Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Musings.15: Barbara



elissa's dreams have been criss-crossing my actual life in a number of ways, but yesterday morning this happened in a wholly new manner: my work with this character crossed over into my dreams. Until this dream the process had worked in the reverse; I dreamt on occasion and on occasion aspects of my dreams would appear in Melissa's story.

Yesterday I dreamt I was sitting somewhere happily minding my own business, painting with a luscious light blue color and some creamy frothy whites when some unknown woman shows up and looms over me. She leans over my right shoulder (she is behind me) and begins berating me for not following her instructions and insisting she had told me the "assignment" was to do a piece in "black and white."

I was thoroughly confused because, until she appeared, I had no clue I was in any sort of instructional setting. I'd just been playing with the colors, having abandoned an attempt at design to let the colors 'do' what they would 'do'. (To do or not to do, that is the question, eh?)

So, anyway, she persists in her harangue so I decide to go come up with something in black and white to silence her. I told myself I would go around looking for white pieces in "the sweepings of a street" and put them on a black background. As I left the room I wondered whether I should tell 'her' I was leaving and what I was going to do, but I decided she didn't deserve any explanation from me.

In searching for refuse through what appeared to be school corridors, I saw jaguar costumes on display in a large glass trophy case. There was a sign saying that these were the new costumes for the dance team, or something like that. I remember stopping in my tracks for a moment, blinking and thinking, "Oh! The jaguars are back," and feeling rather
comforted.
Awake and pondering the dream, waiting for my tea to steep, I suddenly realized that in developing the character of 'Melissa' through a fictional dream journal structured, in part, around William Butler Yeats' "The Circus Animals' Desertion" - which includes a line about masterful images beginning from "A mound of refuse or the sweepings of a street" - I had produced 31 original drawings in graphite on white paper. Black on white, but then mounted on dark blue and black paper.

The last art instruction I received was in elementary school and, I confess, it left me feeling totally incompetent. Forgive me, but I used to dread that one hour a week art class. I loved the array of colors in the box of 64 Crayola crayons, especially the periwinkle for some reason, but I could never figure out how to get the opalescent scenes I dreamed up in my child's mind onto the paper in a way that would satisfy myself and not add a failing mark tomy report card.

When I decided to explore Melissa's character using a device designed to be an intimate personal journal my journalistic instincts told me I needed to break up the text with visuals of some sort. After trial-and-error I discovered that the graphite drawings promoted that idea of impromptu sketches made while writing - like Monet or Matisse including impromptu sketches in their letters. For the sake of individuality and visual harmony I chose to present the drawings in a uniform style.

So, I sit here nearly four decades after those dreaded and dreadful weekly art classes feeling rather surprised to discover I have done over thirty original graphite drawings. I was just minding my own business, letting this project be what it wanted to be, and ... I am a bit non-plussed.




[Photo: the author's, of a copy of Michelangelo's "David" at a stoneware shop a few blocks east of The World Peace Cafe; Atlanta, GA; 2010]

Friday, January 8, 2010

'Statues Crumble for Me': "Melissa"




verywhere I go statues crumble for me ... who knows how long I've loved you?" I heard that over and over in my dream last night; it sounded like part of a song. Maybe it is. I don't know. All I know is that I dreamt I was back in that office at St. Clair Shores staring in fascination at a mirror someone had hung on the wall. I was startled, to say the least, because it was the same mirror those demon cats held in that dream from a long time ago - the one with Medusa.

Before I could figure out just why the mirror would be in my St. Clair Shores office I saw Medusa herself appear in the mirror and stand with her back to me, looking into an identical mirror. A mirror within a mirror. Medusa asked the mirror, "Mirror, mirror on the wall, who's the foulest of them all?" All I could think was that this was certainly not the way I learned the "Snow White" story when I was little. My mouth dropped open - I must have looked like some landed fish! - when the mirror told her a name just before she stepped into the mirror and walked between two rows of beds in some amazing room in a gothic church or castle of stone. It reminded me of the children's story "Madeline" ... twelve little girls in two straight lines. I counted them as I watched.

She was utterly silent and wasted no time singling out one of the sleeping forms on one of the twelve beds. A pair of worn out shoes with battered soles lay at the foot of each bed and each princess - for I recognized the twelve dancing princesses asleep on those beds - had dropped on top of the bed covers in her ball gown.

Twelve times Medusa questioned the mirror and twelve times she went into that vast room on the other side of it, to touch a princess and turn her to stone. I have no idea why she asked her question of the mirror repeatedly, but she did. I remember it vividly.

I stood there staring at the sight of those twelve immobilized princesses lying there in that vast space - effigies, it seemed, atop their tombs. Answers, I wanted answers, but I wasn't sure where to begin. I did receive a happy answer, of sorts. My Crow arrived just then, along with young Ham and his buddy, Sam. They flew in on a pig, the pig from the 'Lost and Found' bin, right behind my Crow.

Ham called out to me that we had to go break the spell on the princesses. I started to climb onto my Crow's back, but suddenly remembered something. I shouted "Wait!" and ran out of the room. The next thing I knew I was digging through the 'Lost and Found' bin, pulling out shoes, their tongues flapping. I shoved the shoes into a bag and climbed on my Crow's back, then we flew - boy, girl, and woman, pig and Crow - through the mirror into the princesses' sleeping chamber.

Ham leapt from his pig and ran from bed to bed, kissing each statue as I ran from bed to bed leaving shoes for them. I could not hear what Ham said to the princesses because the sound of crumbling and falling stone became a bit loud, and we hurried away because the Crow said it was time to go, time to leave.

Back at St. Clair Shores Ham, Sam and I snacked on animal crackers and cocoa in the office. The Crow joined us after flying around a bit, and he gave me a puppet he found somewhere. The puppet was LOVELY - a medieval king in beautiful robes with a crown on his head. His robe was embroidered with a myriad of stars among shields decorated with a gold lion of the coat-of-arms of King Richard I, King Richard the Lion-Hearted.
I slid my hand into the puppet then picked up my pen. I wielded it like a sword and tapped Ham first on one shoulder, then the other. "In the name of King Richard the Lion-Hearted I knight thee Sir Ham, for your courageous and loving service to the Order of the Heart. I hereby knight your loyal and steadfast steed also. Rise, Sir Ham."