~"Daisy Buchanan"~
My entry for this month's
Nibblefest Art Contest (NFAC), the
theme for March being 'Flowers',
features a portrait painted in tribute to a protagonist of the 1925
vintage classic, "The Great Gatsby", by American novelist F. S.
Fitzgerald. Painted on all sides in acrylics upon a 7" wooden oval
plaque, this original, entitled "Daisy Buchanan", is
signed and ready to hang.
As usual for Nibblefest, I thought long and hard
about this month's 'Flowers' theme. I knew painting actual blooms
probably wasn't going to keep my interest for very long (too
straightforward). Instead, a women's name came into mind: "Daisy"...,
as in Daisy Buchanan, everyone's favorite literary poor little rich
girl. Daisy was beautiful, charming and wealthy, so much so that when a
destitute young officer from humble beginnings named Jay Gatsby
happened to cross her path, he just couldn't get her off his mind (for
like, years). In fact, he went on to create a whole new identity,
fortune and persona for himself, all with the soul intention of luring
her high-maintenance self back. The fact that she had impatiently
gotten hitched to a powerful man within her own social circle, presented
but small obstacle in his mind. The jilted Gatsby went on to make his
own way in life (never mind the legalities), and years later was able to
purchase a ginormous mansion smack dab across the bay from his beloved
Daisy's house (hmmm, stalker much???) Every night he focuses upon a
glowing green light that shines across the water -- it's the blinking
bulb at the end of Daisy Buchanan's dock. As it says in the
book,"Gatsby believed in the Green Light....".
Hope springs ever eternal, no...?
(Included in my portrait is Daisy's green
light (plus for anyone thinking my interpretation may be too much of a
stretch for 'Flowers', notice the wee roses I included in the lace
overlay of her gown)...).
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