“Nobody Understands” oil, acrylic and wax pencil on paper
Comments on The Red Tree
The Red Tree began an experimental narrative more than anything else: the idea of a book without a story. I've always loved Chris Van Allsburg's classic picture book ‘The Mysteries of Harris Burdick’ (1984) which is a great example of word-picture enigmas, exhibiting partial fragments of unknown stories and leaving the reader to use their imagination. It has no sequential narrative, which is something a picture book is ideal for – you can open it at any page, go backwards or forwards, and spend as much time as you wish with each image.
I'd also been increasingly aware that illustration is a powerful way of expressing of feeling as well as ideas, partly because it is outside of verbal language, as many emotions can be hard to articulate in words. I thought it would therefore be interesting to produce an illustrated book that is all about feelings, unframed any storyline context, in some sense going ‘directly to the source’.
What resulted after many scribbles was a series of imaginary landscapes connected only by a minimal thread of text and the silent figure of a young girl at the center of each one, with whom the reader is invited to identify. At the beginning she awakes to find blackened leaves falling from her bedroom ceiling, threatening to quietly overwhelm her. She wanders down a street, overshadowed by a huge fish that floats above her. She imagines herself trapped in a bottle washed up on a forgotten shore, or lost in a strange landscape. She's caught in a tiny boat between towering ships about to collide, then suddenly she's on stage before a mysterious audience, not knowing what to do. Just as all hope seems lost, the girl returns to her bedroom and finds a tiny red seedling growing in the middle of the floor. It quickly grows into a vivid red tree that fills her room with warm light. Each image remains open to various interpretations in the absence of any accompanying description. What minimal 'story' there is seeks to remind us that just as bad feelings are inevitable, they are always tempered by hope.
Originally I was planning to paint pictures about a range of emotions; fear, joy, sadness, amazement and so on. But the more I worked on this, the more I found the negative emotions - particularly feelings of loneliness and depression - were just much more interesting from both a personal and artistic point of view. Not that I’m an unhappy person, it’s just that these ideas seem to be utlimately more thought-provoking.
Readers have occasionally asked me why my imagery is often 'dark', and I think it’s because of this. I'm more attracted to those things that aren't quite right, like the social and environmental injustice in The Rabbits, or the social apathy of The Lost Thing, or even ideas about self-destruction in The Viewer. I find such things artistically engaging, perhaps because they are unresolved, like a puzzle. At the same time, I do enjoy work that is celebratory - which
The Red Tree ultimately is - but any apparent meaning is always laced with uncertainty. The red tree may bloom, but it will also die, so nothing is absolute or definite; there needs to be an accurate reflection of real life, as something that is continuously in search of resolution.
The Red Tree has been translated into several languages, including Chinese, Japanese and Korean, which indicates something of it’s cross-cultural appeal. A different kind of ‘translation’ altogether has been the adaptation of this book as a children’s theatre production [link] developed for Brisbane’s Out of the Box festival, which opened at the Queensland Performing Arts Centre in June 2004. This was a fascinating project, and a welcome opportunity to work in collaboration with artists from very different disciplines, and see how they went about interpreting the book, and in turn how audiences responded to this. The ideas of the original book are very broad and I think point more to a method of expression – of ‘emotional worlds’ - rather than any very specific content, so it not only endures variable interpretations, it almost demands them. This seems appropriate, as everyone’s experience of ‘suffering’ or ‘hope’ is unique and personal.
Taken from http://www.shauntan.net/books.html.
From my personal perspective, the painting/illustration/image entitled 'Nobody Understands' captures the isolation and alienation man can experience when not belonging. In terms of techniques, the use of clothing; a scuba diver's head gear/helmet and a purple robe on an alien-like figure creates a strong sense of dehumanisation of the man. This emphasises that he does not belong within the society. The fact he is in a bottle represents floating away into the unknown, becoming forgotten; similar to that of a 'message in a bottle'. The use of pebbles of the ground beneath him symbolise the pain and awkwardness associated with being excluded from a group or entity. The white light in the sky to his right portrays hope and enlightenment, two characteristics he needs to achieve in order to belong. In contrast the dark shades on the left hand side of the image reflect fear, uncertainty and hopelessness; a binary opposition to the right hand side of the image. This shows the negative outlook of the subject (the man); he is depressed, stagant and cold.
Hope that gets you started.