Friday, May 25, 2018

Falbrook Library TWA Voices





Diana Carey
Nest 12    36x36"    thrown and splattered acrylic paint on canvas    2011
It always amazes me how much artists interpret, reflect, and construct reality, even when it’s seemingly unintentional. My mother passed away seven years ago, after a long illness. I am a landscape artist, but before she passed away and for a year after, I found myself painting nests. The nests were typically large, built by layered threads of thrown and splattered paint. Most of them had  yawning openings, swollen bellies, seemingly large enough to climb into and curl up, womb like, if one could. All were empty. 
At the time, I thought I was “just” painting. I didn’t consciously connect the significance of the subject with my situation, with the fear, loneliness and the heartbreak of losing my mother. I was grieving the loss of her love and support, the loss of my childhood, my “home” and womb. The loss of the one person I felt tethered me securely to my place in self, family and society. At the same time, the significance of the subject became clear, so did the significance of them being empty, it was time to let go and fly.  Through painting, I had been interpreting and reflecting, security, love and comfort while constructing a new reality of separation, strength and hope.