Sometimes being an artist is like being a cryptographer. The
universe gives me messages that I have to decode. Instead of breaking the code
with words or numbers, I rely on the language of colors, shapes, patterns, and
textures to reach the place of understanding. With the next piece in my
portfolio, I did not know what I was creating, or the meaning behind it, while working on it. Even when it was complete, I still knew as little about
the piece as when I set out to create it. For the first time ever, it wasn’t
until I began writing this blog post that I began to break the code
and thus understand what the piece truly represented.
I was first introduced to Peter Gabriel’s superb score,
“Passion: Music for the Last Temptation of Christ”, in Autumn 1999. I was immediately mesmerized by the score which
varies from epic, sweeping tracks to minimalist pieces. Naturally, some of the
epic tracks are stand-outs, but some of the more subdued and obscure pieces
really shine as well. “Sandstorm” is one such track that has always been a silent
favorite of mine.
It wasn’t until 17 years later, one morning before dawn in
April 2016 when I awoke unable to calm my thoughts, that my connection to this song would come to fruition. In the early hours of that morning, I stepped into the art studio,
inserted my headphones, scrolled directly to "Sandstorm", and instantly I felt it
reflect the spinning chaos of my emotions. As the music pierced my soul, I
began creating the initial layers of what would become this piece. At the end
of that first painting session, all I had was black, white, and grey on the
paper. “And this means what?” I asked the muses, to which they gave no reply.
Work on this piece spanned several days without knowing
where it was taking me. The only thing that was disclosed to me was whether or
not I was finished. More often than not, I was told to keep working. Each time
that I returned to work on this piece, much like donning a mask, I would step
into the music, channeling its energy. As the tempo would build and swirl into
a climax, the muses would guide me, whispering that it wasn’t finished. As
such, I would create the next layer.
As mentioned above, even after its completion, I did not
know what this piece was. “Great, I made an abstract sandstorm,” I initially thought to
myself. The second I had that thought, I knew I was on to something, that this
was an interpretation of a sandstorm. I couldn’t have known what this
represented because I had not yet decoded the underlying message. A few weeks
later into the middle of May, I chose the title, but I still did not fully
understand this piece.
Through practicing Mettā,
I am learning to reside more in my heart and less in my head. Through this
practice, I have realized that often my heart comes to a place of understanding
and acceptance well before my mind does. In the previous November, I knew in my
heart that the long term relationship that I was in was over, but there was a
disconnect between my heart and mind. It wasn’t until I set out to write this
blog post that I understood that the swirling tempest that pulled me from my sleep
that April morning was foreshadowing. My heart was communicating to my mind, signaling the end, and with my mind's reluctance to embrace it, it manifested into the turmoil and chaos that was the
Featured in this post: Sandstorm of my Mind
All current artwork can be found in my profile at Fine Art America. Thank you for your time and your support.
"Sandstorm of my Mind" |
Featured in this post: Sandstorm of my Mind
All current artwork can be found in my profile at Fine Art America. Thank you for your time and your support.
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