“What
a fucking joke”
-Madam Pinky in Aravind Adiga’s 2008 novel, The White Tiger, describing society and class
-Madam Pinky in Aravind Adiga’s 2008 novel, The White Tiger, describing society and class
Dearest
Readers,
I
return to my blog after a winter hiatus, and a spate of wild painting. More on that in a later blog…
I’ll
pick up where I left off in January…sitting and thinking at my frozen upstairs bedroom
window, now moist and green below, waiting for something to happen.
The
opening quote refers to me…silly me. Back in January, I proudly attended the
opening reception of “ArtsConnect”, a juried show at Catamount Arts Center inSt. Johnsbury Vermont.
I had
been picked by Andrea Rosen, the curator from the Fleming Museum at the University of Vermont to be included in an exhibition of sixty-one local and New England artists.
It felt good to “win”. I showed two fabric sculptures created before I moved to Vermont.
Getting in the show stirred
up the bones of another creature I’d made years earlier –“Miss Perfect”, a trickster
masking the little Catholic schoolgirl in a blue jumper and white blouse who
just wanted to please.
The Spinmeister_13in x 13in x 17in_acrylic on fabric_found objects and mixed media |
The Fanatic_6.5in x 11in_fabric_acrylic_glass-beads and mixed media |
Miss Perfect_8x20x3.5_fabric_wood_acrylic_ glass_papier mache_bricks_dynel and lightbulbs |
Academy of St. Aloysius Grammar School uniform made from memory, 2011 |
Take someone who doesn’t keep score,
Who’s not looking to be richer, or
afraid of losing,
Who has not the slightest interest
even
In his own personality: He’s free
-Jalaluddin Rumi–Open Secret:Versions of Rumi
Don’t
get me wrong. The winners’ artworks were good. I smiled and clapped, but I was
not happy.
“There
is no key. There is no key.”
I’m
quoting here again from Aravind Adiga’s wonderfully disturbing novel, The
White Tiger about the roles and the rules of survival between the haves and
have-nots in contemporary Indian society. There is a deadly comedy to this game
of winning and losing inside the metaphorical “Rooster Coop”–an unlocked cage
stuffed with chickens waiting to be sold in the markets for dinner. The poor
creatures do not see that the door is open!
This goes for America too of course, down to my nascent
wishes and desires. I know a few people who seem outside of the cage. I admire
them and sometimes see glimpses of light in myself.
Trapped_25in x38in_Ink and acrylic wash on paper_1994 |
In all fairness to me, I’m
inching along on that enlightened path. Age,
self-kindness and experience in the world tell me to go easy on the self-blame.
So, as Spring bursts from the starting gate, I’m at the
window again contemplating the wish or need to be a perfect winner as the creatures and
things in nature win and lose, live and die on a daily basis around me. What I see is a
wild raucous balance. Some say it’s survival of the fittest, but to me there is
a powerful balancing act between the parts and the whole of everything . There is
no cage.