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Lead with your scars: Healing through visual art
Art is an amulet. It can be. Don’t be afraid to love just one painting. Don’t be embarrassed. There’s a conversation and the dead might be speaking to you across the centuries from the chemical disturbances that created the image. Aggravated, irritated, smitten, curious, love on a first date. There are patches to be made, small reckonings with your own solitary heart. You don’t need to bother with the little legends at the side of images, or the audio guide. A living woman, a dead man, they yearn for their bones to have a conversation with you.Photo credit Dennis Lee
“The waterworks came from the mysterious encounter with the large painting, its muscular delicacy; the waterworks came from nada, from todo.”
I was flooded with joy, the joy that comes from being disgusted at what you’ve spent years creating. My novel was all wrong! It was a disease, a wart, a pathetic pretense. I knew stuff on the ground, low gravity. I knew before I knew it was a Zen precept that simple sweeping in my garden down the garden path, snipping, hands in tilth, that my mind was noisy and the music of what I had written was fine and good but missing something. Diego Velazquez was waiting to ambush me. He’d x-rayed me from the grave. His Vulcan’s Forge was counselling me from the Spanish dust, in Amsterdam on a Sunday morning. November 17, 2019. The waterworks came from the mysterious encounter with the large painting, its muscular delicacy; the waterworks came from nada, from todo. There’s no menu for it. The artist was at work once upon a canvas and the artist trusted me. That I would hold my arms aloft with my breastbone exposed and my eyes a portal. That my eyes would be quiet, too. That my eyes would listen.Hold yourself like a mirror up to another mirror. Lead with your scars.My lungs’ scar tissue was receiving and sending back to the Velazquez figures how, once they lived and they live still, how, once they were created with the old pigments which persist, how, once upon a canvas, an artist was obsessed, and went back to make the sandals of Apollo who came to deliver the bad news of betrayal, made the sandals on the messenger’s feet the colour of sky, or the Mediterranean sea.If you’re lucky in an art exhibit room, you’re a mess, unslept, hairy and scabby and lost, and your rib cage cracks, your bones part to allow you to reach in, and pull your heart out, beating in your hand.Walk up to the art. Hold your heart out, like an ear.Later, in a green space, have a small slow coffee.* * *
Susan Perly is the author of Death Valley, longlisted in 2016 for the prestigious Scotiabank Giller Prize, and Love Street, told in the voice of late-night DJ Miss Mercy. Her memoir on art and marriage, “Picasso’s Pigeons,” set in Barcelona, appeared in Zone 3 in 2013. A former journalist and radio producer, she broadcast eyewitness reports from Guatemala, El Salvador and Argentina during the Dirty War, and from Baghdad during the Iran-Iraq War. Susan Perly lives in her hometown Toronto with her husband, poet Dennis Lee.* * *
Purchase a copy of Susan Perly’s newest novel Stella Atlantis right here on All Lit Up.Tagged: