Commitment
Commitment presents itself as a charged visionary field where figures, symbols, and layered markings gather into a dense emotional and spiritual atmosphere. The image feels less like a single scene than a record of an inner event — something revealed through persistence, revision, and surrender to the act of making. Its rough edges, handwritten notations, and visibly worked surface give it the feeling of an artifact, as if the image has been wrestled into being over time rather than simply composed.
At the center of the work, clustered pale faces emerge from a dark and turbulent space. Their expressions suggest vulnerability, astonishment, and silent witness. They do not appear as stable portraits so much as presences surfacing from an interior realm. Above them, a large winged figure stretches across the composition, creating a dramatic sense of suspension and protection while also introducing tension. The wings feel both sheltering and ominous, suggesting that transcendence is never entirely free of burden.
Throughout the image, other forms rise and recede: a crowned or watchful figure, a bird-like presence, scattered eyes, and a radiant eclipse-like form near the top. These elements create the impression of a private mythology unfolding in layers. The composition invites associations with revelation, sacrifice, devotion, and inner transformation, yet it never settles into one fixed narrative. Instead, it remains open, allowing the viewer to move through it intuitively.
The title Commitment gives the work its psychological center. It suggests more than promise or decision. It points to endurance, devotion, and the willingness to remain present before difficult inner material. The image can be read as a meditation on what it means to commit oneself to vision — to stay with the unknown, the unresolved, and the emotionally charged until something authentic begins to emerge.
The visible inscriptions and handwritten marks at the bottom reinforce this sense of process. They anchor the work in time and make the act of revision part of the final image. Rather than hiding its evolution, the piece keeps that history exposed. This gives Commitment an added intimacy: it is not only a finished image, but also a trace of the artist’s prolonged engagement with it.
Like much of David Ricketts’ work, Commitment exists between dream, symbol, and self-examination. It brings together beauty, unease, tenderness, and visionary intensity in a way that resists easy explanation. What gives the piece its force is not certainty, but conviction — the feeling that the artist has followed the image where it needed to go, allowing its layered meanings to remain alive.
At its core, Commitment is a work about devotion to the inner life: the courage to remain with the image, the mystery, and the call to create, even when the full meaning remains just beyond reach.