On that day we harnessed
History’s joyous
Laughter
But there was nobody
Around to hear it
So instead we
Split
The difference
Matt Beard
End of a Long Day
Empty
They’ll happily share with you
Each and every wave you ride
Whether you like it
Or not
But then again…
They’ll also cook you up a cup of Dutch Coffee
In the parking lot
American Paradox
Under watchful eyes
We pretend the machinery
Will clean up the remains of our freedoms
Lost forever to the systematic fire
We burn your money
And
Weep with your love
Walking the Line
The One that Got Away
They fish for meaning
There’s tension in the line
Once they’ve caught our drift
They will place a hook in its jaw
And skewer the guts from the living truth
Until nothing is left
Between us and them
But a line or two
Hardly worth repeating
Morning Rollers
No Trespassing
Five
One Man Show
Focal Point
Coasting
Peak Demand
Duck Dive
Confrontations
Fetch
An Impending Situation
Undecided
There’s Even a Hot Tub Around the Corner
October Groundswell
Rising and falling like the tide
And yet they are surprised when their stocks don’t rise and rise and rise
One October they fell
A negative low-tide
The panic that followed scorched a thousand cigarettes
And left ‘em where they lie
While their shaking hands still burned with fear
We tip-toed past the madness as the tide slowly filled back in
Surf Check Daydream
The first art teacher I ever had used to always tell us that all art is a lie. I never really understood what he meant by that, but it sounded pretty neat and quite teacherly.
Generally, I gravitate toward truth-telling with my art and most inaccuracies in my paintings are accidents of omission. I’m just not one to paint every single blade of grass and individual leaves on every tree.
There’s an ancient text that repeats the theme that all men are like grass, referring to the brevity and fleeting nature of our lives on the face of the earth.
More often than not, I treat humans in the landscape as the blades of grass that they are, fleeting, ephemeral, just passing through for a moment before they move on.
Sometimes it lends to an eerie silent vibe in my paintings of places that should be full of human activity, but showing no trace of it except those features we’ve built into a more
semi-permanent state on the landscape itself- roads, benches, stairs, paths, etc.
This is one of those spooky ones.
That said, I’m not sure which is the bigger lie here: the complete lack of human beings on a glorious sun-filled afternoon here… or the sandbar creating ruler edged perfect waves from that outside rock all the way to the sand 200 yards later.
Neither of those ever happen.
Hence the title: Surf Check Daydream indeed.
Waxing Moon
My favorite story about this one isn’t my story at all. It’s something a Patagonia employee said the first time they saw this piece in the back of my van in their HQ parking lot in Ventura, California. It went something like this:
“This is heavy, no way, check it out, when you look to the right it’s what’s already happened, the wave has gone by, that’s the past, you don’t want to live there. But then when you look to the left that’s future, what’s to come, something to look forward to, but that’s not where you want to live either. When you look at the center that’s the present moment, that’s where you want to be.”
I’ve always remembered that, even though I’ve forgotten his name and have lost all touch with the fellow who uttered that wisdom off the cuff like only a barefoot surfer in a parking lot in southern California could muster…