At 64, Still A-Mused
By Tom Wachunas
“O! for a muse of fire, that would ascend the brightest heaven of
invention.” - William Shakespeare
Pictured here is Blue Pas de Deux, a recent work of mine
that was accepted into the annual May Show at the Little Art Gallery. Juried
shows such as that one, along with the annual Stark County Artists Exhibition
at Massillon Museum, are welcomed seasonal lubricators of my creative process.
Not being what most folks would consider a highly prolific art maker (beyond
writing this blog, perhaps), I nonetheless enjoy throwing the occasional new
hat in the ring, so to speak.
For weeks prior to
making the piece, I was a paralyzed captive of my own doubt and anxiety about
the direction of my work as a visual artist. I had been seriously questioning
my motives, desires, intentions, indeed the very purpose of making art at all. I
thought that my muse, who for me, you should know, is Christ, was being evasive
if not silent.
A crossroads?
Surely. But as it turns out, it was also an epiphany. One morning I was given a
flash of insight from reading in Jeremiah, “…You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart. I
will be found by you,” declares the Lord, “and will bring you back from
captivity.” The words compelled my
surrender to, and renewed gratitude for…my muse. And so the piece speaks of a
dance. It’s a lyrical symbol of my faith in an intimate bonding or duet with an
eternally loving partner.
Sadly, I’ve been
known to often abandon trust in my Lord’s – my muse’s – words (to be out of step, as it were) and exile myself
for a while to the aforementioned captivity. On this, the occasion of my 64th
birthday, and not to be too flippant about my lapses in faith, I offer my re-writing
of a few verses from The Beatles’ “When I’m 64.” Dedicated to my muse, here we
go. A one, a two, a three, a four:
I’ve gotten older, still losing hair,… how
the years have flown.
Will you still be
sending me your valentines, inspirations, just like old times?
If I refuse your
well-meaning cues, please don’t be too sore.
Will you still need
me, will you still feed me, after I'm sixty-four?
You'll be older too.
And, if you say the
word, I will dance with you.
…Be in my dreams, give me a sign, stating
point of view.
Indicate precisely
what you mean to say, yours sincerely, I’m here to stay.
Give me your answer,
in legible form, mine forever more…
Will you still need
me, will you still feed me, after I'm sixty-four?
Today I know most certainly that he
will. May it be so always.
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