I hardly know where to start. Creativity in the time of Coronavirus—when all this human brain wants to do is create order in a world chockfull of chaos? Now, under New York state lock-down, I have the perfect opportunity. All my piles, all my files, all my styles—and all my guiles (procrastination being the prime suspect)—are staring me in the face. No mask can protect me from what’s right in front of me. I am going to toss into the mix, in no particular order, some of what I have been dabbling in. Au courant, and going back my entire life.
The original art (above) is from several years ago. It was just sitting here in a “to file” pile. Pretty apt, right? What I couldn’t find was the photoshopped original scan. So here are cut marks, scars, the whole tactile mess. I keep clearing my computer desktop, hoping the “prettier” one will turn up. Meanwhile, I kind of like this, just the way it is. Validation from a mental health professional: Brain Fog is NORMAL!
I began several series of collages years ago, only to hit an impasse. This one was half-finished until last week, when I added a pocket, a picket fence, and a protective pad (from a raspberry container). “Ring Around the Rosie” entered my head at the time I started it, a nursery rhyme supposedly written in the time of the bubonic plague. (And yes, this is me.)
Sometimes a poem wants to come out.
NAVIGATING A DREAM (based on a dream from 2017)
I look at a map.
The paper kind, with folds and
bends you can never find again.
I am determined that I can get to
where I’m going.
Relief trickles in.
I could walk, from here to
there though it may take weeks,
even months. They say it’s the journey
not the destination.
There’s no panic in me.
No need to refold the map as
precisely as I found it.
I won’t be using it
anymore.
I am having a hard time committing to a sketchbook. I only have cats around me. Still life and room interiors don’t interest me. They have been done far better by Vuillard.
And yes, I am also going through paper ephemera that includes things that have hung on my bulletin boards decades ago. Like that. Like this:
And yes, I jumped on the sewing wagon early, once it became clear that the Defense Production Act was not going to be called into desperately needed service, contracting professionals to manufacture masks during this pandemic. Oh, no—let the burden and privilege fall on average people who want to do something, however inadequately. I started with this:
and it evolved into this:
So, to end this post, I will return to something I received in the mail back in October. A huge carton of anti-viral Kleenex (that I never ordered, never would have ordered, and never knew who sent it), arrived on my doorstep. I was never billed.
I often wonder about prophesy and fate, and serendipity and signs. I am getting used to the “not knowing” in this life. And hindsight always provides tantalizing clues.
I thoroughly enjoyed this post!Mom xoxo
Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPad
Thx, Mom!
Excellent poem and its title! I love also comic mask 🙂 Feel rock&roll in this article.
Thank you blue tram! Vintage t-shirts and music from the 1980s! Nostalgic for that time when I lived in NYC and the streets were so alive.
So cool, Sharon! I have missed your posts.
Erica~ thank you! And I am so happy for your new life chapter!