Lovelights and Blues (Day 13 Collage)

As I write this post, I’m propped up in bed in the master bedroom, computer on lap, mini collages spread across the blanket surface beside me. Not my usual writing location and mode! But I’ve displaced myself with toxic fumes.

The middle room upstairs where I usually do my writing now, has become uninhabitable. Three walls and the ceiling (my latest “crazy idea”) are covered in the same light blue. Today a darker shade rolls onto the remaining wall. Then the woodwork will turn white—not by magic, but by hard work that takes time—and leaves fumes.

So I’m displaced. But the paint project that has pushed me out of my writing habitat also provided free material I used in today’s collage.

Before I chose the paint, I’d brought home several cards of sample “chips” to stick on walls, to view in various lights at various times, to discern the best colors for my purpose of making this more a “Serenity Room.”

With fairly strong confidence I picked three shades, and separated those chips to take back to the hardware store and get the paints mixed. That left me several “throwaway” cards. What to do with them?

You can see: collage with them! I’d observed paint chips incorporated in mini collage before, on You Tube, in a video I can’t now locate to credit. That had prompted me to stash mine with my collage materials.

That stash also contained the silvery hearts you see—clipped from a Victorian Trading catalog, parts of a light string (like Christmas lights) called “love lights.” Now coming across them, I thought they cried out to go cascading softly down the collage like water drops, softening the angular arrangement of blues with their curves and curving trail.

The composition still needed something. A vase of flowers seemed to belong. So on it went, and there we have it, a collage I’ve called “Lovelights and Blues.”

“Blues” doesn’t exactly represent the “mood” in the composition, though, does it? For these blue hues look “happy,” and the hearts speak sparkle and the whole mix serene joy.

But I kept this blog post’s title because this month, October, is National Domestic Violence Awareness Month, and this Sunday kicks off its emphasis week. I think poignantly of people I know—and wonder how many I’m unaware of—who once had beautiful hopes of their lovelight glowing “happily ever after” and their circles of love staying intact and shining forever—but found their sweet dream turning nightmare, once they’d committed their lives to it.

Sometimes you’d never know, because everything visible to the outside world looks as happy as that collage. In the past decade I’ve learned a lot about “hidden abuse,” because of people close to my life going through it, and how especially hurtful it can be when the false picture projected to the world seems to invalidate anything the abused might try to reveal about it to get help and support.

Maybe before these 31 days are over I’ll share some of what I’ve learned. But for now I’ll just give you this link to the Department of Justice Office on Violence Against Women definition, which may include many things that don’t show up as abuse to the public. For more detailed information, this extensive Wikipedia outline  gives links you can click to learn more about different forms of hidden as well as other abuse.

Becoming aware is the first and crucial step to becoming helpful.

*****

Previous posts in this series:

Day 1 Mini Collage and 31-Days Introduction

Day 2 Collage: Nothing-But-Junk Fish

Day 3 Collage: What Grabs Your Heart?

Day 4 Collage: Why I Chose to do this 31 Days–Really

Day 5 Collages: On Being Transparent

Day 6 Collage: Salute to Birds and Dragonflies

Day 7 Collage: Got it Made in the Shade

Collage Day 8: Three Good Children’s Books to Inform Our Lives

Day 9 Collage: Smiles, Smiles (What Makes You Smile?)

Day 10 Collage: Which Way is Out?

Day 11 Collage: Rugged Rocks or Rugs?

Day 12 (non-junk-mail)  Collage: “Be Like the Bird…”

Day 12 (Non-junk-mail) Collage: “Be Like the Bird…”

As I began this 31 day collection of collages, I said most of what you’d see here would be made wholly or almost wholly from junk mailings. Today is a total exception. I share it so you can see how collage can involve lots of other materials.

Mini Collage #5: “Be Like the Bird…”  cSylvia Robertson, 2017

I don’t know what prompted this one: whether it was hearing or thinking of the famous quote by Victor Hugo, a favorite of mine since my youth, or coming across the little ephemera circle with a bird on it and the oval with the feather.

But I do know something made me want to make a collage containing the quote—and the present pile of junk mail didn’t have anything fitting.

So I rubber-stamped a branch on the index card’s whiteness, a feather on some mulberry paper, and another feather on some light cardstock. I added marker “tweet” lines on the circle and words on both it and the oval, and colored the stamped feather and branch with art pencils. Among my scrapbooking materials I found a likely wedge of background paper to paste a diagonal and some earthy looking contrast, then tore some of the remaining mulberry paper into wisps and pasted them here and there. I drew a few emphasis lines beside one circle (with marker), and wrote in the rest of the poetry quote line. (Since I photographed the collage, as above, I added a credit to Victor Hugo.)

Fini! Not junk mail, but still scraps and other things just lying around. Almost free! As a bird!

*****

Previous posts in this series:

Day 1 Mini Collage and 31-Days Introduction

Day 2 Collage: Nothing-But-Junk Fish

Day 3 Collage: What Grabs Your Heart?

Day 4 Collage: Why I Chose to do this 31 Days–Really

Day 5 Collages: On Being Transparent

Day 6 Collage: Salute to Birds and Dragonflies

Day 7 Collage: Got it Made in the Shade

Collage Day 8: Three Good Children’s Books to Inform Our Lives

Day 9 Collage: Smiles, Smiles (What Makes You Smile?)

Day 10 Collage: Which Way is Out?

Day 11 Collage: Rugged Rocks or Rugs?

 

Day 11 Collage: Rugged Rocks or Rugs?

Things in this world are not always what they seem. Collage often capitalizes on this concept.

This mini collage gives an example.

Mini Collage #24, “Rugs and Rugged Rocks”        cSylvia Robertson, 2017

The name gives its secret away. But if you hadn’t read the title, would you really think what you see above is more rugs than rocks, and home interior backgrounds entirely instead of sea and sky? In fact, what’s represented as the most rugged peaks and most breath-stealing descents are cut from pictures of carpet pieces. The actual mountains in the collage stand much more smoothed by time and weather.

Yet the mix of the two takes the viewer much more into a “world of the imagination,” as my one grandson would have put it in his kindergarten days. And that’s good for our heads, methinks. I think that’s the attraction of collage: the way it can lead us to 1) think outside the box more and 2) consider how the appearance of things in life may be other than what a first glance seems to say.

Take a mind trip in this collage today, and if you like, go back and explore earlier ones in this series using surprising objects and materials to represent something quite different from themselves. In the list below of previous posts I’ve marked with a ** those containing “deceptions” you can detect and consider. (Have fun!)

Day 1 Mini Collage and 31-Days Introduction

**Day 2 Collage: Nothing-But-Junk Fish

**Day 3 Collage: What Grabs Your Heart?

Day 4 Collage: Why I Chose to do this 31 Days–Really

**Day 5 Collages: On Being Transparent

**Day 6 Collage: Salute to Birds and Dragonflies

**Day 7 Collage: Got it Made in the Shade

Collage Day 8: Three Good Children’s Books to Inform Our Lives

Day 9 Collage: Smiles, Smiles (What Makes You Smile?)

**Day 10 Collage: Which Way is Out?

 

Day 10 Collage: Which Way is Out?

Another collage to puzzle over today:

The question to consider: Which way is out? Or is Rabbit already out?

Just for fun.

Or maybe this will stir some deeper questions about your own life. Like what’s in? What’s out? Where is freedom—or are you already free?

*****

Previous posts in this series:

Day 1 Mini Collage and 31-Days Introduction

Day 2 Collage: Nothing-But-Junk Fish

Day 3 Collage: What Grabs Your Heart?

Day 4 Collage: Why I Chose to do this 31 Days–Really

Day 5 Collages: On Being Transparent

Day 6 Collage: Salute to Birds and Dragonflies

Day 7 Collage: Got it Made in the Shade

Collage Day 8: Three Good Children’s Books to Inform Our Lives

Day 9 Collage: Smiles, Smiles (What Makes You Smile?)

 

 

Day 9 Collage: Smiles, Smiles (What Makes You Smile?)

Smiles, smiles, there are all kinds of smiles.

You can see this in the collage.

Can you detect the smile of the model?

The actor?

The ordinary person obliging before someone’s camera?

How about the irrespresible spontaneous smile erupting in exhuberant laughter or beaming all over the face or shining out from the eyes?

What makes you smile that way? What stirs your heart, brings light into your eyes, and ends up curving your lips without your bidding?

Here’s a challenge for you this week: Pay attention, and try to catch yourself smiling that way, and determine what has brought it on. You might be surprised. It might be a seemingly small thing. If you keep a journal or daily lists, note down your smile and its trigger. And consider what truly delights your heart.

Then make an effort to get yourself more often in company with what brings out that good and heart-deep smile. 

Smiles to you this week!

*****

Previous posts in this series:

Day 1 Collage and 31-Days Introduction

Day 2 Collage: Nothing-But-Junk Fish

Day 3 Collage: What Grabs Your Heart?

Day 4 Collage: Why I Chose to do this 31 Days–Really

Day 5 Collages: On Being Transparent

Day 6 Collage: Salute to Birds and Dragonflies

Day 7 Collage: Got it Made in the Shade

Collage Day 8: Three Good Children’s Books to Inform Our Lives