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The Assault on Optimism

Tony Grey

Dec 30 2017

14 mins

Despite our times of comfort and plenty, optimism is under assault. Pessimism is leaping to the attack. Optimism appears to have fewer and fewer adherents.

While natural temperament, derived from heredity or environment or both, is the foundation, philosophical conviction builds on it, sometimes in surprising ways. An illustration of this is the case of my friend, the Australian painter Fred Cress (1938–2009). I had a moving discussion with him when he was ly ill from cancer. He died a week or so after I visited him in his studio.

Fred’s paintings are dark, even macabre at times. While superbly drafted and often ensconced in backgrounds of natural beauty, his human figures are always sly, subversive, up to no good, or just plain nasty. Intrigue and menace haunt the canvas. Fred himself was gregarious, engaging, and to all appearances a happy man. You would never think pessimism about the human condition stalked his psyche. Yet it did in his work.

As I was only there to offer…

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