If wishes were horses, then little girls would ride… we bind ourselves with chains of obligations, decorate our selves with symbols of the things we cherish, the very things that tie us to life and yet keep us from our frivolous dreams.
Category: Hope Chest
Deseo Atrapado
Wishes Sealed in Gold
Kristine’s Hope Chest
The central character in this visual story is the Hope Chest. Â I play a secondary role and I am represented here by the paper mache figure with the hole in her soul and an exposed heart. Â The setting “Life” is a jigsaw puzzle piece cut from a chess board.
The first things to be taken out of the chest are my sketchbook and pencil. Â There are three other items on the board and they symbolize external influences that always shadow my moves.
The contents of the chest are: two teddy bears, a doll, a key, a warm knitted blanket, a couple of books, paintings (my work and that of others), pencils, a tin angel and bits of coloured wire. Â All these items are needed by this nest builder to turn a room or apartment into HOME.
The colourful tin angel was given by a friend, here it means friendships and friends who are sometimes angels.
The colourful curly corkscrew bits of wire are the wonder and amazement that I carry around with me.
On the inside of the lid is a rejection notice from the New Yorker Magazine, and a letter written by my granny when she was 65. Â She lived and died in Latvia. Â She learned enough English to cobble together a now cherished letter to her 10 year old granddaughter.
I write a lot of letters and the stamps are the decals from my travels by mail.
The Bridal Chest
Sanduq Al-Saysum is a type of chest which used to be carved by craftsmen in the Holy City of Makkah (Mecca) from hard wood and decorated with pierced brass. Traditionally, these were one of the prized possessions of a bride which she brought with her to her new home. Being large and very heavy, they were used as safes. Â Inside were kept valuables and family heirlooms. Even though few now live in the traditional homes, Saysum chests are still to be found in many modern homes.
A Chinese Bridal Chest
In ancient China the mother of the bride had to give her daughter two chests of clothes on her wedding day to accompany the bride when she went to the bride-groom’s home. Â The two words ‘Double Happiness’ had to be pasted on the two chests. Â These beautiful decorated rectangular chests would be carried manually behind the bridal sedan chair followed by a group of musicians. Â These chests would be supported by long poles placed on the shoulders of the two male carriers. Â On arrival at the bride-groom’s home the mother-in-law and other relatives would inspect the contents of the two chests. Â Then the bride’s family background would be assessed or usually criticized because of the poor quality of the clothes in the chests. Â How the mother-in-law would treat her daughter in future would depend to a great extent on so called ‘dowry’ of the bride.
An American Girl
Is there no greater suffering than “An American Girl, Shopping For A Husband”? In her single days, she would cry and cry over lost loves, covet the sacred purchases of keepsakes in hope for love, and dream endlessly for the one– a final purchase of the dream guy and live happily ever after.
Medium: The box, Ukranian egg dyes, silver and gold spray paint, floral wire, embroidery thread, wood ball, buttons and dominos, netting, yarn, plastic shopping bags, things girls buy, one groomsman cut in half, newspaper clipping, wire, crotchet needle, Modge Podge and Tacky glue.
Pearls of Hope
Let’s hope
There will be no more wars and differences among countries… and instead, peace…
The world will be free of the evils of human nature–greed, fame and vanity…
The word cancer will be erased from our world with advancement in medicine…
The pearls of hope will illuminate our world, and help us realize our dreams…
