Saturday, June 13, 2020

You must believe in Spring


In 2001 I was asked to consider ways in which my work as a painter and sculptor could be used to give hope to patients of the cancer care wing at a new hospital in the UK.  
  
As I pondered on how to fulfil the commission, the lyrics of Maxence’s Song from The Young Girls of Rochefort began to haunt me and they helped to determine the course my work would take. From the shadow of death and despair my figures would sing to high heaven in praise of life.

One of the UK sculptures is a life-size figure seen through a vortex of autumn leaves. It represents spring emerging from winter. We don’t have the same winters and springs in Dominica but yesterday I gathered the fallen leaves from around my studio and used them to adorn one of the sculptures in my series Daughters of the Caribbean Sun. In the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, the sculpture and lyrics may help to give hope for tomorrow.  

            When lonely feeling fills the meadows of your mind,
            Just think when winter comes can spring be far behind.
 Beneath the deepest snows
 The secret of a rose
 Is that it merely knows,
 You must believe in spring.

Just as a tree is sure its leaves will reappear,
It knows its emptiness is just the time of year.
The frozen mountain streams
Of April’s melted dreams,
How crystal clear it seems,
You must believe in spring.

You must believe in love and trust it’s on its way,
Just as the sleeping rose awaits the kiss of May.
So in a world of snow,
Of things that come and go,
Where what you think you know
You can’t be certain of.
You must believe in spring and love.

The sculpture that illustrates this post is a life-size torso created from the paper I make from the stems of banana plants.

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