From 'A Ballad of Slate Colored Days
"I've just been looking out the kitchen window. You can see the skyline with its mix of brick, stone-colored, clear and black glass buildings and the marble gray tones of daylight. It resembles an urban impressionist painting of the late 20th century. This place is a refuge; I just have to shut the world out a lot. I can hear the ferry boats hooting as they come in from the peninsula, the gulls, even winos cursing and empty wine bottles hitting the sidewalk occasionally -- but don't worry, it's safe in here(laughs). No one bothers me much. Invisibility -- that's the emblem of my being(laughs). I know I'm not as bad off as some people. There was this guy I saw between downtown and Seattle Center. He looked very troubled and then he started screaming as he walked down the street. I saw him enter a run down apartment building. A few days later, I wrote a song about him(picks up the guitar in the corner and begins to strum and sing): Morning stains the walls/a pale gray light/and I am waking up again/ in my Belltown room /to that which I must pretend/is worth the breathing/over and over again. When take my medicine/the world is just/a black and white photograph;/there is no reason to rage/and there's none to laugh --/my mind a blank sun/a seed that is cut in half. So many times/I wish I could fly over my life/like a gull over the choppy gray/of Elliot Bay.
From 'Moonlight and Skeletons'
By my late 20's I had gone beyond the naturalism I had learned from my teachers in Norway and beyond even impressionism. I was no longer satisfied with rendering external reality or even capturing my first impression of a subject. Instead, I felt that one should portray "the reality alive in one's mind". I begun to paint ideas -- my figures and backgrounds now stood for something more than their literal nature. One cold, April evening in my late 20's, I was walking through a crowd of Oslo's respectable bourgeoisie. I was looking for my first lover, Milly Thaulow but kept seeing this procession of pale, death-like faces. There seemed to be soul destroying in them. When at last I saw her, she walked by without speaking.
On an Oslo street,/they came towards him/under a sky of indigo./He saw their faces/in a luminous flow/like a river of moons/in the street light's glow. They were bourgeoisie,/carefully attired/in stiff and proper black clothes./From their dark suits/and dresses, heads rose/that were skeletally white/and cold as ice floes. He was a shadow/striding past that long line/of lunar countenances/and chilling breath/winding their way/to their fated deaths.