I''VE WORKED MY FINGERS
to the bone,
the skin off my back.
Come see
the painted remains at the
Good News Gallery
Woodbury, Ct.
OPENING
SUNDAY * OCTOBER 2
3 to 5 p.m.
Sunday, July 17, 2022
Cathedral of Bones
Cathedral of Bones, acrylic on linen, 18 x 24 inches, $2,000 xxxxxxxxxxx |
I'M IN MY STUDIO painting a skeleton, drinking coffee out of a bone china coffee cup and thinking about bones. And, yes, bone china is actually made from bones. This moderately creepy bit of knowledge, my recently finished painting, Cathedral of Bones, and the fact that Halloween is imminent, have combined to inspire me to share some thoughts on bones. I became familiar with them at an early age because my father was an orthopedic surgeon or, in the vernacular, an old sawbones.
Make no bones about it, our skeletons have done a lot for us. I greatly admire them and do not understand how they got such a bad name. In addition to their more prosaic raisons d' etre of supporting our bodies, allowing us to walk upright and protecting our brains (in my case, moderately successfully), they are a striking engineering achievement and incredibly beautiful to observe.
My first skeleton was the one that hung from the ceiling in my father’s office. At first I thought it spooky. But I soon befriended it and danced with those merry, dangling bones in our private, ether-scented ballroom to the rhythmic clickety-clack of Dad’s secretary’s typewriter.
There was also a human skull on the desk with whom I had many in depth conversations about, well, bones, as well as other important matters crucial to a four year old, such as what happened to its teeth and what it's like to be dead. In an effort to cheer Skully up, I used to dress it with my mother's jewelry. Perhaps this was the precursor to Damien Hurst's diamond-encrusted skull, For the Love of God.
My
next encounter with bones occurred some years later when I tore some
tendons in my neck and shoulders. Upon entering the radiologist's office
after my x-rays had been taken, I noticed that hundreds of other x-rays
were hanging on the walls–sort of like portraits. Until then, I had
thought that skeletons were generic and would look pretty much alike.
However, I was startled to see that my x-ray looked exactly like me. I
could pick "me" out instantaneously. As I stared at the dark, empty
facial sockets in that roentgengram, my eyes itched to be cradled in
them. Those bones claimed me. The skull, clavicle, sternum and all 24
ribs, some sort of grim ersatz chorus, sang to me: "Yes, we are thee!
And this is what you’ll be!"
For a while, I took solace in the knowledge that my bones will be around for a long time after the rest of me goes organic and returns to the earth. I imagine what that will be like in Cathedral of Bones. But the cathedral will not last forever. When I pass on, I will not have to say goodbye to my bones right away. They are so strong that, depending on soil conditions, it may take hundreds of years before they disintegrate and my remains become one with the universe. But when they do, it's...
Bone voyage!
PS I hope this blog didn't chill you to the bone, I meant it to be humerus (pun intended)
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