Tag Archives: emotion

Art Tells A Story

Art – an Emotional Response

House in Sachse 2018
House in Sachse 2018

Art Tells a Story – Surrealism

For many years I have worked to paint realistically so I could eventually bend it even just a bit. My paintings have an underlying theme of darkness, loneliness and separation.

Moon Flower-Oil on Canvas
Moon Flower Oil on canvas 2018

It is intentional creating a feeling or emotion in art but just like creating words if the creative thinks of what they want to say the logical mind supersedes and all nuance is lost.

My Experimentation isn’t as much with painting as it is with writing for example, the use of music to separate the logic from the creative word. I have listened to music in the background that definitely affected the finished artwork but it was never specifically intentional.


Art from Dreams

I had a dream when I was very young- this is my grandfather and lightning hit the tree. Pops-as we called him-came out of the sawdust in a red flannel shirt. There was something ominous about this particular dream because one day long after the dream a lighting hit the willow in our backyard. This is the same willow in the Child of Ten painting below.

This post is about paintings that tell a story. I have often avoided this kind of art because I prefer to let the viewer make their own conclusions or stories from their own experiences.

I started the painting,  Child of Ten-several months before it was complete because the inspiration had to develop over time.

Child of Ten
Child of Ten- the death of my father inspired this painting

In this painting there is a recurring theme that I’ve included in many of my paintings: the blackbirds. The viewer goes into the ground and even into the casket to see a mirror of myself and how his death affected me and also that a large part of my childhood rests with him. The egg is a symbol of the soul, the moth is the death moth and a connection to nature. There are poems included in the right side and other symbols of the feeling of loss and a struggle with his absence. The tree behind the child is the Willow Tree in my backyard in an idyllic landscape a stark contrast to the depths of the grave.


Art and Recurring Themes: Blackbirds

My writing is inspired by loss. Losing a parent at an early age probably made me more of a poet or writer than I would have been otherwise:  it is changed me greatly.

In the family plot all are the same

from who they were or when they came.

A pine box but no words etched.

Only a presence we can’t forget.

A whisper and the wind lifts

an ember to a light place in the night sky

The poet, the writer, passes by…

The blackbirds make their appearance. I always have that haunted feeling when it comes to loss, death as growing up I realized darkness just as clearly and beautifully as light.

Grackles on a wire
Original Oil on canvas: The Grackles

These paintings were foreshadowed in a post back in 2018 on an original blog I had started. It describes the Child of Ten as well as several other paintings that finally came to be and it was on draft since 2018.


Art- a Story While Scuba Diving

A painting and a sketch of the black fish at Shark River Inlet. I mentioned this art in the post from 2018.

For more pastels from this series go to the blog-it is the original  blog


Art for a Contest About Fighting Cancer

A recent pastel on Paper Window of Hope created for Cancer Art Contest from Biafarin

Window of Hope 2024 Pastel on paper- 12×18

 

The Loneliness Project: Part 1

The Loneliness Project – It is the absence of something, most of the time something we took for granted for a long time before we realize it’s gone. The swing settles in the family tree and only a random breeze will wake it from its slumber.

I remember the cool green grasses and clothes blowing across the long lines of rope making shapes and patterns like ghosts. I remember the simplicity of a great blue sky and a child’s mind full of opportunities.

There are so many times we fall off the swing, we skin our knees and assume that no one is coming with the clean washcloth or the gentle encouraging voice; we grow up. We become self-sufficient, we are taught to ignore the swing, the green grass and the great blue sky as if they were just childhood foolishness.

We barely realize they’re gone but the child inside us still yearns to stop, to seek comfort, to search with an explorers heart for wonders among the grass and secrets in the woods.

It is this loneliness, missing a child that always found time to play, to look up to the sky in search for something great. How I miss the swing and the tall willows throwing viridian shadows, I consciously aspire for my own resurrection.

The green lawn, the red and white shed before it was an eyesore, back when it had a purpose. We would have family dinners in the backyard, the kids would take orders and there was a barbecue fired up, it was summer.

I remember a large gathering of people, usually Easter, after church we’d sit outside. It was back before mosquitoes became the deadly creatures they are.

I remember plastic chairs and long white plastic table clothes, laughter and drama-it was a family gathering after all.

Now the family is scattered to multiple states. Many of the members I remember are dead, some still live near the same town but we are all separate.

I miss the bond of family, even if what I remember wouldn’t match reality. I”m sure there was more tension among them but I was young. I had the privilege to grow tired of having guests.

I would love to sit in my Aunt Ann’s kitchen listening to the old woman with stories and small talk. I would enjoy sitting in the living room with all the men watching sports and talking trash but time moves on and we don’t realize the connections or their significance in our lives.

The Precarious State of Loneliness

There are so many more like me…but we are all separate,

How uncomfortable it is, longing for contact

and yet unable to fathom its joy

To seek solitude while aching for connection

it’s the most difficult state as nothing seems to feel comfortable

time is slow and yet fast and random simultaneously

I have lived here

I have driven a long road, alone, missing others

and yet insistent on my own solitude

is it the soul’s nature of knowing its own state

but curious for another?

Fear keeps us

separate.

Awkward we are souls in transition.

I forced my way through loneliness

until I grew comfortable with myself

it was only then that I could fathom

interaction

and it’s joyful conclusion…

The colors of humanity

ebb and flow just like the seasons

but they are to be shared

not squandered

our voices are like the fleeting colors of autumn

how they linger among the tangled limbs

to grow as a wonderfully colorful

landscape

they become stories among grasses

ghosts in the shadows

until they settle on stones

and sleep like whispers…

we were never meant to be alone

we are all notes in a beautiful song

so when did we stop singing?