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And so it begins…

January 12, 2009
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Hello blogging world! I join you expectantly and with careful excitement as I know, or at least have an idea of, the company I join, and you are quite the impressive bunch.  So, let’s jump right in:
Tim Rollins + K.O.S. Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl (after Harriet Jacobs), 2001 Courtesy of the University of Virginia Art MuseumWhat is this title “Color of Happiness” all about?
As an art history and studio art major in college, I had the opportunity to meet some pretty amazing people. One of our visiting artists, Tim Rollins, had a profound impact on me through his installations and approach to art. He worked with kids in the Bronx at an after school program dubbed K.O.S. (Kids of Survival) to help them engage with literature through visual art and spent a year as an artist in residence at the University of Virginia.

I assisted with his project in which we taught kids in schools surrounding Charlottesville (I chose Virginia School for the Deaf and Blind to utilize my budding Sign Language skills) about Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream. From the story, music and language, they would create what they thought Puck’s love-causing flower would look like.  These flowers were collected from the participating schools and combined on pages of the manuscript placed side by side on a large canvas for the final installation.

What struck me though was the installation that accompanied our creation, which for years I have remembered as Color of Happiness. However, as I wrote this I finally went back to research more about this piece to find that it is in fact called, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl (after Harriet Jacobs). My theory is that I was speaking to Rollins about the piece and asking the significance of the multicolored ribbons that literally flow off of the page to curl into a heap on the floor, and he answered that it was to represent the color of each person’s happiness as they worked on the piece. I have always admired Rollins’ approach to art and engaging inner-city kids in what was surely a thankless and unique approach to learning about literature and art, but this was a new level for me. How might we represent our happiness? I like the idea that happiness can be represented in a color unique to each artist, captured in an (inadequately) vibrant ribbon, which has such length and weight that a canvas cannot contain it, so it simply rests on the floor in abundance, intermingled with its neighbors.

I hope this blog will attempt to represent my happiness (and sorrow and confusion and every thought and emotion that may end up here) in the same feeble, yet poignant way, which hopefully flows in abundance to tumble into other’s words and ideas.

So to begin, what color is your happiness?

Mine is green—a vibrant, life force of green which is both calming and energizing all at once.

Photo from University of Virginia Art Museum.

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8 Comments leave one →
  1. Ivi permalink
    January 13, 2009 2:23 am

    Can I be red AND yellow? Not orange. Just red and yellow?

    • January 13, 2009 2:30 am

      of course! do they both make you equally happy? or are they different kinds of happiness?

  2. Ryan permalink
    January 13, 2009 3:14 am

    Congrats on a first blog entry!! Hey, I have seen this piece of art somewhere before but I don’t think it was at UVA, but more importantly I never knew the meaning behind it. And as far back as I can remember my color being green, but I guess you can have it because you were the first to write about it! Blue is still my favorite color though. Good luck nurturing your blog!

  3. January 13, 2009 4:32 pm

    Wonderful start to your blogging adventure! This first post is touching. As I think about it the color of happiness for me is that perfect shade of light blue that’s the color of the ocean when light from the sun hits it just right. I just repainted my home office this color because it’s calming yet energizing.

    Looking forward to reading more of your posts. Welcome to the blogosphere.

  4. Sokunthea permalink
    January 13, 2009 10:02 pm

    Great first post! I can’t wait to read future posts. The color of my happiness is yellow – sunny, cheery, bright and fresh. It’s the color that comes to mind when I think of my funny little nieces and goofy little nephew!

  5. February 25, 2009 3:27 am

    Hey Sus! Whoa, this weird, because I started typing this comment and was about to say “I just joined Twitter and saw your blog on there” when I saw your welcome on YOUR Twitter feed. Cool! And thanks!

    Anyways, nice blog. I’ll be sure to check back.

Trackbacks

  1. Goals for a Fulfilling 2009 « Color of Happiness

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