Featured image: Feel'n Fortunate
I listen
I think
She is saying
what she personally
thinks.
How she
thinks….
Is not
what I think
I feel
she is saying
listening personally
thinking personally
I listen
I think
She is saying
what she personally
thinks.
How she
thinks….
Is not
what I think
I feel
she is saying
listening personally
thinking personally
Featured image: As the Wind Blows
drifting
southerly
eagles wings
slowly
tilt
currents of air
moving
invisible
Featured image: Seasons
the gift of tears
frozen on skin
sadness
NO
powerful
joy
tears…
burdens
released
she weeps
Featured image: Raven's Spirit
I tell and create stories for all the works I create. They are personal stories about my life. I believe that stories are our wealth. No money, diamonds, gold, silver or what have you, but stories. Our history. The stories we create become our history. I love hearing stories from others about their lives, and the lives of others who are important to them.
Recently I traveled to the southwest, Tubac, Phoenix, Santa Fe, Sedona and Taos. I gallery hopped in all those towns, asking about the stories the artists were telling in their work, both 3 dimensional and 2 dimensional. At first I tried to visually read the artists’ stories but then I found that I really needed to do some research. I started asking questions about the artists’ visual languages. I researched and bought books on the visual symbolism in their works. I am still researching – their pictographs, the symbols they put on their clothing, drums, shields, decorations.
I was especially drawn to their fetishes. The first fetish I saw and bought, just because I liked it – turned out to be a major piece. There were fetishes tied to the back of a mole. And another one was of two ravens tied together with a turquoise piece on their backs, the fetish. The women who sold me the work told me about the differences between ravens and crows, or black birds. Ravens mate for life, crows do not. Ravens travel along or with each other, crows do not travel in clusters, groups. I loved the story. And I loved that the story was being told repeatedly. For me, that is what art is all about – the stories, mine, and the other viewers of a work. Stories, our histories. Just glorious.
Returning home, I am beginning to read all the books I picked up along the way. I am re-immersing myself into their culture. It is hard because I felt differently when I was there. Loving their culture and what they were saying. I know my future work will reflect this trip for a long time – my head is just spinning. The first thing will be sketches of Ravens in different postures. I am lucky to have two ravens visit my feeder almost every day. I am so excited about it.
Imagine sitting near a snow drift that covers over your head.
Blending with pearls falling from the sky.
Two ravens at the end of the path.
Featured image: Forever
Before I left for our southwest trip I was researching the Celtic art. Especially their knots. The symbolism within the Celtic knot is that all things are interconnected, women together. That means the good as well as the bad are woven into the knot. I wonder if all things are intertwined. What was the thing that held the knot together? I came up with the conclusion that it was faith.
Faith according to the online dictionary is: complete trust or confidence in someone or something. Faith is also according to the online dictionary is a strong belief in God or in the doctrines of a religion, based on spiritual apprehension rather than proof. Faith isn’t really a visual, that it is just something believed in and this belief allows us to imagine and create work that illustrates it; like the Celtic knot.
Featured image: Sun, Tree, Water
Landscapes quietly absorb the tones, textures and rhythms of our living.