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Art is Celebration and History in the Making

Carol Allen Anfinsen

Blog #154 of 330

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March 23rd, 2012 - 07:56 PM

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Art is Celebration and History in the Making

When I sold my painting “Broken,” the buyer said it reminded her of the people she saw in Haiti and in the Dominican Republic. The mother and child in the painting inspired her and renewed her compassion for the people there and for their hardships
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There are as many reasons to buy art as there are people. Some people buy a work of art for the tranquility it gives them in a chaotic world. Some choose something humorous that makes them smile. Others walk on the dark side and select something provocative to jar the sensibilities and promote conversation.

Art arouses in us the unspoken words of the heart. Yet, there are those who view art as frivolous and unnecessary; an added expense we could probably do without. These people absorb like sponges, unaware of the affects that art produces in their life.

God is the master painter of the universe. To be unappreciative of art is to deny the beauties of nature that surround us. After all, it is God’s world we artist’s try to capture, with all the emotions and feelings that life evokes. For centuries man has tried to conquer time and space; to mold it and bend it in our own image. Nature inspires us and challenges us. People reach out to us in a way that deepens our appreciation for the inevitable pain and suffering life brings and for the joy that sometimes bears fruit.

Art reminds us of who we are. It’s a looking glass into the past and the future. Like the painted pictures on cave walls, art records history and events. It enlightens our journey and reminds us of what has been. It was the sketches and notes in the Lewis and Clark journals that recorded their discoveries and experiences. It was the stories and drawings in war diaries that illustrated the horrors of war. It was the diaries of pioneer men and women who recorded their struggles and sorrows as together they built a fledgling nation.

We must never forget. Writers have written countless pages to record these events and the sacrifices incurred. One canvas may capture it all by depicting the toil and suffering in the faces of those early warriors in a visual setting of struggle that surpasses imagination.

The Arts have the potential to degrade us or uplift us. It provides broad commentary on the state of our nation and world; and yet, art is minute enough to focus on individual character and perspective.

We must keep the arts alive for future generations; to offer hope and light, to record history and monumental changes in society. Artists are witnesses of and recorders of the present. We must participate in life and celebrate the process.

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