Planet Creature and After Maeve

Frank Coughlan and Robyn Brady are parents of Maeve who was killed in a road accident, at age 10, in November 2003. Jan Cattoni is a friend and documentary film Director of After Maeve: a film about the family and Maeve's friends following her death. The film is generating much interest internationally. This blog is for Frank, Robyn and Jan to offer thoughts as the film and the Planet Creature website are viewed by audiences in different countries.

Friday, December 26, 2008

Chemotherapy and Colour





Robyn here.
I wanted to write briefly about the strong effect colour had on me during the darkest part of the year's journey.
Early on, I found a cotton duvet cover at an op-shop in a retro design with circles of brown, tan and mustard. I loved it, and fashioned a pleated skirt (above right) out of the fabric, and even spent some time planning to applique and embroider the individual circles. But at the peak of this i suddenly went completely off the fabric and most particularly off brown, tan and mustard.
It seemed to me then that the chemotherapy was about death and faeces. Each cycle, during the cell-death phase, the first week, I became terribly constipated, probably a side effect of the anti-nauseants. Then my cells would recover and everything started to move again. For me, brown and tan and mustard, as colours, and rich dark stews such as lamb's shanks, which we ate to build up my blood cells, belonged to that dark death week, and after a while I couldn't bear any of them.
The Picasso Collection was on at GOMA and I went, wearing my new skirt, its only outing. I found that I was drawn to paintings completely by colour, and that what I was craving was spring colours: mint green, pink. I spent most of my time standing in front of two paintings: one (not picasso) full of clouds on a light blue sky, and one (picasso) cubist still life with lampshade and blocked sworls of soft mauve. I was drinking in the freshness. I went home and buried the brown shades in the recess of my cupboard. My taste from then was for fresh, bright colours (above left).
I spotted a like minded patient at radiotherapy with emerald trousers and a bright, light yellow head scarf. The soul cries out.

2 Comments:

At 5:06 PM, Blogger Pinetree4 said...

Dear Robyn (and Frank), I think colours are fascinating and strongly affect us even at an early age. My Grandma also lost a child (drowned) and got breast cancer. It was difficult for my mom and her brothers as my Grandma rejected them at first. She got well though and her passion for nature helped (sounds and colours all around:) She also seemed to have a strong liking for chinese red and jade green. Thank-you for your documentary. I wish you all the best and send bushels of good healing thoughts:)

 
At 11:04 PM, Blogger Robyn Brady said...

Hi Pinetree
Thanks for this- I only just found it.
I found in the early days "after maeve" that all my senses were heightened, as though a membrane had been removed. None of us understand what life is, but death makes it more precious. I'm interested in your Grandma and her evolving journey and her fabulous exotic colours. It sounds as though these will always be part of you.
Kind regards
Robyn

 

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