post-certainty era in art

Detail Figure in red hood holding a Target bag in the forest. Painting by Deborah Scott, part of her Structural Omission framework. Deborah Scott Art. 2010 oil on canvas

The Artist Doesn’t Know

  Some truths may not be hidden. They may be simply out of reach. No matter how long you look, how well you draw, how complete your rendering, you’ll never get the whole story. Not because it’s buried, but because it was never all there to begin with. That’s the ground condition of my paintings.

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detail Painting of a portrait of a young woman seated barefoot in a chair draped with white cloth, wearing bright sneakers, framed through omissions revealing the limits of perception and narrative closure. By Deborah Scott, part of her Structural Omission framework. Deborah Scott Art.

Structural Omission vs. Narrative Closure

  At some point, someone taught us that the story begins.A clean start. A rupture. An unanticipated twist.Voids that can’t be ignored or explained.And the inevitable reckoning—because sitting with the unresolved is unbearable for most. I’ve watched people choose collapse, confrontation, performance, self-erasure—anything but acceptance. The unknown is terrifying, but slightly less so if you

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Start Here: Structural Omission

Start Here: Structural Omission You landed here because you saw a painting, heard the phrase, or followed a breadcrumb. Either way, welcome. This is the entry point. Structural Omission isn’t unfinished work. It’s not laziness, and it’s not sprinkling abstraction onto realism for effect. I originated Structural Omission in response to what I was experiencing

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ropped detail from Deborah Scott’s painting It Was Obvious to Her — a partially disrupted realist portrait showing a contemplative man emerging through vivid red structural omissions that interrupt and reveal the incompleteness of the scene.

Structural Omission Is Not Non-Finito

Structural Omission Is Not Non-Finito When people first encounter my paintings, the visible gaps and disruptions can look like incompletion. Art history has a name for that: non-finito, the “unfinished.” Michelangelo’s Prisoners seem to claw their way out of raw stone. Rodin loved leaving surfaces rough. Modern painters have used incompletion to keep energy alive

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