In So Many Words
If you read yesterday’s post and took a guess at the two elements of man-made inspiration in the amulets that I was going to talk about, you probably came up with something about the runes. Runes are characters in ancient alphabets, specifically in Germanic-based languages. (English is one, even though we’ve been burdened with arbitrarily applied Latin rules for the last couple centuries. But that is a soap box to get on in another place and time. ) One of the first and truly most unique things we created as a species is writing. Other creatures can create structures and designs; they even have their own versions of language. But no other creature has created writing.
That may be part of why we have such an affinity for any kind of lettering, although we are certainly drawn more to words of our own language. Once you learn to read you can’t help but be drawn to text wherever you find it. Yes, we are overly inundated with the written word in our modern lives and ignore much of it, but it will take more than that kind of overdose to keep us from being drawn to and reading any small set of words we find in a piece of art.
This mosaic by Julie Ann Haas would be difficult not to stop and read, even if it was among dozens of other wall pieces. It has both words and imagery to convey it’s meaning and speaks to a feeling we have probably all had at one time or another (perhaps especially so for us artists).
What did you see first when looking at this? I’m guessing the word ‘cracked’. Well, it is rather large, centered, and a word at that. It’s hard not to just keep returning to it, as it really gets the point across. You can read the rest of it once, but all you need to see after that is this one word. Eventually you probably found yourself looking over the rest of the piece to see what imagery and symbols were inserted to support this statement. If you did, I would think you were smiling by the time you were done examining it. The happy and playful figures along with the words are reassuring for those of us who think of ourselves as cracked all the time!
Julie’s Etsy shop is named Little Altars Everywhere (officially abbreviated to LilAltarsEverywhere.) She says “I am particularly inspired when creating pieces that elevate the human spirit …” and you’ll see as you look through her shop, she’s pretty darn good at doing that.