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As a child, Jane Urquhart knew she was destined for fame on the Broadway musical stage. When she felt ready, she let Richard Rodgers know that she'd be arriving in Manhattan and would appreciate it if he would meet her at the airport. He thwarted her ambitions with a polite reply. Since then, Urquhart has set out on her own journeys, working out solutions while she's on the road. Writing is a form of exploration for her, and she is willing to travel without a map in order to create new territory. Austin Fraser, the abstracted, calculating artist with an intellectual concept, is her polar opposite.
"Obviously he's in my psyche somewhere," commented Urquhart a few weeks before The Underpainter's publishing date. "But it's strange how totally distant I feel from that character, even though I wrote it in his voice. It's the oddest thing."
Urquhart describes writing as quirky, serendipitous, and, in some ways, uncontrollable. The names of her characters, for example, "came out of the air, to a certain extent, as does everything else, I must confess." Even about her characters' actions, she can disclaim control: "I gasped out loud at what Austin did to Sara at the end of the book, but there was nothing I could do," she comments, although quite cheerfully. Being a hostage to the creative process is not at all distressing. Her goal is not to control her creation, but to take the happenstance that befalls her and make it into a book.
"In my experience, you often don't know what you're doing as a writer until after you've done it. Then you can go back, when you've seen what you've done, and begin to hone it and take it further in the direction it's already going. But in the meantime, writing is so absolutely wonderful-it reinforces my belief in the collective unconscious. Synchronicity is always available and you just open the synapses of your brain and in it comes."
Urquhart's description makes writing sound like a rather simple matter of being available to receive the book when it arrives, and to some extent, she did let the story find its way to her door. George Kearns, the young Canadian who paints china, was practically hand-delivered.
"I had begun already to write the part of the book that dealt with Austin and the north shore of Lake Superior, when my cousin Amy Quinn appeared at my door with a collection of letters and said: `Jane-look at these!!' They were letters from a First World War nurse to her lover, who lived in a small Ontario town and ran a china hall. I knew, when I read those letters, that they had to be in."
Thus Urquhart's Canadian hero became a china shop proprietor by a fluke, but nothing more apt could have been found. George loves his fragile ceramics with a commitment and reverence far sturdier than the objects of his devotion. He decorates them, protects them, studies them, and, in a way, when he is in France during the war, educates himself through them. On leave in Paris, George sets out in search of a china painter whose pieces had made their way to the shelves of his Davenport store. At his atelier, George is transported to a new plane of artistic vision after being shown the china tableaux animés created twenty years before. These were
"small idyllic worlds where animals frolicked, waterfalls tumbled, and lovers kissed before all became motionless once again. When George was shown examples of these, he felt his heart open, and then he was overcome by a tremendous sorrow.`the war finished them off altogether. Nothing beautiful and fragile could survive it.'"
He tries to describe the revelation of that visit to Austin, after the war:
" `I'll never forget that moment in Lambert's atelier.when I realized there were two worlds of art. One up there'-he pointed towards the ceiling again-`and one down here, a little closer to earth.. It made me very happy.to be able to understand this.. There is only one world of art now. .The war finished the other one off. .Only one world of art,' he repeated. `Yours.' "
When Urquhart found her china painter, she recognized him to be emblematic of his time, engaged in an amateur art that was popular in that era. She told his story, in part, to "mourn the loss of the amateur artist, the one who loves his art and is beyond fashion or ideology. The artist who doesn't exploit his art. In my opinion, much of twentieth-century art has been exploitative. We've got the artist as celebrity phenomenon, where the artist is hyped by the media to the point where his art gets lost, and he just becomes a fashion. Austin is the successful artist, but he is not a good one. He cannot stay connected to his own soul."
Loss of integrity is something Urquhart mourns, but the character of a young, tragic artist comes from an even more personal source. She is married to a highly esteemed artist, Tony Urquhart, and is very familiar with the visual personality and how it relates to the world. It is a personality to which she is partial. Before this marriage, she was married to another artist, a "young, gifted art student and printmaker, fascinated by everything visual from stump fences to printmaking," who was killed in a car accident on the highway outside Cobourg, the real model for Davenport, Ontario.
"I think the fact that Paul died when he did, when we were both so young, allowed me to remember what it was like to experience such a devastating loss early in life, as my characters do in this book," she explains.
Urquhart knew her book was about loss, but she believed she was expressing the grief of another generation. Her mother, who is still alive, was a child during the war, and Jane grew up on stories and memories of the world that was lost, the world of her grandparents. "I'm driven by a need to express emotions and to record a disappearing world," Urquhart says. "I didn't consciously set out to write about losing my first husband when I was so young, but that must have been part of it too." By telling George's story in the detached voice of the underpainter, his almost completely obscured world is described by the very same person who is responsible for his disappearance. George is the superior artist, but Austin is the survivor.
George begins painting on china because that is the surface available to him, but in the aftermath of war and abandonment, he comes to value it precisely because it does contain. ".he stopped suddenly, removed a painted teacup from one of the shelves, and thrust it towards my face. `At least I could have taken some nourishment from this,' he said. . `At least I could have filled it again and again with warmth. Can you say the same thing about anything you've done?' "
George has survived the tragedies of his young life by tending to his vessels, but eventually, they cannot contain the rage and despair unleashed by revisiting his past. He smashes each and every piece of china, in a vain attempt to force the pain out. It is only when his agony is released that Austin begins to value the containers he always thought were in dubious taste. The rest of his life is devoted to the futile task of repairing the collection that can no longer contain anything.
Urquhart was a friend, admirer, and colleague of Adele Wiseman, a writer whose identity was formed in the shadow of the Second World War. Of her decision to become a writer, Wiseman wrote:
".there was very little innocence about the world into which I emerged as a young adult. We were counting our dead.as a Jew, I knew that not only a way of life, but life itself had been preserved. And so it was even a kind of rebirth. But it was a rebirth that carried with it responsibility. In the counting of our dead I had more dead than I could ever count.I did not feel guilt because I survived; I felt the responsibility, rather, in some sense to make the dead survive through me."
In order to give her dead new life, Wiseman created a character who was a crackpot, a heroine who burst beyond the walls of any container in which she found herself-an irrepressible life force. Urquhart attempts almost the opposite: to give the dead a decent burial, first by bringing their death to our attention. Like Wiseman, Urquhart is a chronicler of a bereaved community, and like Wiseman her book contains the grief that needed to be expressed.
Both these writers take responsibility for their dead, and through their art, nurture them. This tender, stately, and intimate respect for her characters is what keeps The Underpainter from being morbid. It is an elegy: an ode on the side of a porcelain urn. Robin Roger(Books in Canada)
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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