Poppies in a Hurricane
by Beverley Harper Tinsley
Original - Sold
Price
$295
Dimensions
12.000 x 18.000 inches
This piece has been already sold. Please feel free to contact the artist directly regarding this or other pieces.
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Title
Poppies in a Hurricane
Artist
Beverley Harper Tinsley
Medium
Painting - Watercolor
Description
A vibrant and splashy floral, this poppy painting can bring a modern, fun feel to any room. Energetic reds and oranges liven up the environment.
Original is priced as matted and framed.
*****
According to http://www.whats-your-sign.com/poppy-symbolism.html
Symbolic Poppy Meanings
These thoughts on the meaning of poppy symbolism is inspired by a dream, which is pretty uncanny as the poppy is a symbol of Morpheus, the Greek god of dreams.
I love this association. If you've ever seen a poppy in its process of growth, you've observed just before blooming, the bud hangs its head - heavy with the promise of blossom. In fact, the cocooned bud seems to droop in somnolence, as if enchanted or perhaps the bud is pregnant with floral dreams.
Most of us are familiar with the hypnogogic (hallucinogenic/narcotic) properties of the poppy. From the Chinese poppy opium is derived. The ancient Greeks understood this, and so we see another link to Morpheus and poppy symbolism.
Morpheus lived in his own world - a world of dreams, fantasy and complete nonadherence to traditional reality. He was destined to live here and rule the realms of dreams - it was in his genes. He was born from "night" - his mother is Nix, the goddess of night and dark creations. Morpheus' dad is Hypnos the deific governor of sleep.
To me, this speaks of the potential found in unconventional reality and messages wafting up through our dreams like a sweet fragrance - waiting to be recognized.
Poppies are also sacred to Demeter who was said to concoct an infusion of poppies (like a tea) in order to sleep through her sorrow while Persephone was absent. The theme of sleep is carried through as Persephone's cyclical excursions to the underworld were timed with the seasons. She would leave her mother Demeter in the winter to join her husband, Hades. Her absence marked the winter, her submersion in the underworld signifies a kind of "closing the shutters" and slumber in the cycle of life.
Poppy symbolism is also associated with the Muladhara chakra (I write in more details about the Poppy/Muladhara connection on my blog). Poppies come in many colors, but they're typically dressed in red, the chakra color corresponding to the Muladhara. Further, this chakra prompts human awareness to be fed from rich, nutritive soils and encourages that nourishment to be pulled from our roots and moved up through the rest of the chakras. We blossom at our crown only when we can move well-being up through our roots.
In Chinese symbolism, the poppy represents rest, beauty and success. However, its associations with opiate-induced stupors also lend meanings of sloth, dependence and an inability to temper pleasure with the banalities kicked up by living a pragmatic life. Honest masters know enlightenment is induced from within and through a connection with the infinite. Dependence upon external substances/influences to lift the veils of illusion is considered a lazy approach to enlightenment.
In Christianity, poppy symbolism is recruited to represent death as a period of tranquil slumber. This association is seen in metaphor as the red petals of the poppy symbolize the blood of a sacrificed Christ. Themes of resurrection and immortality (salvation of the soul) blossom as the poppy (and the spirit) never really die, just renew and ascend.
Poppies are also featured in the legendary poem, Flanders Field by John McCrae:
In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.
We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved, and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.
Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields.
-Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae (1872 - 1918)
The poem elicits feelings of transience, perhaps even the futility of conflict/violence. Moreover, the poem stirs up ephemeral concepts of life, how existence is at once fleeting yet also continual. It is a remembrance poem dedicated to fallen comrades in battle. The poppies McCrae refers to grow on the battle-ravaged fields of Flanders. The red of the poppies has often been compared to the blood sacrificed in war for the sake of gaining advantage or battling for higher ideals. To this day, poppies are worn by veterans and those honoring soldiers for Remembrance day as well as Veterans day.
Uploaded
September 2nd, 2011
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Comments (10)
Nikki Dalton
Great energy and movement Beverley!
Beverley Harper Tinsley replied:
Thanks Nikki, I really enjoyed the freedom of movement and expression when painting this one.