What I Did on Ash Wednesday
By Tom Wachunas
“God utters me
like a word containing a partial thought of him. A word will never be able to
comprehend the voice that utters it. But if I am true to the concept that God
utters in me, if I am true to the thought of Him that I was meant to embody, I
shall be full of his actuality and find him everywhere in myself, and find
myself nowhere.” - Thomas Merton
My newest artwork: Ash
Wednesday, mixed media painting (fabric, acrylic, latex and graphite on
corrugated panel), 18” (h) x 17 ½” (w).
Lent begins. A
solemn 40-day season of penitent prayer, self-sacrifice, holy preparation. Ash
Wednesday invariably takes me to a trove of Catholic childhood memories.
The pastor, vested
in purple, rubs our foreheads with ashes, the resultant smudge often looking
more like an accident than a cross. Even so, it was a mindful symbol of our
inheritance: Mortality. All of us wore it like a badge of dishonor - a haunting
remembrance of our ignominious expulsion from Eden. Yet there was always the promise
of a glorious new inheritance to come. Resurrection.
Once again, my
piece includes cursive writing, and more challenging to read than usual (not
that my handwriting was ever really easy to decipher). But at one point in
making the work, for some mysterious reason I was thinking about Leonardo da
Vinci’s notebooks filled with the “mirror writing” that accompanied his
drawings. He wrote his words backwards, right-to-left, and one would need a
mirror to read them. I’ve developed no such writing technique. So I cheated the
process by writing the words on very thin tracing paper and flipping the paper
over, the words still visible in reverse. Words not my own, but from Genesis 3:
22-23: And the Lord God said, “The
man has now become like one of us, knowing good and evil. He must not be
allowed to reach out his hand and take also from the tree of life and eat, and
live forever.” So the Lord God banished him from the Garden of Eden to work the
ground from which he had been taken.”
Presenting the
words in this manner was intended to make the experience of reading them more
interactive and literally personal. I held the finished painting close to my face
as I lifted it up to the mirror on my medicine cabinet. There they were, the
words now readable, and I, in one reflection, framed together in the same plane.
It was a humbling reminder that I am dust become a re-made child of the Lord
God.
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