“THIRST” – Painting and Poem by Rina Lucas

Dear Friends,

I am delighted to unveil my latest original oil painting, 18 X 24 on Gallery Wrapped Canvas, and accompanied by poetry entitled “THIRST” with much gratitude to the Gila River Indian Community who recently hosted us at Wild Horse Pass in Arizona and inspired this multimedia work. – Rina Lucas, Staff & Palette

 

“THIRST” 

Poem and Painting by Rina Lucas

In the desert

And in life

Thirst

Is real…

Seeing it slaked

Is holy work

Feeling it in the first place

An other worldly experience

Recognizing

The Divine

Among the dust

Are vessels

Carrying much medicine

High Priests

Who feel the fullness

Of what might be mistaken

For emptiness,

They are

Wide waters

Winding their way

Through parched parcels

Like the Gila River

A mindful mirror

Reflecting all the complex hues and shades

Of honesty

Where light and darkness embrace

And become one reality

The Song of the Sonoran

Diverted

For decades

So truth could not be told

Stolen

From the ancient caretakers

Of this sun streaked Land

Lying along arid mountains

Underneath Arizona’s azure skies,

Yet what was taken

Has been returned

As justice always requires

But all too often

Cannot fully achieve

At least not in one

Lifetime,

Reparations

Have restored

The lush blooms

Of this sacred space

Filling the air

With the aroma of Acacia

And calming Creosote

Remembrances of rain

Yielding nourishment

That fills bellies

And feeds souls

Starving for memory

And meaning,

The renewed flower

Of the Gila River’s flow

Repeats the prayers

Of the people…

The Pima

The Pee-Posh

And every one of us

Who has known thirst…

Survivors of violations

Of every kind

Not yet validated

Let alone vindicated…

Until we are heard

Even if it is

A long time coming

As the sun

Is setting.

 

Artist StatementRina Lucas – Staff & Palette

Both the painting and poem seek to represent not only the stunning natural beauty of the Gila River region of Arizona’s Sonoran Desert, but also to tell the story of how devastating non-native agricultural practices in the late 1800’s and early 1900’s literally cut off the life flow of the Gila River to native communities, the Pima (also known as Akimel O’otham) and the Maricopa (also known as the Pee-Posh or Piipaash) who originally cared for this sacred land and remain here to this day. Thirst, experienced often in the desert in a physical way, is expressed here as a longing for truth and for wrongs to be righted. This was the case when the US Government built Coolidge Dam and created the San Carlos Reservoir on the Upper Gila River piping water once again to the reservation to sustain farming practices, life, and hope for the people to whom the land holds most value and rightful claim. The river itself, considered holy by these tribes, is the central character of this multimedia artistic work and also has special meaning for me, literally and metaphorically, in my own personal journey. While each story is as unique as the individuals and groups they represent, the poetic idea stretches to acknowledge the thirst felt by all peoples who have suffered their own violation in some form. It describes how the remedy of the river’s symbolic voiced and visual validation of truth, a mirror to allow for just action, refreshes and alleviates this prayerful longing for the world to be repaired. Value contrast is vigorously implemented in the painting to demonstrate that truth contains complicated shades that show the light and darkness of what is. That the scene is depicted at sunset emphasizes even if restitution is a long time coming, it is never too late to see it done.

“Water is life.” – Lakota Proverb

“I am the River, The River is Me” – Maori Proverb

“Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they shall be filled.” 

Holy Bible – Matthew 5:6

“Ho! All who thirst, go to the water…”

ה֚וֹי כָּל־צָמֵא֙ לְכ֣וּ לַמַּ֔יִם

Hebrew Bible – Isaiah 55:1