when she stopped
making art,
she became
angry,
anxious,
irritable, resentful.
she would watch
him draw horned beasts,
using only
red and black pen on a white canvas.
she would watch
him outside a window
swirling
acrylics on metal surfaces.
she would
browse through her old drawings,
or find a
stray red pencil in a drawer.
what had
once moved through her?
and where
did it go?
early on,
when she had felt the first wave
she got
derailed
trapped by
her own need for affection
for
acceptance, for love.
she
abandoned everything to move in with a stranger
she left for
the ocean.
every
warning was ridiculed,
she
surrounded her thoughts with an iron fence.
her body was
burdened,
her lungs
were tight and closed,
and the
thing that once moved through her
became so
small as to be invisible.
she thought
about it for years.
sometimes
she attempted a small drawing,
but she had
lost trust in her own hands.
she judged
the lines before they were complete,
saw herself
as another would see her,
as another
might see her.
later she
fled,
or was cast
aside.
she escaped
the narrow path
of needles
and crime,
lies and delusion,
denial and
fear.
she salvaged
what lay just inside the dumpster
and left the
rest
to become a
vague memory.
and she found
herself in a room,
staring out a
window.
how long had
it been since she drew?
he said to
her:
'if you want to make art, make art.'
'if you want to make art, make art.'
and she
stared at him
with tears
in her eyes.
she thought
she had to wait
for
something to happen,
for a burst,
for an
explosion,
for shapes
to break open the gates
and explode
onto the page.
she watched
him standing in the sun
just outside
the window.
he never
noticed her there,
just a few
feet away.
the canvas
was on the ground on a blue tarp.
he let the
colors mingle,
then would
occasionally move
one side of
the canvas or another.
After a
while
she went
back to her room.
1 comment:
Hauntingly beautiful. There is sorrow here but all hope is not lost. The observations she has are art itself.
Post a Comment