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Get Illuminated
December  31, 2022
Galaudet Gallery 
Chicago, IL
4pm--?

12.16.08 Hubbard Christmas tree lights 2.jpg
Stop by Galaudet Gallery in Chicago and light a candle to illuminate the start of 2023 and release 2022 (and some other years) to history. Each candle and your intentions will be placed in a luminaria and put outside the gallery on West Hubbard. Help us light up the west side of downtown Chicago as we celebrate community, a new year and illuminations.  This is a sixth year of Get Illuminated and our first in Chicago! Bags for the luminaries can be decorated by you or left pure white.
​
Lighting a candle can provide different experiences like:
​
  • Lighting up the way to 2023 Reflect and celebrate on the year that has passed
  • Release thoughts and beliefs that are no longer serving you
  • Set clear intentions for the year ahead
  • Invite the powerful energy of attraction to manifest your desires
  • Lighting up the night with Luminaries can bring a warmth to our celebrations for the coming new year
 
Good music will be playing, good people will be present and positive energy will be ample as Galaudet Gallery looks to support Chicago’s downtown since it is where we love to have our business!
 
Inspirations:
Arthur Rimbaud has provided inspiration for Get illuminated it was his collection called “The Illuminations” 42 poems  which are lighting up our imaginations and inspiring us to “Get Illuminated”  This year we look at Rimbaud's Poem Metropolitan 
 
From the indigo straits to Ossian's Sea,
over the rose and orange sand washed by wine-colored air
crystal boulevards have risen up and crossed
immediately settled by poor young families
who get their food at the fruit dealers.
Nothing rich.--Just the city.
​
From the asphalt desert flee in a straight line:
helmets, wheels, barges, rumps
in confusion with the sheets of fog spaced in sinister bands in the sky
which bends backwithdraws and comes down,
formed by the most treacherous black smoke which the Ocean in mourning can make
--Just the battle
​
Look up:
this wood bridge, arched;
these last vegetable gardens of Samaria;
these illuminated masks under the lantern whipped by the cold night;
the silly water nymph in her noisy dress, in the lower part of the river;
these luminous skulls in the pea rows,--and other bewitchments.--Just the country.
​
These roads lined with fences and walls,
their gardens bursting over them
and the terrible flowers called hearts and sisters,
damask cursing languorously,
--possessions of fairy-like aristocracies ultra-Rhenish, Japanese, Guaranian,
still capable of receiving the music of the ancients--
and there are inns which will never open again now,
--there are princesses,
and if you are not too overwrought,
the study of the stars
--just the sky
​
In the morning when with Elle, you fought in those shimmerings of snow,
the green lips, the ice, the black flags and blue rays,
and the red perfumes of the polar sun.
--Just your strength.
​
 
 
 
 
We started our first year with a quote from Rimbaud's poem Mystic:
 
And while the band at the top of the picture, is formed
by the whirling and leaping noise of a conch shell and nights of men.
 
The flowering of the stars and of the sky and of all else comes down opposite  the hill,
like a basket ,
close to our face,
and makes the valley below sweet smelling and blue
​
The next year we continued with Arthur Rimbaud's “The Illuminations” quoting from the first section of his poem Vigils:
​
It is the enlightened rest, no fervor no languor, on bed or on the grass
It is the friend, who is neither strong nor weak.  The friend.
It is the beloved, not tormenting not tormented.  The beloved.
The air and the world not sought after.  Life.
--Was it this then?
--And the dream fresh,
​
The Third year we looked to Rimbaud's poem Aube (Dawn) for inspiration that led us to the dawn on January 1, 2019.  Here is an excerpt:
​
I have held the summer dawn in my arms.
Nothing moved as yet on the fronts of palaces. The water
was dead.  Swarms of shadows refused to leave the road to the wood. 
I walked along, awakening the warm, alive air. 
Stones looked up, and wings rose up silently.
​
The first occurrence, in the path already filled with cool white
shimmerings, was a flower which told me its name.
​
The Fourth Year we look to Rimbaud's poem Vies (Lives) for reflection on the lives we all lead and those we dream of living--could we merge these two in 2020?   Here is an excerpt:
​
II
​
I am far more deserving inventor than all those who went before me; a musician, in fact, who found something resembling the key of love.  At present from a meagre countryside with a dark sky,  I try to feel emotion over the memory of a mendicant childhood.....I don't miss what I once possessed of divine happines.
​
The last line is best in the French:
​
Je ne regrette pas ma vielle part de gaite divine
 
​
​
Notes
​
The candles being used were made at the Athenian Candle Shop and have lead free wicks, a mixture of beeswax and parafin candles will be available. A luminaria is a white paper bag with designs on it and some sand in the bottom.
​
Translations of Rimbaud are from Wallace Fowlie's A Study in Angelism

Get Illuminated

December 29, 30 and 31, 2019

Galaudet Gallery 

618 S. Farwell Eau Claire, WI

4pm--10pm

Stop by Galaudet Gallery in Eau Claire and light a candle to illuminate the start of 2020 and release 2019 to history. Each candle and your intentions will be placed in a luminaria and put outside the gallery on South Farwell. Help us light up the south side of downtown as we celebrate community, a new year and illuminations.  This is a third year of Get Illuminated and we have saved most of the wonderful Luminary bags from last year so stop in and see if yours is here and add something more to it before lighting your candle.  Or start a new bag for a new year.  Or leave the bag plain and simple--it's your choice!
 
Lighting a candle can provide different experiences like:
​
  • Lighting up the way to 2020 Reflect and celebrate on the year that has passed
  • Release thoughts and beliefs that are no longer serving you
  • Set clear intentions for the year ahead
  • Invite the powerful energy of attraction to manifest your desires
  • Lighting up the night with Luminaries can bring a warmth to our celebrations for the coming new year
 
Good music will be playing and positive energy will be ample as Galaudet Gallery looks to support Eau Claire’s downtown since it is where we love to have our business!
 
Inspirations:
The good work being down in downtown EC even more so this holiday season.
 
Our Stars in a New Constellation and Choix Fleurs Exhibits featuring some stellar art!
 
Arthur Rimbaud is also an inspiration especially “The Illuminations” 42 poems by Rimbaud which are lighting up our imaginations and inspiring us to “Get Illuminated”  We started our first year with a quote from Rimbaud's poem Mystic:
 
And while the band at the top of the picture, is formed
by the whirling and leaping noise of a conch shell and nights of men.
 
The flowering of the stars and of the sky and of all else comes down opposite  the hill,
like a basket ,
close to our face,
and makes the valley below sweet smelling and blue
​
The next year we continued with Arthur Rimbaud's “The Illuminations” quoting from the first section of his poem Vigils:
​
It is the enlightened rest, no fervor no languor, on bed or on the grass
It is the friend, who is neither strong nor weak.  The friend.
It is the beloved, not tormenting not tormented.  The beloved.
The air and the world not sought after.  Life.
--Was it this then?
--And the dream fresh,
​
We love the first line in Rimbaud's French since we see Eau Claire as becoming eclaire in this our 21st Century:
C'est le repose eclaire,
It is the enlightened rest,
​
Last year we looked to Rimbaud's poem Aube (Dawn) for inspiration that led us to the dawn on January 1, 2019.  Here is an excerpt:
​
I have held the summer dawn in my arms.
Nothing moved as yet on the fronts of palaces. The water
was dead.  Swarms of shadows refused to leave the road to the wood. 
I walked along, awakening the warm, alive air. 
Stones looked up, and wings rose up silently.
​
The first occurrence, in the path already filled with cool white
shimmerings, was a flower which told me its name.
​
This year we look to Rimbaud's poem Vies (Lives) for reflection on the lives we all lead and those we dream of living--could we merge these two in 2020?   Here is an excerpt:
​
II
​
I am far more deserving inventor than all those who went before me; a musician, in fact, who found something resembling the key of love.  At present from a meagre countryside with a dark sky,  I try to feel emotion over the memory of a mendicant childhood.....I don't miss what I once possessed of divine happines.
​
The last line is best in the French:
​
Je ne regrette pas ma vielle part de gaite divine
 
​
​
Notes
​
The candles being used were made at the Athenian Candle Shop and have lead free wicks, a mixture of beeswax and parafin candles will be available. A luminaria is a white paper bag with designs on it and some sand in the bottom.
​
Translations of Rimbaud are from Wallace Fowlie's A Study in Angelism

Galaudet Gallery

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