Aha. Fluff, blankets, cushions, hot colours and a bowl of food. We know who lives here. |
It has been a very good week. I have met some very inspiring people at the Dying Matters Awareness Week launch, and am following them up. A Graceful Death is being talked about more now, and I am glad that I am no longer painting for it. It means I can concentrate on setting it up in as many places as possible, and organising all sorts of events, workshops, talks, discussions on the end of life, to compliment the paintings. The films by Eileen Rafferty, Neill Blume and the music by Lizzie Hornby are absolutely wonderful. They enhance the exhibition and show how the creative response is so important to deeply felt, deeply feared and often avoided feelings around death and dying. I am meeting with Dying Matters next week to see how they can help AGD over the Awareness Week.
Team AGD Brighton has been formally organised. They are, apart from me,
- Nigel Spencer, Palliative Care Nurse Practicioner and Hypnotherapist
- Revd Cannon Peter Wells, Lead Chaplain BSUH NHS Trust and psychosexual therapist
- Rachel Reed-George, Lecturer in Palliative Care
Helpers also include Jackie Keogh, who has helped AGD so much. If you remember, Jackie had her head shaved to raise money for AGD in September. She has been treated, successfully, for breast cancer and shaved her hair for us before the chemo got it. Jackie is affectionately known as Fluffbucket, no one knows why. We love her whatever she is called.
The dates for the next big AGD are 20 to 23 May, at St Peter's Church, Preston Park, Brighton. Team AGD will be sorting out the event and you will all be the first to hear once we know what the agenda will be.
The True Fairy 2 materialised in the studio this week. I wanted her to be all black, but black just didn't work. It was too dead and dull a colour. And so, this Fairy has paynes grey and the deepest and darkest of midnight blues to make her what she should be. Here she is -
I am going to do a True Fairy 3 next, in all white. I just love these Fairies, probably because it is all about me. I reckon I'm ever so interesting, and long to explore myself more. I will probably never tire of it, and by the time I die, landfill sites will be straining under the weight of True Fairies because that Artist, you know, the self obsessed one, who lived in Bognor, wouldn't bloody stop painting them. But they are good for me. I keep painting each fairy over and over again, until the right image is looking back at me. The right face, the right pose, and the right colours. I like the words on this one too, and see myself adding words to more of them as they appear. As I get older and older, and more and more forgetful, the writing will probably say things like Eh? What? Where did I put my dentures? Who? Those ones will probably go for a fortune, as I will no longer be able to interact with other people, and no one will be able to tell whether I am doollally or profound. Some of my later Fairies may even have my shopping list on them. (Eggs, butter, milk, Frosties).
Giant Boy has been teaching Wee Fats to box. (Fatema has been living on my sofa this week, remember?) Wee Fats is loving it. Fats needs to work off her frustrations with life, and has been known to stamp her feet and shout. Boxing, it seems, is the answer. Let me show you Fats and Giant Boy, and you can decide who has the advantage.
Fatema and Giant Boy. Like when Rocky fought the huge Russian fellow |
Yes, this is what I mean. Fats is, of course, much prettier than Rocky and we don't have pictures of Lenin on the wall as inspiration. |
I have also my Jesus on the Tubes to do, last week there was a Half Price Double the Love Jesus on the Tube offer for Valentines. (There is still time if you want one, I need my orders in before 27 January.) They will start on Monday. Plus a painting of one of my lodgers who is having herself done for her Grandson. And all the while, quietly, when no one is looking, the Silent Pole will come through the letter box like mist, and the only way we will know he is here is the gentle displacement of air before the front door closes, and the lonely ping of the microwave in the night.
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