Contact Kelli, temporary manager of Doug's "The Wondering Jew" |
2000-04-28 - 23:22:50 April 28, 2000 Choices All through my life it has been choosing one thing instead of another. The reasons were good, it was just so difficult to understand which way to go. I have always been fascinated with making pictures and all through school my efforts were to create something meaningful and beautiful. I could see it on my block, I could feel it in my gut. The actuality was, I just couldn't do it and suffer myself to see it, let alone anyone else. It wasn't there, the thing was supposed to be there for all to appreciate. It made me want to barf. It was easy for me to see that the quality and delineation was not good. I was so very good at constructing the perfect art class margins on the paper. But what I drew was not good and received a D+ by the kindness of my teachers. Linoleum block pictures were a little better, but my favorite print of a block of mine didn't hang on the wall of my room more than a week until its obscene absurdity consigned it to the waste basket. I did well in shop (industrial arts it was called then). I made all the class requirements and did well, I could cut, shape and polish, bend, twist and forge. Nothing of beauty came of it, utility, yes, beauty, no. That was in what they call middle school now, junior high then. Sometime before I went into high school I began going to the museums, libraries, and the gallery or two existing here those days. The main art museum then was housed in a row of vacated shops near the downtown district. They didn't have much room to display and very little storage space. The main library was nearby and so was the state historical museum where Indian and Pioneer artifacts were on display. One of the main facets of my learning was whether tool, appliance, picture or furniture it was easy to see the beauty of form that the craftsman / artist had put into his work. Sometimes simple in form but with lines leading the eye into an appreciation of pure beauty. I obviously couldn't make any kind of living out of art appreciation or music appreciation. So, when the time came I entered the real world and began to work for a living. There were things I loved about each job I ever had, but the hankering after the beautiful still drives me. Now, my attempt to shape beauty out of the massing of words in their proper order and meaning is where my effort is exerted. Result ? Maybe later, a little childish, inocent offering. Who really knows the prospect of writing something that moves some one deeply ? As deeply as I have been many times ? To even come into the edge of the area that written beauty is created. There is a poet in me somewhere crying for the time to be trained in the use of the intracacies of the language. So much poetry moves me deeply, something as simple as the poem about the butter fly that is a feature of Mike Leung's site. Such beauty, such feeling so simply said that it can be seen, and understood. Recently I have been reading Maya Angelou's poetry and I find it very moving. One of her most famous I guess is her "Phenomenal Woman," carries such a depth of meaning, is symphonic in its execution, a thing of beauty and understanding. I am neither colored (pink sorta) nor female but her work seems to give me a better understanding of those conditions. It takes just a little to please this simple man, but it has to be good for me to enjoy it. 0 comments so far
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