WHAT IS YOUR PASSION?

A REMINDER OF BEAUTY

I received a newsletter from a dear friend, Terrill Welch, two days ago. Terrill is an artist residing on Mayne Island, British Columbia. The newsletter contained photographs of works in progress and photographs of the shoreline and natural life found along the trails she walks. I confess that these photographs left me with a deep longing to return to the island, to feel and connect again to the spirit of the place where I lived for three months. Since returning to the States, I have felt a sense of exile. Canada, the rich multicultural society, environment, and lifestyle are more suitable to my nature. Terrill’s vibrant art, her heartful and soulful connection stirs and inspires me.

After reading Terrill’s newsletter and then re-reading it this morning, I asked myself, “What is your passion?” The question began forming yesterday following a conversation with my friend and brother Changding Hsiau. We had briefly discussed a chapbook I mentioned to him months ago. The poems are based on classical Chinese poetry. They are composed in English and will be translated into Chinese. I had put aside working on the poetry earlier this year to paint and to concentrate on the American political and moral crisis.

Time is a gift rather than a commodity. I have to allow the question “What is your passion” to direct my attention, remind me of the beauty of life, and allow myself to express it creatively.

We, and this is true of myself, often fail to see the details of what is before us. The detail of shapes and the variation of the shades of colors, how the sunlight tinctures flowering petals of a forsythia, or a tree trunk and its branches heavy with buds. One of the lessons I have learned from Terrill about art, and I am only now beginning to understand, fully appreciate and apply to my painting, and which also has application to my poetic work, is the compressed value range. This means maintaining the vale of or lightness of the colors fairly consistent while allowing for changes in the hue and saturation of the subtle shifts in color. We live in a world of subtle shifting colors, a wealth of beauty. “Two peas in a pod” is how we tend to look at things, and too often people. We tend to see that all things are similar and indistinguishable from another in our daily rush. When we slow down, take the time to open our eyes to see with an artistic eye, and we can connect and experience the beauty of life. The artistic eye is the eye of wonder.

I express this in a stanza of my poems titled “Twilight At Changuang Temple.”

Long ago I passed through the Dragon Door,

My path to the gate now sprouts mounds of grass,

To cherish the empty and the pure,

To let my body dissolve into the thousands selves

To become myself and my soul to become as the

Liwu River washing away endless torment and regret.

The artistic eye, the eye of wonder, is the eye of a child that resides within us. As we, and I include myself, “mature,” we easily become turtles or clams living within a shell. Narrow-visioned, passing through life, the sea washing over us. We accumulate things and want more. People enter our lives and depart. But all this time, in all we “experience,” there is a child whose voice we seldom hear, whose eyes we seldom open.

Two paragraphs jumped out at me in Terrill’s letter.

“I find that it is significant to capture this quieter process of sea and shore meeting… more of a slow caress than a heartbeat and breath rhythm of rolling waves.

Then I spot this cluster of shells floating in an immediately enthralling composition. This I can see putting to paint on a canvas! I have seen these before but never so visually and sensory complete and, most importantly, I can get close enough to document my discovery.”

The challenge of life, is to use Terrill’s words, “to go deeper rather than further.… deep learning and observation is as limitless and endless as travelling and gathering a breadth of understanding.”

We live in a world of subtle shifting colors, a wealth of beauty.

The beauty around us asks us for a response to the question “What is your passion?”      

  • Cover painting by John Russell, “The Clearing in the Forest.”
  • I encourage readers to visit Terrill Welch’s Online Art Gallery
  • Watch David Mankin in Cornwall, England 14 minute video
  • Deborah Osberg has two 15 minutes videos available that, like Mankin’s, outlines her philosophy of art. These are informative and beautifully filmed.

6 responses to “WHAT IS YOUR PASSION?”

  1. To go deeper rather than further – as a naturalist this means that for me staying with and becoming is the challenge on a lovely spring day! how can I see who is pollinating the solomons seal if I am not really present? Painters are like some naturalists – sitting with rather than moving….. on another note I am so lonely in Maine wishing for more diversity in peoples and opinions…

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    1. Thank you, Sara. I think you and my artist friend on Mayne Island, B.C. Canada would find much common ground in your appreciation of the natural world, the gift that we are given to celebrate. I understand the loneliness, the need for more diversity of people and opinions. Where I am, people are too rushed to take the time for others, or too busy being angry to hear another’s voice. It is a different form of loneliness. I am grateful for what you share on your blog, and confess a bit of envy when you take me (and others) on your walks. I miss those moments of sitting rather than moving in a woodland.

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      1. Charles, You are welcome to visit me here – and yes – too busy, too angry etc is the other kind of loneliness and we have pockets of that here too – I think overall people are struggling with a kind of loneliness that technology encourages as well as a pathological political system – very hard – again – I have a small cabin with one room upstairs….

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      2. Sara, I apologize for not responding to you before now. No excuse. One of these days I hope to make it to Maine to visit you. This morning I caught up on reading your post. I appreciate your observations more than I can express.

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      3. Please come -Obviously we share common interests – have just lost dog of thirteen years after six months of hospicing Hope….. am so grateful you appreciate my observations! It’s wonderful

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  2. Sara, I am so sorry about the loss of your dog. A dog gives so much, enriches our lives, become family. I don’t know when, but I will do what I can to come up for a visit. We do have common interest.

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