It has taken me awhile to get back to this blog. I have been spending my time in ways that now seem questionable. For instance, printmaking! And helping a community print room get up and running. A room now closed due to a virus sweeping the planet.
It has been one month since my closest print-buddy and cohort and fellow volunteer monitor and I said goodbye, closed the doors and went home. Sometimes we text. Mostly about a one-eyed bunny we left as impromptu guardian to the giant press–now sitting solitary in the bizarre hush and dim of Corona days and nights. My friend sends me pictures of the prints she is sure the bunny is happily making, of carrots and cabbages twirling around on white paper. They seem so exuberant; from a “lucky” bunny, she says.
Pressure: Last year started out slow then went off onto a tangent with a lot of pressure: To fix a sick pet, to put myself back in balance and back in the studio, and to think positively about all that is so rapidly changing around me, in my home town and beyond.
Then it ended with a car accident and an even greater need to seek balance and find some peace. I remember praying for people to leave, having no idea many people would be leaving the planet very soon, permanently.
Balance: The desire for balance has put me on a path of artist and teacher. And indeed, the theme in the news and in life right now seems to be about a battle of balance between light and dark and an overwhelming desire by the many to heal our planet; to be conscious of what will turn us to the light–while feeling pushed by the dark.
Dark and Light: In art these are essential components to the composition and feel of a piece: A beam of light shining down through thick tree trunks to touch gold on a single aspect, the quiet white orb of a reflecting pool in the middle of a night forest (a print I once saw), a patch of sunken pumpkins and garbage glimmering under a wash of rain. But in life, the darkness can feel so heavy at times, even though I welcome each end of every long “shelter-in-place” day–to hide in sleep.
I have been reading Barbara Brown Taylor’s book, Learning To Walk In The Dark. She really helps us see both sides of things. I love her personal stories about her search to understand darkness in its many forms.
She writes: “The source of light is not in the outer world. We believe that it is only because of a common delusion. The light dwells where life also dwells: within ourselves.” (Note: This was written by Jacques Lusseyran, a blind French resistance fighter, from his memoir.)