Earlier this week I wrote of DeMarcus’ notes on color made when he was a first year art student. I flipped through the fading pages before placing the notebook back on my shelf and lingered on these gems:
“If we wish to create we must learn the Language of Color.”
“Color stands for JOY in this world of seeing.”
“Through the language of COLOR, we add JOY to the world of seeing.”
His notes are from a lecture. In my mind I see some fantastic art teacher, a life teacher, standing before a class of enthusiastic hearts that included the young DeMarcus, infusing them with a purpose that demanded they pay attention to others, to their reason for creating. Bring joy. Through the language of color, speak to a world that doesn’t know how to see. Speak to a world desperately in need of Joy. Color theory as community tending. Igniting the idea in the students, the teacher then set them free to explore how, through color, to bring joy to the world. The lesson was simultaneously both practical and existential.
I wish I knew the name of DeMarcus’ instructor. I’d send a deep debt of gratitude into the universe.
It is profoundly easy to diminish the role of artists in our culture. Note the dearth of art programs in schools. The emaciated National Endowment for the Arts relative to other budget lines. What might be more important in our times than artists striving to weave togetherness through the language of color? What might be more necessary than opening eyes to see beyond grey assumptions? We diminish ourselves when we devalue our art.
I knew DeMarcus when he was in his 90’s. Those early lessons still twinkled in his eyes. Or, perhaps, a lifetime of speaking the language of color, a lifetime of offering the joy of seeing, brought a permanent twinkle to his eye . He understood artistry as more than indulgent self-expression. He understood – and helped me understand – that artistry came with a responsibility to others as well as to the self. Service. See, in order to help others see, through the language of color, joy.
my-as-yet-still-unfinished-site [I hope you’re not holding your breath]
read Kerri’s blogpost on COLOR
like it. share it. comment. buyusacoffee. thank you for reading our work.
Filed under: Art, Creativity, DR Thursday, Seeing | Tagged: artistry, color, color theory, culture, david robinson, davidrobinsoncreative.com, Gratitude, joy, Kerri Sherwood, kerri sherwood itunes, kerrianddavid.com, kerrisherwood.com, language of color, life lessons, NEA, purpose, reason, responsibility, seeing, story, studio melange, the melange, wisdom |








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