Over het boek
My mother died one spring morning in 2010. I was by her side. The windows had been opened so that she could hear the birds singing. I remember so clearly the arrival of dawn’s chorus. My mother had been in the process of dying all week and was heavily drugged with morphine to ease the pain of her disease.
When I was a child living at home, my mother and I were able to communicate without words—we just knew what the other was thinking. Moments before she died, my mother communicated with me again in that way. She told me that I had better get dressed and ready because things would go quickly afterward. I got up and left the room to dress. As soon as I came back, she was ready to go. I held her head in my hands as the last breath passed from her mouth.
Once the fire was hot enough for the sweat, we all squeezed into the lodge. It was an intense sensation. At some point during the ceremony, I felt a breath come up from my belly, through my chest and out of my mouth. It was not my breath that I exhaled. It was my mother’s breath that I had been holding. Letting it go was a tremendous release.
kenmerken / functionaliteiten & details
- Hoofdcategorie: Kunst & Fotografie
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Projectoptie: 15×23 cm
Aantal pagina's: 24 -
Isbn
- Paperback: 9798211550018
- Datum publiceren: feb 11, 2023
- Taal English
Over de maker
Born in rural North Carolina in 1974, artist Corn Wagon Thunder credits her Southern upbringing as influential to her approach to art making. As is so often the case, she had to leave her home before she could see its influence. At age eighteen, Corn high-tailed it to Boston, Massachusetts, where she picked up a little bit of Yankee sass and received her Bachelor of Fine Arts from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, in conjunction with Tufts University. After enduring a few too many New England winters, Corn returned to her North Carolina home with her tail tucked. It was this return that fueled her investigation into what it means to be from the South. During this time, Corn studied at Penland School of Craft in North Carolina—also known as Shangri-La. Doors opened for Corn during this time, and she decided to walk through one, which led her to the Southwest in pursuit of a Master of Fine Arts at the University of New Mexico.