"Lessons Learned, Sailing Home"
I am an artist. This is the story about my current project - painting a pink plastic adirondack chair. The chair represents my mother, Carolyn Elizabeth Pedersen Schulte, who passed on June 5th, 2011 and loved this bright color pink. She was proud of me as an artist and would love what I am doing. I take the chair to favorite places of hers and to places or situations I know she would have liked. It is a way for me to grieve and to celebrate her life.
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
"Grief Work"
Rockport, MA is a very special place for me and has always nourished my art. I used to say my car went there all by itself! So it naturally came to pass that I had to take "Mom" there too. I set up right on the T wharf but instead of doing "Motif #1", the building that has inspired so many artists, I placed the chair on the pier high over the water, looking out to sea, through the jetties on either side. It was a gray day, cloudy, but comfortable. As often happens, many people stopped and enjoyed the work, and heard the story of the pink chair paintings. It was a 4 hour session, longer than usual because of the interruptions. I left the water empty until almost the last minute, when all of a sudden, a children's sailing school with small sailboats came tacking back home after their lesson. Without thinking, I quickly painted them into the piece, and it was almost done. The sky was pretty boring, all grey and kind of flat and I said kiddingly, "Mom, can you do something about that?" Within 15 minutes, the sky took on a interesting pattern of clouds with tiny bits of blue, which I gladly painted in......Later, after packing up the car, an extreme tiredness came over me. I could barely make it to the bench, where I laid down for a while. Ravenous, I finally got up, and still tired, barely made it to the restaurant. I ate quietly and again, barely made it back to the car. I have never been so tired after painting, and had felt none of it during the painting process. Later, showing the painting to my friend Teresa, a therapist, I told her the story. She said: Lynne, you are doing grief work. You need to plan a nap after every painting. I said I didn't actively feel sad or grief; I had just been painting. She said "Lynne, look at it! That is grief work if I ever saw it!" Then I saw the powerful message of that small (14x14) piece. I instantly knew the title.
Labels:
Harbor,
Jetty,
MA,
Motif #1,
pink chair,
Rockport,
sailboats. sailing school,
Sailing
Location:
29 Granite St, Rockport, MA 01966, USA
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Beautiful. Thanks for sharing this, Lynne.
ReplyDeleteAlexandra Thayer, Plainfield, VT
I really like what you are doing now. This is a very touching piece. What a contrast between the darkness of the sky (still beautiful) and the bright pink chair. So much like Mom, a flower blooming wherever planted and in whatever conditions life threw her way. Bravo!
ReplyDeleteLove,
Georgie