Most of Elizabeth MacFarland’s recent paintings have been done within a few miles radius of where she lives in the northern Catskills. She finds inspiration and interest all around her without going far. In this way, Elizabeth practices standing still and learns to see the treasures of the natural world right in front of her.
Elizabeth has been concerned about the impact humans are having on the earth for a long time. Ten years ago she completed a large painting dealing with this subject, The Sorrow of Sophia. Since then, the climate crisis has only worsened. Her recent painting Windigo World arose from her subconscious while looking at a thread of quartz in a large rock. The Windigo is a greedy and insatiably hungry cannibalistic creature in Native American mythology (Ojibwe, Cree, and Anishinaabe) that stalks humans in the deep cold of winter. It has become a symbol of greed and selfish disregard for the well-being of society and the earth. Many have been treating the earth as if her resources are limitless, created just for human consumption. Our culture has greedily consumed and consumed, like the hungry Windigo, and now we are reaping the consequences, as evidenced by the climate emergency we now face.
Elizabeth expounds, saying “We can and must live our lives in better relationship with the natural world: within nature instead of outside of it. The need for endless economic growth, what I refer to as our Windigo World, comes at a great cost: the depletion of the wealth and health of earth’s ecosystems.”
Elizabeth hopes that her paintings can serve as a window into the treasures we still have, and also perhaps as a call to protect those we are poised to lose.
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