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A Scent of Jasmine in the Evening Air

For Ray's Art Inspires a Challenge

By John CoxPublished about a year ago Updated about a year ago 4 min read

I have a problem. A problem with art.

It's not that I don't like it, or do not understand it, because I do. It's what happens to me when I view it.

My doctor tells me I'm easily over stimulated. But I ask you, have you ever heard of someone experiencing catatonia from over stimulation?

Fainting, maybe. Getting the vapors as my dear ole granny used to say, sure. But fall on the floor, out cold for an hour, call an ambulance due to an acute overdose of art?

Yep. That's me.

Like I said. I have a problem.

The first time it happened, I was a junior at Augsburg College when our art history class visited the Minneapolis Institute of Art Museum for a class trip.

To pay for tuition, I worked nights at a bakery and was in a perpetual state of exhaustion during classes, so that may have had something to do with what happened next.

The professor was discussing a work by the photorealist Chuck Close when a few of us snuck over to check out an enormous canvas by Maxfield Parrish called The Dinky Bird.

The Dinky Bird by Maxfield Parrish

We were there to study post-modern art, not 20th century illustrators. But I was transported. One moment I'm dragging my feet in a stupor of extreme fatigue and in the next I am thunderstruck, transported, a child in a magical realm, swinging naked beneath the shadow of a fairy castle in the clouds.

Imagine my surprise at awakening in an emergency room being treated for a concussion!

Eventually I learned my lesson and stopped visiting art gallery's and museums. My wife suggested the solution after I collapsed in the National Gallery in London when we visited its glorious Impressionist collection.

But I had stood a bare ten paces from paintings by Van Gogh, in person, for the first time in my life! Can you imagine? I fairly shivered with excitement until naturally I collapsed yet again. But in a state of catatonia, I was once again carried away to another world. I sat in Van Gogh's chair with his pipe and tobacco in hand and I was him! I saw the world around me as he must have seen it. The simplest objects filling me with unutterable awe. I literally wept for joy.

Van Gogh's Chair and a self-portrait of Van Gogh in the National Gallery in London.

When I finally awoke, my wife told me that I wasn't safe visiting art museums. We bought an Illustrated book with all of the art at the National Gallery for me to enjoy at home. Where its safe. In my Lazy-Boy. I've never collapsed with a book. Or looking at art online. Or gazing at our little artsy refrigerator magnets. Now our personal library is filled with a veritable catalogue of the world's greatest art works.

Decades have now passed since my last catatonia episode. I sometimes wonder if I might safely visit a museum now and again. But I'm far too old to take another fall on my noggin.

But when Ray posted his challenge with the monoprint Night Jasmine 2, 2021, by Eileen Cooper RA, quite naturally I was intrigued.

The print immediately moved me. But seeing it on my phone is not the same as using a 60-inch television as a computer monitor. I wanted to see it large enough that it would come as close to seeing it in person as I dared.

At first nothing much happened. I noted the artist's visual strategy of dividing the image in a dark background in its upper half and warm light colors in its lower. The dark cat echoes the darkness where the woman sleeps, and her flesh recalls the color and tones where the cat rests.

Only the bird is in motion, either just landed or poised to take off. Everything else seems static, at least at first. But then I noticed what I had missed looking at the image on my phone. There is movement in the background behind the figures, swirling around them, the screen fairly shimmering with motion. In a moment my flesh was stiff with catatonia, and I had impossibly joined the cat, the woman and the bird.

It was then that I experienced something that I could not have while conscious. The scent of Jasmine hung in the Evening Air. But it was not a perfume teasing the woman's bare skin or a sprig of flowers carried in the beak of the bird. It was carried by a breeze that swirled round and about us in the twilight darkness.

The wind is what holds the disparate images together and makes them whole. It is what drew me into the image with the cat that stares intensely at the viewer at rest and yet poised to leap away from danger. It is the fragility of the flitting bird who watches us rather than the cat and in the peaceful rest of a woman unafraid to dream of flowers carried on the breeze, unadorned and unprotected.

At some point, my wife turned the television and my lap top off. She tried to wake me, but I slept the rest of the night in the picture with the uneasy bird, the alert cat and the dreaming woman.

I did not awake until morning. But once I did, I smiled, the scent of jasmine still lingering in the morning air.

InspirationFiction

About the Creator

John Cox

Twisted teller of mind bending tales. I never met a myth I didn't love or a subject that I couldn't twist out of joint. I have a little something for almost everyone here. Cept AI. Aint got none of that.

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Comments (24)

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  • Testabout a year ago

    Congrats!!

  • Andrea Corwin about a year ago

    Wow! I am astounded by the experience you had! You described it so well; congratulations on winning!

  • Cindy Calderabout a year ago

    Congratulations on the win for this amazing piece, John. Well done!

  • Pamela Williamsabout a year ago

    Congratulations! Beautiful story.

  • Antoni De'Leonabout a year ago

    Wow. what a story, you really dived into the crux of the matter. Very impressive narrative,

  • What a fascinating story! Gullible me… I believed it all except for you actually entering the Narnian painting in The Voyage of the Dawn Treader! 🧐🙃

  • L.C. Schäferabout a year ago

    Tiny typo? visiting art gallery's - I think this shoul dbe plural, no?

  • L.C. Schäferabout a year ago

    I get why people stare for ages at paintings, now, thank you 😁

  • Pamela Williamsabout a year ago

    Your description: "The wind is what holds the disparate images together and makes them whole." I can see that now. Wonderful description. You had me somewhat fooled initially, not being familiar with your work!

  • Excellent trip through your art history and love the ones that you shared. Collapsing and waking up in hospital is disconcerting , but so glad that you are still with us and appreciating art

  • C. Rommial Butlerabout a year ago

    Well-wrought! That Maxfield Parrish print reminds me of magical realist author Gene Wolfe. It would have made a great cover for his novel "Castleview", though the actual cover was pretty cool too. Ever look over the works of Frank Frazetta? He did a lot of illustrations for horror, fantasy, and sci-fi, especially well known for his work on Conan publications. Being able to view or read artistic works from all over the world and all through history is one of the aspects of the internet I cherish, though I still like to get out and see them in person when my meager income affords it. Thanks for sharing a few here!

  • Raymond G. Taylorabout a year ago

    Fabulous! A work of art in itself. Wonderful storytelling and about as authentic as it gets. And what a great way to give an art lesson. Really well done.

  • Mark Gagnonabout a year ago

    Fiction, yes, but told in a way that feels so real. Your writing never disappoints, John.

  • Cathy holmesabout a year ago

    That was fascinating. Firstly, I was so believe, even if it is ridiculous. Secondly, I love how you're able to look at a work of art and pick it apart. I don't have that eye, but I found taking a second and third look based on your words. Really well done.

  • Testabout a year ago

    Incredible story through the lens of amazing art and the eyes of one who appreciated it. I could smell the jasmine. Wonderful John!

  • D.K. Shepardabout a year ago

    Woah! I love this, John! What a brilliant concept and top notch storytelling! Loved each art inspired episode and the concept of the print in a book not being catatonia inducing really captured the magnificence of beholding actual artwork vs a print

  • Gabriel Huizengaabout a year ago

    This is so fantastically wild, but so believably written!! You're brilliant, John; loved this wonderfully crazy artistic venture. :)

  • I agree with Hannah too! Because I kept wondering if this was actually true but at the same time kept telling myself that it's absurd, lol. You're such an excellent storyteller, it just feels so real!

  • Shirley Belkabout a year ago

    I don't know what the challenge is...must have missed Ray's story, but I felt like I was walking around in your head, seeing what you saw, and feeling what you felt....so I suppose catatonia took me over when I saw "your" art piece/story. Great job!

  • Paul Stewartabout a year ago

    Almost had me again, sir! Absolutely bought into your mischievious, but incredibly insightful and eloquent take on the challenge! well done! also, totally agree with Hannah!

  • Hannah Mooreabout a year ago

    What is it about your voice I find so believable.

  • Rachel Deemingabout a year ago

    Wouldn't it be wonderful to literally be transported into a picture? Loved the premise of this, John and where you led us with Ray's picture.

  • SoniaStewartabout a year ago

    "A Scent of Jasmine in the Evening Air" evokes a delicate, serene atmosphere, filled with the calming and romantic essence of nature.

  • Lamar Wigginsabout a year ago

    👏👏👏 Take a bow, sir! That was enriching and so full of discovery and interpretation. I'm still in the process of absorbing it all. Art is beyond me but is so fascinating to read what others get out of viewing it.

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