Look Closer #6: The Kiss

I had so many challenges in the past year, I wasn’t sure I was going to be able to keep working on paintings bigger than 8×10″, but I still wanted to work on the Look Closer: Disability and Sensuality series, which I wanted to be on 20×24″ canvas.

I also wanted to borrow compositions from famous paintings but use people with disabilities in them. I decided to try to work on a piece inspired by Gustav Klimt’s famous The Kiss.

The Kiss by Gustav Klimt, 1908

Of course, I could never match Klimt’s work but it’s such a well known piece, that I thought I could use the composition as a statement on the passion all people feel, no matter their physical state. Klimt used gold leafing, but I stuck to gold and yellow paint.

I worked on layering, color blending, and small repetitive brush strokes so I would not get overwhelmed by the size of the canvas (which is really not that large) or my own insecurities about painting. It took over a month and my painting went through many changes, but after about 2 months I’ve finished it.

I chose to keep the figures and wheelchair simple, and let the emotion of all the bright colors carry the painting.

Look Closer: The Kiss by Joy Murray

I kept the wheelchair structure very minimalistic, but obvious I hope. I wanted it to blend in with the figures
The Kiss by Joy Murray, detail

What do you think?

Here are the other pieces in the Look Closer series.

Look Closer: Her Secret Colors by Joy Murray
Look Closer: The Color of Air by Joy Murray
Look Closer: She Unlocked her Door by Joy Murray
Look Closer: Ever After by Joy Murray
Look Closer: Desire Seemed to Expand by Joy Murray

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Thanks for reading my blog. Feel free to share it, if you’d like.

This blog is brought to you by the generosity of people who support me on Patreon , buy my art, and who support me in so many different ways. 

If you’d like to make a one time donation, you can do so at paypal

Cards and prints on some of my art is available on Redbubble.  

You can subscribe to this blog by email in the link below this post.

If you find a typo, let me know, and I’ll send you a postcard.

Memorial Day 2022

I post this about every year on Memorial Day on my blog or facebook.  If you’ve read it before,  I hope you don’t mind reading it again. This year it feels particularly appropriate.

Memorial Day

To those who marched off boldly

Determined to free the world,

To those who stumbled into service

Seeking a better life,

To those who could no longer sit

Anxiously in the sidelines,

To those who only wanted to stitch the

Wounded back together,

To those who fell because

They lived along

The quickest path

To victory,

We remember.  We regret.

We hope to not repeat.

Yet, even as we mourn,

A catchy tune

Lures us into war’s insatiable jaw.

I wish you peace in your after life.

A cool drink and quiet audience

For your story

And all eternity

To dream in peace.

S6303195

On The Other Side

Sunday, a friend took me down to the South Main district of downtown Memphis. It was like being in a new city. There have been changes to the area over the years, but mostly it’s my own world that’s gotten smaller. My friend pushed my wheelchair up a pretty steep street, then we turned around, and we flew back down the hill. He held onto the wheelchair handles, ran with me, and steered me clear of bumps and divots. It was scary and thrilling. About halfway down the hill, I stopped gripping the arms of my wheelchair, threw my arms in the air and sang out woo-hoos of sheer delight. All the anxiety, sorrow, and fear that had taken up residence in my soul blew away like so many cobwebs.

When we got back to level ground, I felt 10 years younger. I also felt my exact age, my exact physical state –whole and healthy in my deteriorated and janky body. I haven’t felt that carefree in a long time.

And the truth be told, it was a spontaneous moment but a lot of preparation went into it. My every day preparation is complicated. I have to have medical supplies at the ready, I have to take medications several times a day, I have to eat carefully, I have to have a well maintained wheelchair and a proper cushion. That’s an everyday thing, no days off.

(I have Hereditary Spastic Paraparapelgia, a rare disorder, that is genetic more than hereditary. You can find more information here. Though I have to say in the 40 plus years I’ve had it, I’ve had several other diagnoses. No one knows quite what to make of me.)

It’s complicated, by Joy Murray, 2020

The past few months the weight of all I have to do just to maintain a small life has felt overwhelming. We are all, of course, in a state of aging and changing. Our friends have faced challenges, our friends have died.

The past few years, the pandemic has made getting medical care more complicated. I have gotten sick and weak in ways I haven’t had to deal with in the past. My doctors have changed my medications with not good results. The world around me seems to make less and less sense, I seem less and less powerful. Since the fall of last year, I’ve felt my creative spirit shrinking, felt too weak and depressed to paint. I can gather up the energy sometimes, but the daily flow of my life seemed to have slowed to a trickle. My vision narrowed.

I’ve been in the midst of such depressions before and I always try to remember what I’ve already been through, that there is another side, once I make my way through a rough part in my journey. We are all travelling difficult journeys. But I hadn’t been able to get out of my depression these past months. Good things happened, but my basic mood remained low.

Then one day, the angle of my little patch of the planet shifted toward the sun so that even rainy days seemed brighter. A friend on Facebook asked me to post 10 pieces of my art, one a day. I decided to do that by posting one piece from each of the past 10 years.

Because of that, I was able to see where I’ve been very productive some years, others not so much. I can see how I’ve grown as an artist. I can see how I’ve changed art practices when I needed to because of lost strength and ability. I can see my very own record of how much I love life, how much delight there is in it, how the sorrow and happiness all blend together to make a rich, color saturated life.

Since I have a tendency toward depression, when I have an exacerbation in my degenerative condition, I always wonder if life is worth living if I can no longer have what I’ve lost. Limping, needing a cane, needing a walker, needing a wheelchair, needing pain medications — needing some kind of assistance for almost every part of my existence. I learned to give myself a year to adjust to the new me, the new symptom, and see how I feel about it. So far, something always happens to delight and encourage me, and make life seem a wonderous thing to have.

And Sunday, it happened again.

One thing that’s been hard when I’m using my portable manual wheelchair, is trusting others to steer me safely. (That has more to do with my own fears than with the people who help me.) I’m always looking at the ground. In fact, I’ve been looking at the ground a lot since I was a teenager and started limping, started this journey with a degenerative neurological condition, looking for things that will trip me.

Sunday, my friend kept pointing out @poetrybyboots poems stenciled onto the sidewalks. I was a little alarmed that I hadn’t noticed them.

And then I realized it wasn’t that I was less observant. I was looking at the sky. I trusted my friend. I trust my friends. Interdependence isn’t as scary as it used to be. That realization opened so many memories of how helpful all my friends are to me in so many different ways.

And it was then I realized I was on the other side of an uphill struggle. Flying down hill, alive, alive — and so so glad.

Some art work from the past decade, and a few years more, starting with a fabric sculpture I made in 2010, called the Survivor, an homage to breast cancer survivors. A few years later I didn’t have enough strength in my hands to keep doing this kind of work, so I began to draw and paint.

Sweet Dreams 2012

Robot Cat, acrylic on canvas, 2013
Imagination Real, 2014, watercolor, ink and pencil on paper This is part of a series of illustrations I did for a music video

Never Going Back to the Gravity

Turtle Dreams, 2015, watercolor and ink on paper
Holding Space, 2016, Mixed Media
She Saw Things Differently, 2017, Mixed Media

Don’t Take My Sunshine Away, 2018, Mixed media
Portrait of Memphis artist Frankd Robinson, How Does Your Garden Grow? 2019

Point of Departure 2020

Portrait of Memphis musician Lou Bond, 2020

So, with a little help from my friends, I’ll try to keep making my small contributions to this world while we all spin around on this complicated planet.

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Thanks for reading my blog. Feel free to share it, if you’d like.

This blog is brought to you by the generosity of people who support me on Patreon , buy my art, and who support me in so many different ways. 

If you’d like to make a one time donation, you can do so at paypal

Cards and prints on some of my art is available on Redbubble.  

You can subscribe to this blog by email in the link below this post.

If you find a typo, let me know at joyzmailbox@gmail.com, and I’ll send you a postcard.

Stop Wars Everywhere

This is my contribution to the anti-war sunflowers that show solidarity with the victims of the Ukrainian invasion by Putin’s military. But I also want to acknowledge all the countries that are in that brutal condition called war. There are civil wars, drug wars and wars over territory. They are rooted in greed and hatred that is inflamed by men in power, and inflicted on the powerless.

There is so much suffering in the world with illness, lack of resources, and heartbreak. Why we still find ourselves embroiled in wars, I don’t understand. I wish for something better for us as I have all my life. I can think of plenty solutions, but have no idea how to implement them. Keep voting. Keep creating. Keep supporting the people and organizations that rush in behind the warriors and offer medical help, food, mercy, healing.

You may download and share this art as you wish. I have not signed it and am offering it to everyone. You can get stickers, cards and prints from Redbubble, too, but they are for sale. If I make any money on this, I’ll contribute it to one of the organizations helping refugees.

Stop Wars Everywhere, 8×10″

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Thanks for reading my blog. Feel free to share it, if you’d like.

This blog is brought to you by the generosity of people who support me on Patreon , buy my art, and who support me in so many different ways. 

If you’d like to make a one time donation, you can do so at paypal

Cards and prints on some of my art is available on Redbubble.  

You can subscribe to this blog by email in the link below this post.

If you find a typo, let me know at joyzmailbox@gmail.com, and I’ll send you a postcard.