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My Love For The Crowned Fruit

my love for the crowned fruit

Why are there so many pineapples in my artwork?

Pineapples were all the rage this year, and as a trend they seem to be here to stay.  We saw the lovable fruit everywhere and I have to admit, I was more than tickled to be able to add to my collection of things pineapple.  It is apparent in my body of work, my accessories and home furnishings, and my social media feeds, that I am a self-dubbed pine princess.  The I-liked-it-before-it-was-cool tone aside, here’s some background on why it appears so much in my art.

In a number of my pineapple pieces, I focus on the closeup of the skin of the pineapple.  The beautiful fibonacci dermis in it’s myriad of colors is actually a result of the helical clusters of the plant’s flowers forming the fruit we are familiar with. It is so much more than meets the eye.

I often speak about pineapple as being dear to my heart because of my family’s plantation background.  But it isn’t pride of place or family that makes it special.  There is so much more to it than that.  I don’t know if I have the words to articulate it.

My dad is from Lana’i and my mom, like me, is a Wahiawa girl.  They both donned green and gold as graduates of Lana’i and Leilehua High School.  Both of them grew up in humble households raised by parents employed by Dole.  I have aunties that worked in the cannery.  Uncles that worked in the fields too.  Both of my paternal grandparents worked hard in the fields, harvesting and planting.  My maternal grandfather worked for the plantation too, and my grandma, who grew up in the plantation camp Brody 4 worked lots of different kinds of jobs.  Grandmas on both sides did laundry for the single field workers for side money.  They were all clever and hardworking.  They were good at what they did.  And they did a lot.

There is so much story that precedes this little plantation history, and even more that comes after.  Ours is like many family’s stories.  Both happy and sad and complicated to say the least.  But I am the child of people who shared the same values who were providentially brought together by the agricultural triumph we call “pineapple”.

When you look at the skin of a pineapple, you are looking at the seed, the flower and the fruit all at once.  Just like us.  Aren’t the stories of our lives like that? Starting somewhere in the middle and stretching into the past and future at the same time?  Instead of the words I cannot find to express what I feel about this part of what I consider to be my heritage, I paint the skin of the pineapple.  An elegant retelling of all our stories.

 

Pineapples!

Feeling quite pleased with the paintings of close-ups on the skin of pineapples. They remind me of salt and li hing mui powder and the smell of overripe pineapples near rotting high in the air. I miss that smell.

 

As the fruits grew back after each picking, they got successively smaller, and the companies would stop harvesting because these smaller fruits were supposedly less marketable. (I don’t know, now I wait for those little baby pineapples to go on sale at Safeway, but whatever.) So those smaller leftover pineapples got to ripen on the plant and stink up the air with their sweet almost-wine, sort-of-garbage-y, perfume.

 

Narrowing in on the surface of the iconic local fruit, you’ll notice that the individual “eyes” are farther apart or more yellow at the bottom, because it ripens from bottom to top.

 

This is why most of the time a pineapple is sweeter at the bottom then at its top. And also explains why my family slices pineapple lengthwise into long spears as opposed to rings or chunks. Everybody gets a little bit of everything – and is ensured a few bites of extra sweet pineapple. (A helpful tip in case you don’t know how to cut a pineapple.)

 

Does anyone know what happened to pineapple bugs? What’s the theory on salting pineapple? Have a pineapple memory? Share it here in the comments.

Details

Pencil drawing by Lisa Ventura of family on porch steps in Lanai. Talking about details.

grams and aunties

What do you see in the picture above?  Look at it carefully…

As the summer progresses, and given many unexpected developments, preparation for the upcoming 2013 Haleiwa Arts Festival is getting more hectic.  But I have to say that I am still very excited. New prints are in the works as well as a bunch of other logistical things. And although it sometimes feels like I never have enough time in a day, things are falling into place. koloa trucks

Details in Lisa Ventura art

The above picture shows one of my latest original works. This piece, Trucks Rusting at Koloa Mill, is painted on one of the masonite frames that my husband and brother in-law have (very supportively) made for me. One of the cool things about the originals I’ll have on display and for purchase is that the “edges” of the works include details that their 2D reproductions won’t. For example, edges of the original Rusting Trucks painting includes sections of broken fence, and the number of the plantation truck. Most canvas frame prints repeat or mirror the edges of an image whereas the field of view continues in these originals. I’m tickled by these little details.

 

In an older drawing I did of my dad’s sisters and mother, I included another detail that I was surprised people noticed. I drew in, sticking out of the side of the porch they were all sitting on, a piece of metal. Many older plantation homes had this piece of metal attached to the porch or side of the house for scraping mud off of the bottom of work boots. In my graphite drawing it appeared as a grayish rectangle-y thing. I was so pleased that when it went on display for a competition I had entered, many local people recognized what it was! It was like those of us who knew about that little gray shape were a part of a special club.

 

That weird gray shape was a reminder of how hard my grandparents worked, and for others, summers picking pineapple, scrubbing sidewalk or other weekend chores, some relative’s home…

 

It’s so important to step back and view things as part of a bigger picture. But sometimes, we have to narrow in on small details to appreciate that big picture. Looking forward to hearing about the things you notice. Welcome to the club.