Is a picture really worth a thousand words? I suppose it depends on the picture — and the words.
I have often thought that a well-crafted sentence could trump a picture because you read it and create your own visual. Maybe a thousand different people would have a thousand different pictures, and that in itself would be art.
But I want to talk about a picture that could actually speak words out loud, at least to me. This painting has a warm, open personality, as does the artist who created and gifted it to me for my birthday, my friend Suzanne (Suzy Staulz Fine Art).
From the moment I saw it, the painting “Flowing Without Restraints” proved worthy of its title when it started questioning me. “What do you think about the purple?” it was already asking as I removed it from its artfully packaged bed in a box.
What I thought about the purple was I wanted to have it in my line of vision from my desk, so I hung it just to the left of my computer. Since I suspect most creative types, and certainly me, are a little to the left of life in their thinking, the metaphor fit.
“Are you happy here?” I asked as I placed the painting on its perch.
“You’re the one who needs to be happy,” came the response.
Granted, I’m a person who converses with the moon when it parks its rich round realm at my garden window, so a painting engaging me in a Q&A session was not a total surprise, but definitely an unexpected delight.
“Do you think you’ll write about Me?” the painting without restraints asked.
“Maybe. I love how your images move through each other and turn the colors inside out.”
Suzanne, who gave herself permission to paint full-time when she retired from nursing, has successfully transferred her powers of positivity from patients to painting. I suspect that her pieces of art talked their way into existence and persuaded her to give them voice through her talent. It’s a charmingly effective relationship.
Email Patricia Bunin at patriciabunin@sbcglobal.net. Follow her on Twitter @PatriciaBunin and at PatriciaBunin.com.