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Terry Tempest Williams
Finding Beauty in a Broken World
English · Paperback / Softback
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Description
Zusatztext 42466876 Informationen zum Autor Terry Tempest Williams is the award-winning author of fifteen books, including Refuge: An Unnatural History of Family and Place , Finding Beauty in a Broken World , When Women Were Birds, and, most recently, The Hour of Land . Her work has been widely anthologized around the world. She lives in Castle Valley, Utah, with her husband, Brooke Williams. Klappentext "Shards of glass can cut and wound or magnify a vision," Terry Tempest Williams tells us. "Mosaic celebrates brokenness and the beauty of being brought together." Ranging from Ravenna, Italy, where she learns the ancient art of mosaic, to the American Southwest, where she observes prairie dogs on the brink of extinction, to a small village in Rwanda where she joins genocide survivors to build a memorial from the rubble of war, Williams searches for meaning and community in an era of physical and spiritual fragmentation. In her compassionate meditation on how nature and humans both collide and connect, Williams affirms a reverence for all life, and constructs a narrative of hopeful acts, taking that which is broken and creating something whole.We watched the towers collapse. We watched America choose war. The peace in our own hearts shattered.How to pick up the pieces?What to do with these pieces?I was desperate to retrieve the poetry I had lost.Standing on a rocky point in Maine, looking east toward the horizon at dusk, I faced the ocean. “ Give me one wild word. ” It was all I asked of the sea.The tide was out. The mudflats exposed. A gull picked up a large white clam, hovered high above the rocks, then dropped it. The clam broke open, and the gull swooped down to eat the fleshy animal inside. “Give me one wild word to follow . . . ”And the word the sea rolled back to me was “m o s a i c.”Ravenna is the town in Italy where the west arm of Rome and the east arm of Constantinople clasped hands and agreed on a new capital of the Roman Empire in 402 AD. It was a pragmatic decision made by a shift in power, the decline of Rome and the rise of Byzantium. A spiritual history of evolving pagan and Christian perspectives can be read in a dazzling narrative of cut stones and glass.Eloquence is spoken through the labor of hands, anonymous hands of forgotten centuries. With eyes looking up, artisans rolled gold tesserae between their fingers in thought, as they searched for the precise placement in domes and apses where light could converse with glass. Jeweled ceilings become lavish tales. I want to understand these stories told through fragments. I am an apprentice in a mosaic workshop.Her name is Luciana. She is my teacher. Her work is unsigned, anonymous. Like the mosaicists before her who created the ancient mosaics that adorn the sacred interiors of this quiet town, she conducts the workshop in the traditional manner outlined centuries ago.The tools required: a hammer and a hardie. The hardie is similar to a chisel and is embedded in a tree stump for stability. A piece of marble, glass, or stone, desiring to be cut, is held between the forefinger and thumb of the left hand, placed perpendicular on the hardie. The hammer that bears two cutting edges, gracefully curved, is raised in the right hand. With a quick blow, a tessera is born, the essential cube in the crea- tion of a mosaic.Her name is Luciana. She is a mosaicist in the town of Ravenna. She has no belief in invention or innovation. “It has all been done before,” she says. “There are rules.” 1.The play of light is the first rule of mosaic.2.The surface of mosaics is irregular, even angled, to increase the dance of light on the tesserae.3.Tesserae are irregular, rough, individualized, unique.4.If you are creating horizontal line, place tesserae vertically.5.If you are creating a vertical line, place tesserae horizontally. 6. The line in mosaic is supreme; the flow of the line is w...
Product details
Authors | Terry Tempest Williams |
Publisher | Vintage USA |
Languages | English |
Product format | Paperback / Softback |
Released | 06.10.2009 |
EAN | 9780375725197 |
ISBN | 978-0-375-72519-7 |
No. of pages | 432 |
Dimensions | 135 mm x 201 mm x 23 mm |
Series |
VINTAGE BOOKS |
Subject |
Fiction
> Poetry, drama
|
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