reteP
Member
- Location
- Northern Rivers, Australia.
As an only child to an abusive alcoholic father, my best defence was 'out of sight, out of mind'. In my room in total silence, drawing in my school books was a safe preoccupation. I would draw daily from after school to bedtime. In all honesty, artwork helped me to hold onto what was true within my being; that I was okay regardless. Doing art saved my integrity.
After I finished school and left home, in other words freedom, my art changed. I no longer needed to do art for survival. Doing art for the love of it seemed foriegn to me, and in a strange way it still does. As Aristotle once said, “Give me a child until he is 7 and I will show you (the foundation of) the man”; my words in brackets. So, my art was formed under the foundation of escaping my fears to survive. In a free world, my foundation somehow opposes the idea of doing art.
As a result, in the last 50 odd years, I have only been able to put together several artworks. Unfortunately one of my better pieces was destroyed, with everything else I owned, in a house fire. I keep telling myself I will repaint it one day, but that has never manifested.
Many years later, while studying for a degree in rehab counselling, I came across the subject of art therapy. This inspired me to have a go at it in the hope of straightening out some of my crooked foundatains. It did help me to move on, but only at one artwork at a time, with many years in between. Doing it continuously gets me back on the crooked track again.
So, the following posts will show what I've done over the last 50 years, and it's not much.
Flitering Ego

more to follow...
After I finished school and left home, in other words freedom, my art changed. I no longer needed to do art for survival. Doing art for the love of it seemed foriegn to me, and in a strange way it still does. As Aristotle once said, “Give me a child until he is 7 and I will show you (the foundation of) the man”; my words in brackets. So, my art was formed under the foundation of escaping my fears to survive. In a free world, my foundation somehow opposes the idea of doing art.
As a result, in the last 50 odd years, I have only been able to put together several artworks. Unfortunately one of my better pieces was destroyed, with everything else I owned, in a house fire. I keep telling myself I will repaint it one day, but that has never manifested.
Many years later, while studying for a degree in rehab counselling, I came across the subject of art therapy. This inspired me to have a go at it in the hope of straightening out some of my crooked foundatains. It did help me to move on, but only at one artwork at a time, with many years in between. Doing it continuously gets me back on the crooked track again.
So, the following posts will show what I've done over the last 50 years, and it's not much.
Flitering Ego

more to follow...