time I was
working on a series of black-and-white night
paintings, so I decided to paint the view in a
nocturnal light. This was because when the moon
shines, it can be unbelievably bright. Moonlight can
be so intense that you can see countless colours and
even the occasional rainbow, which is astonishingly
beautiful.’
Pencil strokes
Photos and sketches often serve as nothing more than
a pretext for the work that frequently consists
exclusively of innumerable pencil strokes on
cardboard. Willem van Goor draws and incises
structures so that they can retain the traces of wet
paint more effectively. During this process, he uses
all kinds of pencils: soft, pitch-black pencils for
the foreground and extremely hard, grey ones for the
background. ‘I go through the entire range from
8B to
10H, and build the work up until,
at a certain point, the painting begins to paint
itself. A mould has been made that creates its own
reality.’
In addition, Van Goor regularly applies a steel
brush and, occasionally, a sanding machine to his
work: ‘Because sometimes it all gets too fussy.’ The
fact that such rough treatment could easily damage
or destroy linen is also the reason why he has opted
to work on cardboard and not canvas.
‘I attended art school in Groningen from 1972 to
1978 where I made large, lyrical abstract paintings.
I was already working on cardboard and wooden
panels. All the treatments I used, resulted in what
had effectively become etching plates. These neatly
trapped the layers of wet paint, which were applied
at a later stage. At that time, it was the music of
Steve Reich and Olivier Messiaen that helped me to
work in an extremely concentrated way.
At the time I was being taught by artists, who would
spend weeks working with sharp pencils on ‘stamps’
that measured a mere ten by fifteen centimetres. By
contrast, I began making large paintings with an
attitude of “just slap on the paint”, and was trying
hard to shake off all that finicky precision.’
Incredibly delicate
Yet Willem van Goor has now spent many years
creating extremely detailed images. He uses Japanese
brushes for the linear paintings: ‘You can trim them
right down to a single hair so that you can paint in
an incredibly delicate way. These brushes enable you
to follow the underlying pencil drawing with great
precision.’
Van Goor regularly places his paintings flat on the
floor for further processing: ‘I put them at a slant
or an angle; I let them drip and use a wide brush, a
sponge or a rag.’ Sometimes he even washes a
painting with suds containing paint. ‘You can
manipulate the direction in which the paint flows by
placing a coin or a piece of cardboard under one
side of the canvas. Of course, a hairdryer is also a
fantastic contraption.’

Willem van Goor is becoming increasingly involved
with the skin and fringes of land, with the area
uncovered by the ebbing tide and the tension between
wind and water.
Where emptiness appears to be the subject of ‘Slope
I’, ‘Slope III’, which is completely constructed in
pencil, focuses exclusively on the ground’s surface.
Here, Van Goor’s subject is the overgrowth that
extends from where he is standing on the peat bog
right up to the top of the hill. ‘I mainly wanted to
capture the structure through the shading, without
restricting myself to what you can actually see out
there. A melted glacier dumped its sediment here
some 12,000 years ago, which was then covered with a
layer of peat. You can still find the occasional
stone sticking out of this blanket bog.’
Beautiful, grey-green
To prepare for the painting stage of ‘Slope III’,
Van Goor treated a large piece of green-tinted
cardboard with a number of layers of highly diluted,
coloured binding agent: ‘This allows you to kill two
birds with one stone: You not only create a
beautiful glaze but also close the pores of the base
coat so that the paint is not absorbed.’ But once he
set to work on the treated base coat and had applied
thin layers of acrylic to the strip of sky, the work
ultimately turned into a pencil drawing where no
further paint was used. ‘You can’t really predict
that in advance.’ The fact that all the treatments
had transformed the base coat into a beautiful,
grey-green colour meant that Van Goor could work
towards both light and dark.
‘You follow your own mainstream. In my work, I’m
constantly exploring my fascination for the land’s
skin in greater depth. If I’m in the mood, I let
myself be seduced by all the beauty that’s around
me. This is something that I can permit myself: I’m
old enough. In this difficult climate and under
these harsh conditions, it’s as if the opulence and
vitality of the ground, the water and the light
coincide with the landscape’s absolute bleakness.
The village school in ‘The Old School’ hasn’t been
used for years. The background of ‘Storm Grass’
comprises a decaying cottage with a collection of
rusting outbuildings, which are known in Ireland as
‘Dutch barns’. ‘These were erected all over the
country with the support of the EU. But now they’re
just as dilapidated as those deserted houses that
you see everywhere on Achill.’ With a sketch-like
gesture, Van Goor describes this memory of human
activity: ‘Farming is dead and gone, the inhabitants
have retreated and everything will soon be
overgrown.’ The land’s magnificent skin will finally
gain the upper hand.

Translated by Annie Wright
Photographer
Willem
Vermaase.
More about Marie Oosterbaan
you will find
here and
in the blog:
Polrannypirates |