On God (Poem by Eldon Taylor)
ON GOD
Poem by Eldon Taylor
God created all first reflecting on Self, necessarily so since
there was only God, and then dividing self; separating...
ON GOD
Poem by Eldon Taylor
God created all first reflecting on Self, necessarily so since
there was only God, and then dividing self; separating the
firmaments from the heavens and so forth. All creation is a
creation of god and is in the body of God just as surely as
the cells of life forms are in the body of these life forms.
Just as a cell has the capacity to clone, or a tiny fragment of
a holograph the inherent whole, all life (and all is life) is a
representation of the whole or God.
If one argues for limitation one will remain limited. Accept
the Divine within and your perfect will, which is god’s will, will be done.
THE STORY
Do you remember the first 21-days of Lockdown?
I participated in an artist challenge in which we created art every day for 21 days (with a couple of added extra days of lockdown). I was house-sitting for my mother and didn't have access to my creative studio, so I attempted to improvise. I discovered cable ties in the kitchen drawer and was impressed by their flexibility and strength. I set out to make sculptural drawings out of wire ties.
Post-Lockdown I was still experimenting with cable ties when I came up with the "Simple T.E.S.T." collection. It demonstrated my sculptural versatility for working outside of the studio. I then chose to journal my thoughts and feelings when I re-entered society after a period of severe self-isolation. My awareness was at its peak as I kept a visual record of my encounters with people and self-observed them.
Eldon Taylor's poetry collection, "Simple Things and Simple Thoughts," drew me in. Taylor, at the same time, added a new depth to the emotion or issue I was dealing with at the moment. He helped me to see things from other angles, liberating me from any preconceived notions or associations I had with the issue.
Visions generally arise as I am reading the poetry while producing the artworks. I would frequently build shapes out of cable ties and match them to the text. Other times, I'd get ideas from photographs in the National Geographic 1980s collection and start piecing them together. Every work of art is the result of a "sense-feeling" process.
I was also drawn to artwork with a communicative nature. I researched Rebus Codes and began experimenting. A Rebus Code is a type of puzzle that uses illustrated graphics and individual letters to represent words or phrases.
A variety of genres, including Contemporary Modernity, Abstraction, Surrealism, and Impressionism, have affected the colour palette.
There is a healing quality to the works of art that is revealed after spending time with the image and poetry.