Friday, October 21, 2011

Own your art (Guest post by Michelle @ Graceful)






Once or twice a year we’d head to The Plaster Fun House on Shaker Road, select an albino figurine from the metal shelves, pick a palette and settle in to paint at a long, newspaper-covered table.

One time I chose a stately Indian chief, painted a regal scarlet and emerald headdress, a mustard robe and tawny moccasins over the white plaster and then watched warily as the lady behind the counter slid the proud warrior into the kiln. He still stands in the cellar window well in my parents’ home, presiding over my dad’s workbench.

Aside from those rare outings to The Plaster Fun House, we mostly did household projects together, my parents, my sister and I. We stained the floor of the screened porch and hammered nails into sweet-smelling two-by-fours on the back deck.

We sprayed Windex on the plate glass window until cobalt pooled on the sill.

We buffed the white walls of Goodyear tires while my dad blasted Dave Brubeck from the eight-track, the doors of the pea-green Duster wide open and ready to be toweled dry as the last of the sudsy water drained down the driveway and into the sewer.
Don’t get me wrong. I loved these practical family projects, this family time. It was how we operated, and it was just fine by me.

It wasn’t until I had kids that I reluctantly began to experience art again. I tried to persuade them to color in coloring books. And when they refused, I deep-breathed through the mess of scattered sequins, plastic cups brimming with muddy brush water and sticky patches of Elmer’s glue on the hardwood floor.

My kids, I’ve noticed, are willing to own their art and define it as such.

“Hey…what’s my art doing in here? Who put this in here?” demands Rowan, pulling a motley creation of colored paper, magic marker and glued confetti from the recycle bin.

“Oh. I’m sorry, honey,” I say sheepishly. “I didn’t know that was your art.”

I cringe, wondering if resistance to art begins with this moment: the moment a parent even unintentionally redefines what is art…and what is not.

Just recently I spread newspaper over the dining room table, and the four of us – my husband, the boys and I – made art together. A rare quiet descended as we concentrated on our individual projects, heads bent low over paper and brushes. I painted a watercolor of a bird’s nest – two blue eggs suspended in twigs and twine. I doubt I’d deem the finished product art, and I certainly wouldn’t call it good. But I don’t know that any of that really matters, simply because of this: long after the boys and my husband had finished their paintings and wandered off to other activities, I still sat at the dining room table, painting by myself.

(yes, beautiful michelle... this is what it means to own your art. please check out michelle's grace-filled site here, where she uses words to paint pictures of Christ)

19 comments:

Sheila said...

I am unlikely to ever produce something that anyone would recognize as art.

But the process, now...that can be fun!

Thanks for that reminder, Michelle.

Rachel said...

this is so beautiful.

i cannot wait to watch my children hold a paintbrush, wrap their fingers around a pen, or express themselves in any other form they choose. it will be a gift to see.

redemptionsbeauty said...

Lovely as ususal Michelle. Now that my kids are older we don't do the projects as much anymore, but what great memories. Still have lots of their artful beauty tucked in boxes in the attic and on pictures in the scrapbooks. And when we re-visit those memories occasionally, they still smile with pride over what they created.

David Rupert said...

I had some terrible artistic endeavors as a child and I've never returned. I need someone to put the crayon in my hand again, to give me a bottle of glue and glitter and tell me that what I did is nice.

Brian Miller said...

smiles. we like to go do family pottery as well...and art together...and my oldest likes toon his own and will ask for it occassionally just to be him doing it...

happygirl said...

I have no talent for art. But I love to see beautiful art and it moves my soul. :)

Tiffany said...

The process is what I think is art, not necessarily the finished product.

My daughter loves coloring books, but you've inspired me to do what I've been procrastinating about for a couple months now. This weekend, we're going out and buying a whole bunch of art supplies!

Ostriches Look Funny said...

I really like this, it sort of hints as to why i refuse to tell my kids how to make, and instead I wait for them to do something. rocket ships don't have to LOOK like rocket ships, they just have to feel like rocket ships.
My logical one thinks I'm insane.

Kathryn Ross said...

Good for you, Michelle! Keep the art alive!

Joy!
Kathy

Carolynn said...

I love this. I know that quiet you speak of. It's quite sacred, actually. This inspires me. I've been guilty of not owning my art. *Hugs* (would love to see your birds' nest painting...)

amandatdodson said...

loved seeing you here today, Michelle. :) i'm still a sad lit'l stick figure kind of artist ... but there's something about crayons and paint that makes life slow down a bit and bring out the inner kid. enjoyed your words ...

Linda said...

I have always longed to have the word artist applied to me - to my awkward attempts to create something beautiful.
This encourages my heart Michelle.
What a gifted writer/artist you are!

Jodi said...

For me it's all about the feeling it gives. Thanks ,Michelle

Gwen Stewart said...

Wonderful post. I always encourage my young music students to call their musical creations "art", because I believe art is as much about the process as it is the end product.

God bless you both!

journeytoepiphany said...

Michelle,
This is so deep. You are right, as parents and teachers we often define art by what we toss around freely or toss in the the trash. What a great reminder to us as people to be more careful in how we determine not only art, but what is important to others...

Nancy said...

What David Rupert said. Not long ago, I wrote about my panic attack in an art studio. Maybe if I'd had a glass of wine first?

But I write words and my son makes music, so we have that.

Nice to see you over here, Michelle!

Ed Pilolla said...

beautifully told. rediscovering art, our passion, and with it peace, is dramatic event, or can be.
really like that scene of the whole crew sitting around making art, and you still there later.

S. Etole said...

Art will be in the memories as well.

Amy Sullivan said...

I struggle in big ways to own my art. Good encouragement (as always!).