(How do an individual’s spiritual values evolve? As we catch glimpses of the Art, Life and Legacy of pioneer artist and conservationist Annora Brown, we learn about her spiritual “ripening”.)
Annora Brown was a person who didn’t let other people’s attitudes and opinions affect her negatively once she found her course in life. Matter-of-fact, exhilarated by her curiosity and creativity, Annora’s thinking moved along a unique plain of values – and many of us find ourselves touched by her far-sighted legacy.
Annora often told about the way her parents encouraged her to find her voice. Then, in her book “Old Man’s Garden”, written early in her professional career, she talked about listening for the “gossip” she heard from the wildflowers. Later, she wrote “when I looked deep into the heart of a flower, I felt as if a presence surrounded me … As if the spirits of the earth were coming to share this moment with me”. As for how our famed Southwestern Alberta winds affected her, she told how the power and violence of those winds touched an elemental part of her nature and provided music for her soul.
She wrote about how those many glimpses of space and light and spirit influenced her many forms of creativity and were part of her spiritual formation… To the present time, we can still focus on her inspired wisdom.
In her illustrations and paintings, her writings and handicraft designs, Annora excelled in her gifts of creativity. Her artist friend Doris Hunt thoughtfully wrote “Annora Brown’s art is the product of her environment, but in her transactions with her environment she is as much the creator as created.”
A fascinating part of Annora’s story is that she never really realized the potential of what she had to offer until she was in her late Twenties and was challenged to develop her inspirational spirit at Toronto’s School of Art. Even after graduating with Honours, and after being gainful employed as an art teacher at Calgary’s Mount Royal College, the fullness of her struggles was still being developed. With the desperate illness of her parents and her need to help with their finances as well as care for them … while being pitied by many because she was a spinster … and being challenge by a community whose rural values were very traditional … her resolve was to remain called to the place where God placed her in Fort Macleod, Alberta!
Through all this time it was as if her spirit was evolving, pushing her in new directions – some might call this a process of “ripening”! Through it she and we discover how we can be both blessed and a blessing. Many are the surprises that may still lie in store for any one of us at any time! Remember the youngster who shouted “God ain’t finished with me yet!”
(see details of her art and her story at www.annorabrown.ca )
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