Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Grief Journey, Ines























Grief Journey.
Ines.
2.5" x 3.5" Artist Trading Card
Watercolor.

:::

about the piece.
The painting is the second one of my grief journey ATCs I painted for a swap. I was trying to encapsulate the up/down and the struggle about getting on top of the mountain of hurt. That's what the first ATC was trying to show that the journey is a hell of a climb over a mountain of hurt but that it does get easier and the sun shines again eventually). The second ATC shows more the dark side/bright side alteration path of the road, that we dip into darkness repeatedly on the journey along the winding road to get to the top/over the mountain of hurt. Even though they show a lot of darkness I hoped to show that there are better times ahead, I was trying to paint something that shows there is hope for someone who's at the start on their journey. -Ines


about the artist.
Ines, aka forward tumble, is a 42 year old mother of Fionn who died before he was born in June 2008. After a year of serious illness, she is learning to live her life without her child.

In Ines’ words, “While art and creativity has always somewhat been part of my life, I used to take a lot of pictures (still do) to capture the beauty of life. I have recently discovered art as a new way of expressing and releasing parts of me from within. I now pursue art in a more deliberate way because it seems to cleanse/liberate me which helps both in my grieving and life in general.”

Ines lives in rural Ireland in a house in a big field two miles from the sea. She maintains a number of blogs: forward tumble; daily forward tumble, chronicling her Creative Everyday Challenge; Fionn, a blog about her son; and tunnel time, a blog about growing vegetables in a poly tunnel in Ireland.

7 comments:

  1. What a great painting, it very much captures the feeling. Love it.

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  2. Ines, I love what you've represented here -- that we pass into and out of the light over and over. I like to think that the periods of darkness are getting shorter over time (and choose to ignore the fact that the light does, too...).

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  3. What a fabulous painting Ines ... and what you are trying to represent in the painting is so true. xx

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  4. thank you for your comments, hoping you are all on the sunny side of the mountain...

    xx

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  5. i love this. exactly right. xo

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  6. Ines - Thank you. I am at the beginning. It is a very dark and lonely place. This makes it less lonely. Thank you for taking on a bit of a mentorship role. I hate the dark, but sometimes the thought of the light hurts, too.

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  7. Very true Cynthia there were time were I resented the mere thought of life and happiness because I was so devastated and angry and broke.

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