Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 6, 2019

Toes

The day my life changed was when I woke up from surgery totally different. Paralyzed from the neck down, only able to move my left foot, a different me. I lie in the hospital bed wondering if I would ever be able to paint again. From a very young age, I was fascinated by artistry, and I took up art classes from the age of four.

My mother stood next to my hospital bed in tears. “Everything will be okay,” she said. I clearly remember the words she used even though I was being medicated heavily: “It will all be okay in the end and if it’s not okay, it’s not the end.” Unable to answer, I gave her a smile even though it felt like the end.

After the accident, I was bullied at school for the way I looked, going to an all boys public school wasn’t easy for a kid who didn’t care for all the sports that required me using my legs, like soccer or running. I couldn’t write and had to take tests orally. I could never bring myself to tell my parents how unhappy this school made me. How do you explain feeling like the center of a merry-go-round, the stagnant centerpiece to outside life.

My mother and father were happily married up until my accident. I blamed myself for the fighting over who would bathe me, dress me, and drive me. I blamed myself when my dad packed his bags and left my mom to pay the rent. I blamed myself when my mom locked herself in the bathroom and sobbed every night when she thought I couldn’t hear. I blamed myself when she got arrested for stealing from our neighbors to feed her gambling addiction. And when I sat on the sidewalk, covering myself with some cardboard and newspapers, shuddering and squirming from the cold, aching from the hunger, I didn’t even cry because I was at fault for being this way. I was alone, and it was all because of me.

Many years went by where I was begging on the streets of Barcelona, counting my last penny. I had no escape. One day, lost in my thoughts as the air was cold and hard on my small fingers and nose, I thought all hope had been lost. The world is a weird place, fleeting in its petty for things that don’t affect it. One day, however, a small girl stopped and stared at me long and hard. After standing at a distance for a minute or two, she approached me, “Hello,” she smiled. She was a British girl, I recognized the accent from the big screens across the road that always aired advertisements about British chocolates. “Hola,” I said sheepishly. People didn’t usually talk to me. Without further warning she tore off a piece of one of my newspapers and pulled a pen out of her pink dress pocket, and began to draw a picture of what seemed to be a man. She took one last look at me and nodded. Then she was off. I smiled at the encounter. It was the first time someone had really acknowledged me. I looked carefully at the picture and laughed. It was a stick picture of a man drawing with his feet. The idea seemed totally ridiculous to me. No one can hold a pen with their toes. I noticed the girl had left the pen beside the drawing. I thought for a moment. No one was around, so I attempted to pick up the pen with my toes. I dropped it at first and laughed it off. After a breath, I tried again. What did I have to lose? I managed to draw a letter, and then another and then another, and for the first time in 10 years, I saw my name in writing, and cried. I cried for my mom, for my dad, for my hands, for the all boys school I hated, for the cruel world that had placed me here, but mostly for myself, I cried for me.

This single word turned into sentences, which turned into full letters. And finally drawings, my art, my art had come back to me. I found some old paintbrushes and a tiny bit of paint in a trash bag near and started painting. Passers started buying my art, talking to me, donating paint brushes and paints and blankets. I was finally part human again.
On a sunny Monday afternoon, the busy streets had given me a generous amount of viewers and buyers for my art. People were amazed by me. They would watch and admire and compliment my works. A young man approached me. He kneeled beside me carefully, steadying himself, “Hello, what’s your name?”

“Jason,” I responded.

“You draw these yourself Jason?”

“Yes sir,” I replied.

“Wow, they’re incredible.”

Thank you very much.”

“You seem happy,” he said to me,

“How could I not be sir? I have art, I have sunshine, I have park benches with lovers, I have fresh air and clicks of heels. There are people with nothing.” The man looked speechless. He thought for a moment, and then smiled a vivacious smile at me.

“Thank you Jason,” he said, and as he made to walk away, I handed him a paper with a saying I wrote, the first day I learned how to write with my feet. He read it, tilted his hat at me, and with a grin, lifted his pants on his left leg and tapped on his prosthetic.

***

“Wow Jason, a moving story. Well I guess everyone wants to know  what was written on the piece of paper you gave to me?” “Well,” Tom, reaches into his pocket and pulls out an old piece of paper and unfolds it, he smiles, “when your will is big, the obstacles are small.” “I don’t think I can follow that one folks, so that’s all for tonight’s show. Thank you again Jason for sharing your story. I’m Tom Whittaker, Goodnight everybody.”
Photograph by Dylan Ephron


Sunday, October 19, 2014

Chick-fil-A

The art piece "Chick-fil-A" is showing animals taking the place of humans: animals treating humans the way that humans treat animals. The truck for the fast food restaurant is picking up meat that they will kill and prepare later. Instead of animals being used, the girls are being used. "Chick-fil-A" is trying to express that we should treat the animals on this planet correctly, and remember that they have rights as well. It is revealing how we support animal cruelty everyday, by eating and giving money to meant companies that torture their animals and kill them in inhumane ways.

Saturday, October 18, 2014

The Lone Sailor



A lone sailor has decided to set sail the seas and have been polluted. His only source of movement is the bathtub.There is a huge storm and his ship gets lost in the sea. He can see land far away. The mountains look much closer than they really are. The trash that surrounds the bathtub shows there is not enough space in the bathtub. The storm is shaking his bathtub and slowly making him sink.The sailor is going to swim to his love who is in another country thousands of kilometers away. Before the storm and before the world was polluted he was a sailor and a fisherman. But after the pollution the fish died. Most people lost their jobs and their property; in this occasion the sailor has lost his boat.


Friday, October 17, 2014

The Dead Wed

In this picture you can see the wedding between a living groom and a dead bride. The view point is on the couple and the priest. The statement that I want to show is the difference between rich and poor. This is shown with that fact that the human family has to stand or sit on the ground, while that dead family has riches, like chairs and a buffet. The wedded couple is standing with the priest in the middle of the picture. It's most likely midday and it's in the 21 century. The magical realism is that necrophilia is completely in this world and even marrying a dead body is fine.