Puerto Rico-Tropical Keystone
The cry of the blacksmith’s daughter to the sea and the
life of uisge-beatha sing to the lone islands that I am Clan Morrison. The Zen of
an incomplete circle of black soot and the mixture of Chinese graphite and clay
cry that I am an artist. Technically, Puerto Rico is not a state but neither is
Virginia, but in 2012 with a non-binding referendum 54% of the population voted
for statehood. My Puerto-Rican friend said that she did not what they wanted. It
was Spain’s keystone of the Caribbean. British captured the island but
retreated from it. The United States got the island as part of the end of the
Spanish American War. Ironically the Island also has one of the largest
Communist Party’s in the United States. (Its flag is the same design as the
Communist Cuban Flag which is why the blue is darker because the federal
government changed it in the 1950’s with the Cold War, but the government is
letting them return to their own flag in recent times.) It used to be a “rum
island” but the industry went overseas. There actually a uprising to gain
independence in the 1930’s but it is becoming American. I like the song Pour Me a
Glass As Well.

The name of this piece is Fencepost,
is 9” x 12” and drawn with ink October 2013. It was between two cornfields in
Indiana were the stream divides the land the tree scared to form an eye as the
fence ran out permitting a taste of nature I was worried because there was a
loose dog in the area. This was from my first year as an artist the month my
mom died. If you
are interested in buying this or any other of my work email me at MatthewMorrison76@yahoo.com to order.