What
happens when summer finally arrives in the Pacific Northwest?
L I F E
Mary B’s leggy tomato plants in the middle of July!
The TAG-5 is simply a group of women who’ve experienced L I F E lately―children graduating from
college or coming home for the summer from college; children moving to another
state with the first grandchild in tow; elderly parents who are infirm and needing
to downsize and move; and the passing of a parent to name a few of the personal
things.
Then there are the other L I F E things: vacations and planning vacations, TAG-5 field trips, gardening, landscaping,
reading, upholstering furniture, sewing and delivering custom projects, sky
diving, having fun and embracing the sun when it shines, and trying to keep up
with our art study--and not necessarily in that order! Natural vitamin D
can be in short supply here, and when the sun comes out, all-of-a-sudden we
want to be outdoors instead of indoors. Plus,
we need to take time to just make art since we are a creative group of five! Get the picture?
So, lately when the TAG-5 is together on Thursday
mornings, we’ve sometimes been only two people having a cheese Danish, coffee
and conversation. When we are four or
five, we’ve spent time with personal catching-up and being a support system
when those L I F E things happen. Remember, we were girlfriends first!
Leif Ericson on the shore of newly discovered Vinland (Newfoundland), Book from 1908, Mary MacGregor: Stories of the Viking, Wikimedia Commons |
When TAG-5 met last Thursday, we revisited our
art study focus. None of us was ready to move into another time period, so we are on the Viking trail
(sail?)at this time. The word ‘Viking’ originally meant making an expedition or
journey by water and evolved from there.
The word had no negative connotation. The voyager did not wear horned hats, as pictured above,
but they did have clasps (brooches) to keep their wraps on, they did drink out
of horns and wore cuffs and belts with ornamentation. Instead of telling someone to go-take-a-hike,
one could say go-take-a-viking! Just saying . . . I digress . . . but, they
were an itinerant lot according to the map below.
Vikings in the 8th -10th centuries, GNU Free Documentation License, Wikimedia Commons
(Names of places are in German language, but are close enough to English to figure them out! )
Can you find Aachen from where Charlemagne reigned?
Interesting to see the rivers that moved the Vikings to the Middle East.
|
Their L I F E included
art, as learned in the Sutton Hoo post.
Looking for more Viking information?
There is a great PBS documentary called “Michael Wood’s Story of England:Romans to Normans.” This episode investigates Vikings in England. They weren’t
all pirates and pillagers; but people moving from place-to-place or simply commingling with other tribes for their human survival.
I found this absolutely fascinating.
After viewing this particular PBS episode in the series, my curiosity took over: If I lived in that time, what would art be? What would my art/creative pursuit be? Did they call it "art" or was there another term for an individual's creativity?
Did their art always have a functional quality, or was there anything just plain decorative for decorative's sake? Would I have had time to make art while living a subsistence
L I F E without the advancements of the last 2,000 years? Is any creative
process art as well as craft? (i.e. boat building, tool making, wood carving, spinning, weaving, lace making, or
baking bread to name a few. (I say yes!) What questions would you ask them about their art? And, who put the art in artifacts?
From tomatoes to Vikings, I remainMary B.
of Scandinavian and British ancestry
and glad I don't have to rely on my garden for subsistence!
P.S. I learned from the documentary that Charlemagne specifically purchased woven cloth from "Vikings" in England because of its quality. The map above is a key to other Viking influenced art.