This article was written by John R. Lane as the introduction to an exhibition
catalogue from around 1988. At the moment precise source and date are unknown.
Living on a cliff overlooking the Pacific since the early eighties amid the
redwood forests and wildlife, Don Van Vliet has embraced painting with the same
controlled passion that made him, as the avant-garde rock composer and performer
Captain Beefheart, a cult figure of conspicuous influence and one of the genuine
musical geniuses of the past twenty years. Self-trained as a painter and knowing
relatively little about the history of art or the current scene, he is a modernist
primitive but also an artist whose remarkable intuitive gifts and love of nature
have combined to create highly charged paintings that are at once jolting as well
as lyrical.
The essence of Van Vliet's sensibility is a longing for an artistic expression
that is direct, intuitive, and bewitching. In the philosophical tradition of the
eighteenth-century French writer Jean Jacques Rousseau, he is critical of the
current corrupted state of society. Seeking to reaffirm humanity's inherent virtues
like Rousseau, Van Vliet advocates embracing nature and relocating man in a position
that stems from natural order rather than an imposed hierarchy. His paintings
- most frequently indeterminate landscapes populated by forms of abstracted animals
- are intended to effect psychological, spiritual and magical force. In discussing
his musical compositions with a critic he also affirmed the role of the artist
as wizard, saying, "You see, I don't think I do music. I think I do spells." Image-making
to him seems to be an act of reassurance, reinforcing what William Robin has suggested
in discussing the appeal of Primitive art in contemporary Western culture, that
is, a process of evolving through nature a sense that the world is ordered and
manageable by an animistic system of beliefs.
Van Vliet's enthusiasms for other artists' work are limited but discriminating.
He admires the emotional intensity of Vincent Van Gogh, the juicy painterliness
of Willem de Kooning, and the expressive, primitivistic figuration of Julian Schnabel
and A. R. Penck. There are affinities, too, with the thick whites, automatic writing,
and jagged, scratched impastos of Cy Twombly. Inscriptions do not appear on Van
Vliet's paintings as they do on Twombly's, but Van Vliet invests great creative
energy in devising poetic titles for his works (usually ex post facto). There
is a revealing distinction between the literary propensities of the two artists
in that Twombly's references are to heroic, classical civilization and Van Vliet's
invented titles (for instance: Parapliers the Willow Dipped (shown above left),
Tinkling Like Mercury in the Wind, and Light Rubber Mountains in the Distance
Stretched) invoke a magic state of nature. This contrast underlines profound differences
in their approach - one through culture, the other through nature - yet reveals
a common search for the aesthetic sublime that is their common inheritance from
American Abstract Expressionism.
The artistic intentions found in Van Vliet's paintings closely parallel those
in his music and his writing. He has said that he wants to get the same "flash,
time, smell" in all his art and, in fact, his work in each medium shares common
characteristics of rapid execution and prolific production, an obsession with
maintaining absolute control over the formal means of expression, and a heightened
interest in fraught imagery. His music can seem rawer and more radical than his
painting: this may be because Van Vliet as composer and performer was pushing
rock music to a level of serious artistic expression not envisioned or attempted
by his contemporaries. In contrast, his visual aesthetic ideas have a distinguished
history in modern painting. Since early in the twentieth century artists have
abstracted nature to create expressive and painterly new worlds of mood (as seen
in the landscapes of Wassily Kandinsky of around 1912 or in the work of the early
American modernist Arthur B. Dove). Van Vliet has drawn from and built on this
established tradition, locating ample room within it to develop his own personal
style and ideas. While he finds the technical challenges of painting more complex
and demanding than composing and performing, he has discovered that, without having
to breach frontiers to the extent he did in his music, painting can serve as an
extremely effective vehicle for his ideas and emotions. This easier relationship
between form and content results in art that is not so conflicted and difficult
as is Van Vliet's music, perhaps because his imagery is quite suited to visual
articulation.
Van Vliet was born in southern California and grew up there an artistic prodigy.
As a child he was regularly asked to make sculpture on a television program and
as a youth he executed what now would be termed a performance piece: as an aesthetic
action he punched a single hole in every rose in the hedge of a Beverly Hills
garden. His family moved to the high desert community of Lancaster where he intermittently
attended school, became friends with Frank Zappa (with whom he invented his stage
name, "Captain Beefheart": the reference is to "a tomato as big as a beefheart')
and in the mid-sixties began making a new kind of rock music that drew its chief
inspirations from Mississippi Delta Blues and such free jazz movement artists
as John Coltrane and Ornette Coleman. In 1969 Van Vliet composed and recorded
an album entitled "Trout Mask Replica", regarded in informed circles as one of
the most astounding, influential, and enduring achievements in recent rock music.
Although music was his principle concentration from the mid-sixties to the early
eighties, during that time Van Vliet was also writing poetry and fiction and was
painting and drawing. It was through two artists - Julian Schnabel and the German
painter A. R. Penck, both enthusiasts of the music of Captain Beefheart who learned
he also was a painter - that Van Vliet's work was brought to the attention of
the Cologne art dealer Michael Werner, resulting in public presentation in the
early eighties of what had heretofore been a private preoccupation. In 1982 Van
Vliet decided to leave the music world and southern California to dedicate himself
exclusively to painting in his new home on the state's northernmost coastline.