Monday, June 21, 2010

Day 26 -- grief released


i haven't finalized/realized the title yet, but i do know what the piece is about. it is a visceral manifestation of the uncontrollable nature of grief, the way in which it is a total reaction of mind, body, and spirit. its overbearing weightiness. its ebb and flow. it cannot be stopped even if others think one has no "right" to grieve. grief does not listen to the rules or expectations of others or even one's own mind. it just has it's way with you, all of you. the only way i know to survive it is to let it flow through me, letting it do its work in me.


i suppose i could try to deny this grief, as apparently is the expectation of some for me. grief is. it will run its course. i do not hold it, though for a time it holds me. it will flow through me if i let it. as it does, the weep holes will open up because it and i can simply not contain its force. the openings make room for relief; they allow in the light, like the dappling tree canopies allowing the light to stream into and onto the soft life filled forest floor; they reopen the soul. they let the grief pass.


i have accepted that this is the nature of it within me. the work is an expression of this.


i was comforted at the piece’s reception at the open studio event. several people quietly came up to me and spoke to me of how they connected to the work and their own lived experience of grieving. that meant a lot to me.


i believe that the nature of my work has historically connected with various visceral experiences not just that manifest in me, but that seem to be true for others. the works connect to the internal non-language based experience of living, knowing, and a depth of being. the work reads very differently in person than as a reproduced image (as is true of all my work, as is true of life).

2 comments:

  1. The piece looks magnificent. I wish I could see it in person.

    It makes me think of this painting: http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_a693TT2YGI0/S1nXZMLNzKI/AAAAAAAADeI/L0xEj3ikKoc/s400/Amerika.jpg by Tim Rollins and KOS. (Sorry the image is so small--it's the biggest I could find.)

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  2. thanks. they, the i-park crew, really like the piece and hope to keep it up as long as possible...until nature has its way with it. so if you're up in the area...give i-park a shout...

    i am really looking forward to seeing images of it in the snow. better yet should just come up over my break between semesters next winter to see what happens with it with the evolution of the seasons...

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