Tag: Manda Severin

  • Going on a Treasure Hunt (Part 2)

    CAC mural March 2014What would you do if you found yourself on a sailboat in the middle of a stretch of ocean, and your task was to search for treasure?

    Along the way, you had to:

    • find a few new friends
    • locate some markers of your trip so you could share them with others who might want to follow you
    • weather a storm or two
    • discover something magical; and
    • leave a mark on the spot of your treasure so others could find it too.

    Oh yeah – and then you need to create a piece of art that shows your journey.

    The mural created by some of the girls in our mentoring programs, led by artist Manda Severin, represents something very similar to this make-believe journey. They didn’t go on an actual boat, but the mural makes me think about the journeys we take at each phase of our lives and all the symbolism that can be found in a painting of an ocean.

    CAC mural March 2014blog3

    Think about it: an ocean is a deep and mysterious place under the surface, but when you look at it from above, it is just a beautiful expanse of blue water and sparkly splashes and rolling waves. Looking at it from that viewpoint, it seems like an ocean is just water – miles and miles of water.

    CAC mural March 2014blogBut we know that under the surface you can find all sorts of life. You might find turtles or fish or living coral. If you are lucky, maybe you’ll meet a mermaid or merman. If you travel close to shore you might see a lighthouse and cliffs and rocky shoreline. If you dive very deep, you might find larger sea creatures, both gentle and fierce, moving through the deep, dark depths.

    It’s kind of like stretches of our lives. If we just look at what things appear to be on the surface, it can seem like lots of sameness – like the stretches of blue water of the ocean. If we look below, though, we find all sorts of things going on. On my particular journeys at various times of my life, I have met lots of interesting friends and companions (like the turtles and mermaids and jelly fish in the mural), weathered a few horrible storms, and been very grateful for the markers along the way that helped me avoid wrecks and disasters (like the lighthouse and the compass).

    CAC mural March 2014blog2In the mural, the X marks the spot of the treasure, but the box is unopened. I like this image, because even though we might all venture through journeys similar to the one in this painting, we each need and hopefully find different “treasures”.

    The journey of healing from anything painful has all of these elements: uncertain pathways, companions and friends, stormy periods, and resting spots when we need them. What I love about this mural is that it leaves a path of this journey so that others can follow and hopefully have an easier time of it. The fact that this was created by girls healing from abuse makes that part of the painting even more touching to me. I like the idea that they have created something that is both playful and significant, meaningful to their own journeys and to the journeys we all take, whether we have experienced abuse or not. We all journey through challenges and times of joy in our lives and this mural speaks to all of us in that way.

    Have you decided yet what your journey might look like? Who your companions might be? What treasure you might find at the end?

    CAC mural March 2014blog4One last thing. At the top of the mural the purple sky is lit up with glowing stars in the shape of expanding circles and they seem to cast a blessing over the whole thing. I’d like to think those stars represent all those who watch over us and help us, over the girls who painted the mural, over all kids and teens healing from abuse. When I look up at the stars tonight, that thought will bring peace to my thoughts.

    Thank you, artists of this mural, for sharing a little bit of your journeys with us and for leaving something beautiful behind at our center. May the stars watch over your journeys, tonight and every night, and may you always have companions to help you along your way.

    This mural was painted by artist Manda Severin, with participation by five girls who are in treatment at the Children’s Advocacy Center (CAC). The girls helped choose the theme and picked the design, as well as being full participants in the painting process. 

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    Manda Severin
    Manda Severin

    The artist: Manda Severin is a true renaissance woman. She has a Master’s degree in Psychology and she has been an instructor at SOU for many years. She is also a very talented artist and musician. She is available to paint murals for individuals or businesses and she can be reached at juniperbryn@gmail.com

  • Going on a Treasure Hunt (Part 1)

    In January and February, an artist named Manda Severin helped some of the girls who come to our center paint a beautiful mural.  This, like all creative processes, began with a few simple things:  paint, a canvas, brushes, ideas and thoughts, and a few questions.

    What type of adventure would you like to take?  What kind of journey are you on?  What journey are we all on?

    What flowed from these general ideas was a painting with literal images of flowing water, of ocean waves and birds.  I got a glimpse of the mural before it was finished.  The top half of the mural is bright with colors from the sea shore – blues and greens and a brilliant red-orange-yellow sailboat floating in the middle.  The puffy clouds and bright stars in the sky mirror the white foam bubbling at the shore.

    Met2I am captivated by the images and want to get on that sailboat and see where it would take me.

    But my eye is drawn to the image on the bottom half of the mural.  This section is an earthy brown, a grounding color that compliments the bright movement of the ocean above it.  A bright red dotted path starts at an island and travels down, in a curving pattern, around outlines of a turtle and mermaids, ending someplace in the middle of the space.

    Metamorphosis1I wonder what is there?

    The mural is not quite finished, so I will have to wait to see what treasure is found there, but it has me thinking.  Will the path end here?  Will the treasure be something expected, or something surprising?  Will we get to see the treasure, or will we be left guessing about what type of treasure can be found in this magical place?  Will each viewer of the mural get to decide on their own “treasure”, or will we all enjoy the same treasure?

    I love this piece because it is so similar to life, with all of its twists and turns and surprises, the moments when we get to frolic with the sea turtles and the days when we feel lost on a path that doesn’t seem to have an end.  The mural is both playful and a bit mysterious, and it invites me to look at my life with a bit more playfulness and lightheartedness.

    The journey we are all on can be pretty hard sometimes, and the journey of healing from painful things can feel unbearable at times.  But if we keep going – “just keep swimming” as Dori says in a famous sea-based movie – we can know that there is always treasure to be found and unknown adventures just around the corner.  Just like life, this mural in its unfinished state invites me to keep going … to follow the dots and explore just a bit more.

    met3I look forward to seeing it in its finished state.  Stay tuned.