Loading...
Village Squire, 1977-11, Page 1441t As short a time ago as last year Mona Mulhern's leanings were strongly toward simple, naturalistic art. find I'm just now starting to do what I did when I was a kid," she says. That has been a rediscovery of fantasy and she's become fascinated by it. She feels she can relate more to her children now than she could even a year ago. She recently took them to see the movie Star Wars, a science fiction fantasythat so impressed the children and herself that they went a sond time. The imagination used in the show, the fantasy was exciting, she says. It relates to what I'm into now," she says. One of the things she's into is a lot of thinking about creativity. Why, she wonders, is there this desire, this need for creative things when it isn't part of the natural environment. After her father died, she says, things were tough on the farm without money to bring cultural things to the home. yet that drive to draw, to be creative was still in her. She wonders too where the images come from that drive creative people. What leads a writer to think of words in a special way or has a painter arrange lines and colours in a way that is more than just technically good, but is also creative. A large influence on her life and work is nature. When she was a child, she says, her companion was nature. She'd go down by the stream with just her dog, and nature was her friend. Today she still loves nature. She likes walking and working in her garden and when things get hectic, she walks the couple of blocks from her house to Lake Huron where by descending a stairway over the cliff she can enter a world that hardly seems to be in town at all. "Nature", she says, "makes you realize your insignificance as a man or a human being." Man has tried to dominate the work, always trying to "improve" things instead of leaving things alone. And so nature dominates all her work, though it's nature today that is influenced by her fantasy. One drawing, for instance, shows a tree with a face with a large dandelion beside it rearing menacingly out of proportion to the tree. When asked to explain it, she says that in nature she finds many of the small things the most threatening. Dandelions, for instance keep coming back, defying man. You cut them'down today and tomorrow they're back again, reaching up with jagged leaves. Of her work she says that "I'm finally getting any act together." She is comfortable enough with her work now, she says, that criticism doesn't hurt her. Art is a very personal thing, she says and she's come to realize that if someone looks at her drawing and doesn't like it, it's just their personal response to her work, not a reflection on her. No matter what the reaction to her work, she says, she has a real need to create. There have been times, she remembers, when she would get discouraged with drawing and just put it dovyn for a while but always there is something drawing her back to it. That urge has also been leading her to more actively pursue public viewing for her work. Besides the showing by the London 12,VILLAGE SQUIRE/NOVEMBER 1977. FINE FURNITURE • PAINTS CARPETS • WALLCOVERINGS Robert L. Plumsteel Interiors DECORATING PHONE 527-0902 SEAFORTH We have over 10 years experience in interior design We will decorate your room or home to suit your personality. Give us a call and we will come to your home with our free decorating service. We can co-ordinate to your Special Needs. We have a Targe selection of furniture floor covering, wall covering and paints.