This painting is the most figurative of my recent works. It is fuelled by my being more open and explicit about my past and its legacy. I still wish to leave the viewer with ‘room’ for alternate interpretations.
What strategies do you use to cope with negative feelings?
Strategies I use to cope with negative feelings…
Ooh, I use different strategies – dependant on what and how severe my negative feelings are.
The majority of the time I get my paint brushes out and express my feelings on the canvas. I also write in my journal, splurge all my thoughts and negative feelings on the page.
I occasionally chat with my friends…
More recently, I have expressed my feelings through tears, floods of persistent tears – what a release!!!💧
In the warmer months I will go into my garden and potter around. At other times I go on a cleaning spree in my home, scrubbing and polishing already clean surfaces.
I do, at times sit quietly and have a little chat with myself. Put things into perspective…it’s not all that bad – surely?
You’re writing your autobiography. What’s your opening sentence?
Opening Lines of My Autobiography
If I were to write my autobiography, my first sentence would be…
I had always planned to attend my father’s funeral when he dies. I knew I wouldn’t be invited but I had every intention to attend. He died in November 2011 of esophageal cancer.
Our homes are practical objects. They are built to give us shelter and a place to live. To many the home is usually linked to stability, security, happy families and protection. We use them to work, play, socialise, and entertain our friends. They also offer us with a place to relax and rest. We personalise them to make it familiar, which in turn can make it comfortable; physically, mentally, or both. We do this by investing our personalities, status, securities, wealth, memories and identities in these structures. But we also rely on the emotional value of home.
The idea of home has a meaning for everyone. We often speak of our hometown, our birthplace, family background, nostalgia of a time, place, and home with fond reverie. It is a place where one can locate their identity.
A ‘home’ is the house we make our own.
Gaston Bachelard once said:
Our house is our corner of the world – Our first universe – In the life of a human being, the house maintains the person through the storms of the heavens and through those of life.
Home is a space where the occupants are hidden from view, locked away behind closed doors, surrounded by enclosing walls. These walls give us the privacy that offers the only reliable hiding place from the rest of the public gaze. They are the places in which we usually hold memories of family and childhood events.
On the other hand, the home can also be a place of conflict, abuse, loneliness, entrapment and fear. Concealed from public view it holds things hidden from human eyes.
There are many who have no safe haven. Some people have lost or never had that protection. They have no place to live or a place to call home.
Homelessness not only brings a loss of home but also brings a sense of isolation and estrangement. Many people, like me, have moved house many times. I have also been homeless (a young teenager) and experienced the isolation, loneliness and feelings of abandonment. I do not have childhood memories of a safe, warm and loving environment. Thus, my concept of ‘home’ is somewhat tainted.
I believe Marianna Torgovonick sums up the ambiguities of home in the foregoing:
Home is the place we live, lungs expanding and contracting, air clean and healthy, loving parents, wholesome children, all that in sync. Home is the place of shelter; protection against natural and man-made catastrophes, doors locked and barred to violence and destruction, windows open to the world but able to shut at will. That’s why the plight of refugees, or civilians in wars, of the homeless, is so terrifying. No place to live, no place to shelter, no place to get away from it all. Home is the Utopian ideal, home is what we have to believe is safe, where we have to carry on as though it will be safe. Home is the last frontier.
My dream home is a where I will feel at peace.
Oh, and it will have a large studio so I can paint and dance to my hearts content!
‘The Intimate Values Of A House And The Spaces Within It’
The language of houses, homes and their interiors; practically, philosophically and psychologically in artists work.
The theme of house, home and their interiors are used in my art work to represent my own memories of the homes I lived in as a child; not simply in the physical sense, but also in a psychological sense.
This study explores the work of other artists who use this theme in their work. I discovered what led these artists to express their identities, beliefs, memories and lives in the language that represents home.
I also observed the similarities and differences in our concepts of home and in the way we present the home to the viewer.
What is the significance of home to you; practically, philosophically and psychologically?
I did have a male friend who made a massive, positive impact on my life!
It was in the summer of 2016. I was at a friend’s house party and I got chatting to a gentleman I’d never met before. We talked art, poetry, education, and a dash of bullshit! As one does after a glass of wine or two.
Anyways… we hit it off, we had a giggle and we connected straight away.
We actually taught in the same College, but he was thirty + years my senior. so, our paths didn’t cross in the work place.
He was a published author and poet. I knew very little about either genres at the time, so he opened up my eyes to the written word. I would also like to believe, I opened his eyes to the painterly art world.
We laughed, argued, debated, danced, sang, wrote, and exchanged our inner most thoughts, feelings, past history, and experiences together. It was a time, we were both…a little lost.
COVID lock-down hit us all. The loneliness, and isolation was awful for many of us. My friend and I stayed connected via text, email, telephone calls, and writing to each other daily. Neither of us had anyone else.
He was the most supportive, non judgmental, kind, funny, open minded man I had ever met. He was the man who encouraged me to write my memoir.
He sadly passed away in 2022 at 83 yrs young.
He was my best friend.
I loved this man dearly, trusted him wholeheartedly, and I miss my creative soulmate terribly!
Hey, this is not a dislike men campaign 😅. I love some of them…sometimes! 😉☺️🤣
PS. This is the first music video, well, any video I’ve linked to a post. So I hope it works. 🤪