Walking me through her studio years ago, I was in awe and in equal confusion hearing her credit the act of painting to move through her father’s death. How could she paint about it I wondered? Her imagery wasn’t dark or foreboding, nor unapproachable or unrelatable. At the time I couldn’t understand, instead could just notice from the outside. I now let out a multi-feeling chuckle as I count the number of new works hanging around my home, little comfort symbols surrounding, each I realize related in some form to processing my father’s death. I sometimes worry sharing these new works will be received as repetitive or a topic others wish I’d move on from. Despite their somber source, I’m grateful for the opportunity these moments spent in creative work have enabled. It’s hard not to think about my dad and our relationship while making them, and I think that’s become why they’re magnetizing to return to. To not avoid these thoughts, or skirt around the grief. To move through rather than around. To make mementos of beauty where pain once lived.
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