Wednesday, March 5, 2025

Painting is Forever

 Painting is Forever 
Living with Nature Center 
San Vicente Ilocos Sur

Painting is forever, there's no time and space limit.  Art evolves, it rolls on and on, traces history and beats a path to the future, exempts no one - young, old and those yet to be born." - avr  
 
Paintings and Verses by Dr Abe V Rotor

Art is leisure, mural detail of a cavern.

Take a break, relaxation a luxury today,
Sleep a most precious rest, give way.
Shift your thoughts to dreams and fantasy.
Live life your best, give thanks, and pray.    

 
Bring Nature home in the sala and on canvas.

Nature comes into your home through art,
     on painted floor, ceiling and wall,
in three-in-one piece, or in views apart,
    with aura to admire and enthrall.

Landscape your empty wall and corridor.

Mirror, mirror on the wall, 
what is the fairest of all,
but trees, hills and a waterfall,
away from the ugly troll.

  
Memories of childhood scenes enshrined through painting.

Paintings of sweet memories forever,
my childhood I'll never forget, never!

 
 
 
Painting sets the stage for drama, rehearsal and actual performance,
in the purview of performing art under the subject of Humanities

Make a stage your own and tap your talent,
overcome stage fright, conquer fear;
as you go through practice and experiment;  
discover, stir your way wide and clear,
 for stars are born, by providence or accident;
acting a great hobby, a lifetime career.

 
Painting is work and game, hobby and career.  As spatial art, it provides
 a beautiful setting in the interplay of reality and fantasy, rationality 
and creativity. 

Painting is forever, there's no time and space limit. Art evolves, it rolls on and on, traces history and beats a path to the future, exempts no one - young, old and those yet to be born." - avr ~

Famous Blind People (Article in Progress)

 Famous Blind People

Researched by Dr Abe V Rotor

Helen Keller - (1880 - 1968) (1880-1968) American author, activist and lecturer. She was the first deaf/blind person to graduate from college.


 Helen Keller

Horatio Nelson – (1758-1805) British admiral
When enemy ships would display the signal flags Horatio would bring his telescope to his blind eye and say carry on with the attack, I see no signals.

Andrea Bocelli –(1958 - ) Andrea Bocelli had become blind at the age of 12 years old, famous singer. He once said "I don't think a singer decides to sing, it is the others who choose that you sing by their reactions". Bocelli is also a lawyer. 

John Milton – (1608-1674) English poet and prose polemicist, well known through his epic poem Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained.

Claude Monet (1840-1926), founder of French impressionist painting, a movement that swept through Europe in the later part of the 19th century. The term Impressionism is derived from the title of his painting Impression, Sunrise. PHOTO
                                            
Galileo Galilei - (1564- 642) Galileo Galilei was a Tuscan (Italian) astronomer, mathematician, physicist, and philosopher being greatly responsible for the scientific revolution.
                                                                                           
 Franklin Delano Roosevelt - (1882-1945) Franklin was the 32nd President of the United States of America.  In spite of several disabilities including vision impairment, he was responsible in the recovery of the economy from the Great Depression.

 Stevie Wonder - (1950 -  ) American singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and record producer. Blind from infancy.

 Alec Templeton - (1909-1963) was a satirist and pianist who had moved from Wales to the United States where he played with several orchestras, eventually making it to his first radio performances on the Rudy Vallee Show, The Chase and Sanbourn Hour,The Magic Key and Kraft Music Hall. The way he would memorize his scripts before the show was by asking someone to read them 20 times in a row while he would listen. He was blind from birth but it did not stop him to doing what he wanted to do in the end.

 Louis Braille - (1809-1852) Louis Braille became blind after he accidentally stabbed himself in the eye with his father's awl. He later became an inventor and designed braille writing, which enables blind people to read through feeling a series of organized bumps representing letters. This concept was beneficial to all blind people from around the world and is commonly used even today.

 Harriet Tubman - (1820-1913), a slave throughout her youth, being treated as an animal until she eventually escaped captivity. When she had reached Canada she did not stay to enjoy her freedom. She returned to the lands and brought hundreds of black slaves back to safety, saving them from slavery by escaping from what they then called The Underground Railroad. After a severe wound to the head, which was inflicted by a slave owner before her escape, she became victim to vision impairment and seizures. Which did not keep her from tossing her fears aside and to keep fighting for the freedom of her people.

James Thurber - Comedian and cartoonist for New Yorker Magazine. His brother William accidentally shot him in the eye with and arrow while playing a game of William Tell making him almost completely blind after the loss of an eye. 

Jorge Luis Borges - (1899-1986) Argentine writer whose output includes short stories, essays, poetry, literary criticism, and translations.


Joseph Plateau PHOTO - (1801-1883) Belgian physicist, invented the stroboscope that led to the development of cinema, blinded by gazing at the sun for 25 seconds.

 Marla Runyan - (1969 - ) Marathon runner who is legally blind. She is a three-time US national champion in the women's 5,000 meters.

Thomas Gore - (1870-1949) Democratic politician. He became blind as a child through two separate accidents but did not give up his dream of becoming a senator.

William Prescott - (1726-1795) American colonel in the Revolutionary War, became widely attributed for the famous quote, "Do not fire until you see the whites of their eyes," an important instruction to his soldiers in order to conserve ammunition. The former town of Prescott, Massachusetts, and the Prescott Peninsula today were named in his honor,

Ray Charles - (September 23, 1930  June 10, 2004) known by his stage name Ray Charles, was an American pianist and musician who shaped the sound of rhythm and blues. He brought a soulful sound to country music, pop standards, and a rendition of "America the Beautiful" that Ed Bradley of 60 Minutes called the "definitive version of the song, an American anthem. In 1965, Charles was arrested for possession of heroin, a drug to which he had been addicted for nearly 20 years. It was his third arrest for the offence, but he avoided jail time after kicking the habit in a clinic in Los Angeles. He spent a year on parole in 1966.

Sidney Bradford - (May 30, 1906 - August 2, 1960) went blind at 10 months of age but regained sight on both eyes after a cornea transplant at the age of 52. He was the subject of many scientific studies of perception by neuropsychologist Richard Gregory. His operation was able to reveal idiosyncrasies of the human visual system.

Arnolt Schlick - Arnolt was a German organist and composer of the Renaissance.

Esref Armagan - (born 1953) Esref is a blind painter of Turkish origin.

Frederick Delius - (January 29, 1862  June 10, 1934) was an English composer born in Bradford in the West Riding of Yorkshire in the north of England.

John Sanley - (January 17, 1712  May 19, 1786) John Stanley was an English composer and organist. 

Kelvin Tan Weilian - born 5 October 1981) Kelvin Tan Weilian is a visually impaired professional singer in Singapore.  

Thomas Rhodes Armitage - (1824-1890) Armitage was a British physician, founder of the Royal National Institute of the Blind.

Joseph Pulitzer - (April 10, 1847 - October 29, 1911) Joseph was a Hungarian-American publisher best known for posthumously establishing the Pulitzer Prizes (along with William Randolph Hearst) and for originating yellow journalism. In 1882 Pulitzer purchased the New York World, a newspaper that had been losing $40,000 a year, for $346,000 from Jay Gould. Pulitzer shifted its focus to human-interest stories, scandal, and sensationalism. At the age of 42 Joseph became blind due to retinal detachment leaving him no choice but to retire.

Judy Heumann - (born 1947)  is an American disability rights activist.

Leonhard Euler - (born  April 15, 1707) Leonhard was a pioneering Swiss mathematician and physicist who spent most of his life in Russia and Germany. Euler made important discoveries in fields as diverse as calculus and graph theory.

Rahsaan Roland Kirk - (August 7, 1936 - December 5, 1977) Rahsaan was an American jazz multi-instrumentalist, playing tenor saxophone, flute and other reed instruments.
                                                                                               
Tilly Aston - (December 11, 1873  1 November 1947) better known as Tilly Aston, was a blind Australian writer and teacher, who founded the Victorian Association of Braille Writers, and later went on to establish the Association for the Advancement of the Blind, with herself as secretary.

Doc Watson - (born March 3, 1923) Doc Watson is an American guitar player, songwriter and singer of bluegrass, folk, country, blues and gospel music.

Francesco Landini - (around 1325  September 2, 1397) Francesco Landini was an Italian composer, organist, singer, poet and instrument maker.

Sue Townsend - (born April 2, 1946)  is a British novelist, best known as the author of the Adrian Mole series of books. Her writing tends to combine comedy with social commentary, though she has written purely dramatic works as well. .

Bernard Morin - (born 1931) Bernard Morin is a French mathematician, especially a topologist.
  • French singer, musician, pianist and organist 1915 - 2001)
  • Audre Lorde - Poet - Activist (1934 - 1992)
  • Blind Lemon Jefferson - (1893 - 1929) - Blues musician & singer
  • Eamon de Valera - (1882 - 1975) - President of Ireland.
  • Eduard Degas - French painter
  • Ella Fitzgerald - (1917 - 1996) - jazz singer - went blind as a result of diabetes in her old age.
  • Francisco Goya - (1746 - 1828) - painter, became blind and deaf in late life - painted blind(ed) subjects.
  • Frankie Armstrong - English folk singer and voice teacher - sight degraded in late teens onwards from glaucoma
  • Frida Kahlo - Artist (1907 - 1954)
  • George Shearing - (1919 - ) - jazz pianist.
  • Gilbert Montagn - French singer, musician, pianist and organist
  • Ginny Owens - Gospel singer - totally blind from age 2
  • Harilyn Rousso - Disability Rights Activist/Psychotherapist (1946-)
  • Henry Fawcett - UK Postmaster General - 19th Century
  • Homer - Greek poet said to have been blind.
  • Honor Daumier - (1808 - 1879) - French caricaturist - painter - and sculptor - blind later in life.
  • Isaac the Blind - (1160 - 1235) - French cabbalist (possibly blind from birth)
  • Isaac - biblical patriarch
  • James Joyce - (1882 - 1941) - writer - at times blind - underwent several operations
  • Jessica Callahan - singer - blind from retinopathy of prematurity
  • Jhamak Ghimire - Nepalese Poet and Writer (1980)
  • Joaquin Rodrigo - composer - from an illness at age three
  • Johann Sebastian Bach - (1685 - 1750) - became blind in later life.
  • John II of Aragon - (1397 - 1479) - able to see again after cataract surgery (couching) by Abiathar Crescas
  • John Wesley Powell - Explorer - Geologist (1834 - 1902)
  • Jose Feliciano - (born 1945) - blind from birth due to congenital glaucoma
  • Joshua Reynolds - (1723 -1792) - British painter - blind later in life.
  • Judi Chamberlin - Mental Patients' Liberation Activist (1944-)
  • King John the Blind of Bohemia - (1309 - 1346)
  • Mike May - (born 1954) - regained partial vision due to stem cell research.
  • Ronnie Milsap
  • Rt Hon David Blunkett - MP - politician
  • Samson - Biblical character - blinded by the Philistines
  • St. Paul - Apostle (photo)
  • Stalebread Lacombe - Jazz musician - went blind in middle age
  • Surdas - a Hindu poet - saint and musician of India
  • Tim Cordes - a blind American physician who earned a Doctor of Medicine degree from the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 2005, and is the second blind person ever to be accepted to an American school of medicine.
  • Tom Wiggins (1849 -1908) - a virtuosic pianist, gifted composer, and one of the most in-demand musicians of his time in America in the late 19th century. Born in 1849 into slavery in Columbus, Georgia, he was blind and autistic. People quickly discovered that he had an unusual gift for music from an early age.
  • W.C. Handy - (1873 -1958) - Blues composer - went blind in middle age
  • Wilma Mankiller - Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation (1945-)
  • Zohar Sharon - blind pro golfer
Famous people with sight problems. Summary: Famous people, some real, some imaginary, who have lost their sight.


This is a list of famous people, both real and imaginary, who have lost their sight. The people on this list have been included because they are well-known in their own right rather than because they are, or were, blind or partially sighted.

The portrayal of some blind characters in literature or the arts is very negative. Blind characters are often seen as frightening or pathetic, or as being punished for some moral lapse.

It is important to realize that sight loss is a natural phenomenon which can affect anyone, irrespective of moral behavior or religious belief. While it may cause very real problems it does not turn ordinary people into monsters or victims.
  • Thomas Rhodes Armitage - founder of RNIB
  • Rt Hon David Blunkett MP - politician
  • Andrea Bocelli - opera singer
  • Louis Braille - inventor of braille
  • Ray Charles - American singer and composer
  • Cupid/Eros - Greek/Roman god of love
  • Eduard Degas - French painter
  • Henry Fawcett - UK Postmaster General, 19th Century
  • Mikey Hughes - Big Brother 2008 contestant
  • Homer - Greek poet
  • Horus - Egyptian god
  • Helen Keller - American author and philanthropist
  • Denise Leigh - opera singer and winner of Channel 4's Operatunity
  • John Milton - English poet
  • Claude Monet - French painter
  • Dr William Moon - inventor of Moon system of reading
  • Horatio Nelson - British admiral
  • Odin - Norse god
  • Oedipus - mythological Greek King
  • Samson - Biblical hero
  • St. Paul - Apostle
  • Tiresias - mythological, Greek seer
Lesson on former Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School-on-Air) with Ms Melly C Tenorio, 738 DZRB AM, [www.pbs.gov.ph] 8-9 evening class Monday to Friday

Verses to Reflect and Meditate about Life

Verses to Reflect and Meditate about Life

Dr Abe V Rotor

1. We do not have the time, indeed an alibi
to indolence and loafing, letting time pass by.


Sun on a hazy day

2. As we undervalue ourselves, so do others
undervalue us. Lo, to us all little brothers.

3. Self-doubt at the start is often necessary
to seek perfection of the trade we carry.

4. What is more mean than envy or indolence
but the two themselves riding on insolence.

5. The worst kind of persecution occurs in the mind,
that of the body we can often undermine.

6. How seldom, if at all, do we weigh our neighbors
the way we weigh ourselves with the same favors?

7. Friendship that we share to others multiplies
our compassion and love where happiness lies.

8. Evil is evil indeed - so with its mirror,
while goodness builds on goodness in store.


Morning rainbow, Bamban, Tarlac 

9. That others may learn and soon trust you,
show them you're trustworthy, kind and true.

10. Kindness and gladness, these however small
are never, never put to waste at all.

Sunday, March 2, 2025

Priorities & Choices in Life (Lenten Season Reflection)

Priorities & Choices in Life
(Lenten Season Reflection)
Dr Abe V Rotor 

Helen Keller, deaf-blind since infancy became a role model for millions of people. She wrote a moving essay that challenges us who have the power of vision on how we would value “Three Days to See” if we were blind like Helen Keller blind since infancy. (The Story of My Life)

Try this exercise. If you were given Three Days To See just as Helen Keller told in her essay, how would you prioritize these? (Please indicate the day after each item; or it is not applicable.) Please refer to the answers below

1. Lives of people everyday
2. Theater – concert, performing art
3. Transformation of night to day
4. Views from top of a high building
5. Loved ones and friends
6. Nature - landscape and garden
7. Museum of arts and natural history
8. Historical records of man & society
9. Things at home, favorite books, etc
10. Comedy, the lighter side of life.
________________________________________________________
After checking your work with the answers guide below, compare it with the priorities of Helen Keller.
1st Day - Loved ones, Favorite Things, Nature
2nd Day - Natural History, History, Humanities,
3rd Day - The Business of life. (NOTE: The lighter side of life closes the episode.)

Answer Guide 
 Lives of people everyday - 3rd day
 Theatre – concert, performing art –end of 2nd day
 Transformation of night to day –opening of 2nd day
 Views from top of a high building – 3rd day
 Loved ones and friends – 1st day, immediately.
 Nature - landscape & garden – 1st day pm to sunset
 Museum of arts and natural history – 2nd day
 Historical records of man & society – 2nd day
 Things at home, favorite books, etc – 1st day
 Comedy stage play - End of 3rd day

Three Days to See challenges us to look into our priorities and choices in Life • City or countryside life
• Aesthetics or materialism
• Permanence and transience
• Love and Friendship
• Spirituality and faith
• Computer graphics or fine arts
• Perception or sensitivity
• Affection or companionship
• Vice or hobby
• Knowledge or Wisdom
_________________________________________________________

From this exercise we can better appreciate Helen Keller’s philosophy of life.

“Everything has its wonders, even darkness and silence, and I learn whatever state I am, therein to be content.”

“The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen and even touched. They must be felt within the heart.” ~

Saturday, March 1, 2025

Wall Mural: Nature comes alive with children

Nature comes alive with children
in 60 detailed scenes
In celebration of World Wildlife Day March 3, 2025

For most of history, man has had to fight nature to survive; in this century he is beginning to realize that, in order to survive, he must protect it." —Jacques-Yves Cousteau

Mural Paintings and Verses by Dr Abe V Rotor 
Living with Nature School on Blog


Imagine hugging a tree host of butterflies,
a street post made alive by art's sweet lies,
nature's art of camouflage and mimicry,
tools for survival, sharing and living free. 

"There’s a whole world out there, right outside your window. You’d be a fool to miss it." —Charlotte Eriksson


The blue whale, the biggest creature that ever lived,
bigger than the dinosaur, and man a minuscule;
lucky it is to touch, to talk to, to listen to its song,      
plaintive with a message for man to heed its call.

 Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better. —Albert Einstein


It's a kugtong, giant lapu-lapu, and it's true,
dweller at the bottom of the sea,
zealously guarding its cave from anyone;
no fisherman dares, but she,
who is learning to face danger from images
before dealing with reality.

"There is something infinitely healing in the repeated refrains of nature—the assurance that dawn comes after night, and spring after winter." —Rachel Carson


A twin by the waterfall and stream,
and another twin fishing;
reality and imagery are but one -
parallel worlds we live in.

"Preserve and cherish the pale blue dot, the only home 
we’ve ever known." —Carl Sagan


 Never kiss a parrot we are told, 
just listen to it talking;
save in circus, among the bold, 
on picture, toy and painting.  

"If you truly love nature, you will find beauty everywhere." —Laura Ingalls Wilder


Sentry the whole night through, an owl retreats 
at sunrise into  its abode, the hollow of a tree,
and finding a girl playing with butterflies, wonders
if  the garden is always open and  free. 

"Study nature, love nature, stay close to nature. It will never fail you."—Frank Lloyd Wright
   

The friendly capybara, the biggest rodent,
never has been  tamed, never a pet; 
but on a wall, earns love and respect
beyond anime other creatures create.

"Heaven is under our feet as well as over our heads." — Henry David Thoreau


Touch the rays of the sun through the trees,
be like the butterflies and bees, 
the singing birds and the splashing fish, 
breath the cool morning breeze.

"Forget not that the earth delights to feel your bare feet 
and the winds long to play with your hair." —Khalil Gibran

 

Do you like to live at the edge of the sea,
where the tides rise and fall and stir,   
the waves in rhyme and rhythm with the wind,
where creatures appear and disappear?  

"Fresh air is as good for the mind as for the body. Nature always seems trying to talk to us as if she had some great secret to tell. And so she has." –John Lubbock


Beach party by imagination, hear the music
of the wind and waves, song of the sea gull, 
the wall comes alive with echoes of lilting 
children, friendship and abandon extol.

  
"Leave the road, take the trails." —Pythagoras


 Can we live under the sea like the fish
among corals and  seaweeds?
Only fairies in the world of fantasy do,
yet without the sea all dies,
for the sea provides our basic needs.   
 
 

 This is how big a kalaw is, as seen in the wilderness;
its body pitch black, breast bright yellow, beak bright red;
take time, it's now tame on the wall, posing to viewers,
its imagined sonorous call reverberating far and wide. 

 "Every morning was a cheerful invitation to make my life of equal simplicity, and I may say innocence, with Nature herself." –Henry David Thoreau


 Splendor on the grass, the world's still,
minute to hour, year to a lifetime;
 company of a few, we touch and fill
some vacuum, through nature sublime.
 
"Choose only one master—nature." —Rembrandt

 

 A bed of grass takes these children 
to the field and the meadow;
a waterfall and stream in make-believe 
to the ends of the rainbow.~ 

"Nature does not hurry, yet everything is accomplished." —Lao Tzu

Under the Sea in Greek's mythology, with a touch of Jules Verne's Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, and Ernest Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea.  

Young Neptune - he rules the sea 
on make-believe scenery;
in a far land of fantasy; 
 it's the power of  imagery. 

Endangered Wildlife represented by the deer and vanishing rainforest, a global challenge to save both the species, more so, the ecological system and biome. 

Philippine Deer - a lost family in our time,
kneels a girl in prayer consoling
in an act of friendship and love sublime,
a distress call for help begging.

"For a time, I rest in the grace of the world, and am free." –Wendell Berry

Hornbill or kalaw is now an endangered species.  Attempts to domesticate it as pet 
most often fail, as wild life animals generally resist man's intervention in the guise of "benevolence."  

He hasn't seen the kalaw in its abode,
only in images and stories told;
yet he cares for the creature once bold,
now orphaned, lonely and old.
  
Rising with the creatures of the rainforest, as a steam of light seeps through the trees in a pristine and sacred ambiance.  

In a diorama-like presentation, 
this child acts like he is a part, 
the lead character of a living fable;
wish the scene shall not depart.

"Wish we are part of Nature in diorama; wish it is real and we shall not depart." - AVRotor

“When we are children we seldom think of the future. This innocence leaves us free to enjoy ourselves as few adults can. The day we fret about the future is the day we leave our childhood behind.” ― Patrick Rothfuss, The Name of the Wind

 
 
 
 
“I do not miss childhood, but I miss the way I took pleasure in small things, even as greater things crumbled. I could not control the world I was in, could not walk away from things or people or moments that hurt, but I took joy in the things that made me
happy.” ― Neil Gaiman, The Ocean at the End of the Lane

“and when all the wars are over, a butterfly will still be beautiful.” ― Ruskin Bond, Scenes from a Writer's Life


Children and Nature “Because children grow up, we think a child's purpose is to grow up. But a child's purpose is to be a child. Nature doesn't disdain what lives only for a day. It pours the whole of itself into the each moment. We don't value the lily less for not being made of flint and built to last. Life's bounty is in its flow, later is too late. Where is the song when it's been sung? The dance when it's been danced?

It's only we humans who want to own the future, too. We persuade ourselves that the universe is modestly employed in unfolding our destination. We note the haphazard chaos of history by the day, by the hour, but there is something wrong with the picture. Where is the unity, the meaning, of nature's highest creation? Surely those millions of little streams of accident and willfulness have their correction in the vast underground river which, without a doubt, is carrying us to the place where we're expected! But there is no such place, that's why it's called utopia.

The death of a child has no more meaning than the death of armies, of nations. Was the child happy while he lived? That is a proper question, the only question. If we can't arrange our own happiness, it's a conceit beyond vulgarity to arrange the happiness of those who come after us.”
 ― Tom Stoppard, The Coast of Utopia

"A thing of beauty is a boy forever." wall mural painted by the author at his city residence, Barangay Greater Lagro, QC

Three young musketeers are set to conquer the world
     away from the mall, home and school;
If Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn were real and alive today,
     we wouldn't know who's genius, who's fool.

Who is the primitive, who is the civilized, oh brother!
     when we prefer the city over the quaint village,
car for walking distance, processed over fresh food,
     philosophy over instinctive knowledge.

Everything defined in rich vocabulary, but a rose is a rose
     and nothing else, energy to matter and back,
universal cycles no genius will ever truly understand,
     Homo sapiens! it is humility we lack.

Innocence in children, we make up for the falsehood
     of the world of grownups and sages;
Einstein and Darwin never knew the whys of the world,
     children have been asking for ages.

If genius is reborn in the innocence of children,
     and knowledge into wisdom distilled,
treasured in old age for the young ones' sake -
     providence and humanity sealed. ~

Portion of mural fronting Lam-ang St
 
Ecology Wall Mural is a composite painting about nature on a 90-feet long x  7-feet (average) high concrete wall of the author's residence in Lagro QC, facing two streets - Kudyapi on the northeast, and Lam-ang on the southwest. Its obtuse angle perspective gives a general panoramic view of the whole mural. 

Portion of mural fronting Kudyapi St.

The mural consists of representations of ecosystems of the coral reef, mangrove, estuary and the open sea on one side of the wall, while on the other, the ecosystems of the tropical rainforest, stream and river, intertidal zone, mountain and valley.
 

The mural depicts the unity and interconnectedness of the ecosystems as one holistic Nature with resident species of organisms in their natural state. The presence of man in the mural exudes his playful character, and adventurous nature in exploring the landscape. Some historical and fictional aspects take the viewer to Ernest 
Hemingway's prize-winning novel The Old Man and the Sea, and Jules Verne's Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, while views of Mt Makiling in Laguna and Mt Pulog in Benguet, are typical of many favorite views on the local setting.  

The author took six months to complete the mural using as medium acrylic paints conventionally applied with paint brushes. Twelve overhanging LED spotlights were installed to light the mural for evening viewers. 


Explore the cave, these kids are challenged,
seeing three of their age emerging;
adventure can never be explained or written;
one must submit to a deep urging. 

“Anybody who has survived his childhood has enough information about life to last him the rest of his days.”
 
― Flannery O'Connor, Mystery and Manners: Occasional Prose

A series of articles about the mural has been published in the barangay newsletter (Greater Lagro Gazette), the Ilocano magazine Bannawag, and on the Internet, Living with Nature [avrotor.blogspot.com].Christmas with Nature is the mural's theme this Season. Camera enthusiasts and children in the neighborhood  frequent the place as  a sort of mini park.  This article, the fifth of a series, is earnestly dedicated to them. ~

                        
                               The Garden Pond - Microcosm of an Ecosystem.  
Garden Pond at the author's residence in  Lagro QC
with surrounding wall mural painted by the author

"Paradise is regained with our children.  Oh! If only man's wisdom 
can bring back Paradise lost a long time ago."


A wall is empty no more, it dissolves into forest and stream
running down soft under the feet, spilling onto the street;
where once a city of steel and concrete, of dust and smog
reigned, where the forces of human frailty and nature meet,
rekindling wonders and adventures of childhood little known
to the city-bred whom the Good Life in disguise would cheat!


The wall is alive in three dimensions in make-believe perspective,
progeny of primary colors - red, blue and yellow, bold and mellow,
azure sky, deep blue-green sea, prism of every dewdrop bead,
sparkle of every star at night, crystalline water Narcissus saw;
if only walls can speak to mirror human longing of a happy world,
if only man's wisdom can bring back Paradise lost a long time ago! ~
 Kim Laurence and Sophia on Christmas Day 2017 at the author's residence,  
in Barangay Greater Lagro QC, MM.

"Mirror, mirror on the wall, who is the fairest of all?
This wall mural tells and warns us before the Fall." - avrotor

Orangutan and her baby perched in a tree their home -
mother and child model in the wild - and for whom?

A pair of gray herons patiently stalks for prey,
no fast food, no detritus even if it takes a day.

Too small a herd, remnant of an endangered kind;
bless he who has seen a deer free, it's a lucky find.

Kakapo, macaw, or parrot talking birds and colorful;
Bird of Paradise the rarest and brighest of them all.

Serene these creatures live in peace and harmony;
wouldn't we humans wish - if only there were many?

Nest atop a tree a mother hawk takes care of her brood;
scenario we wish, rather than living on the busy road.

A pair of love birds "'til death thou us part" bound;
while a third warns of danger stalking the ground.

A boa constrictor poised to strike or just resting,
makes a story symbolic, fearful, interesting.

Butterflies and bees too, have their share of the scene;
fluttering, buzzing in disguise, discreet on the screen.

Mirror, mirror on the wall, who is the fairest of all? 
This wall mural tells and warns us before the Fall. ~

Landscape view from a cave

Bats emerge from their abode  

Wonder how our ancestors lived
with birds and bats in their abode;
wonder how we live like them today
in two worlds - modern and old. 
 
Wonder why the city never sleeps,
why gregariousness our comfort;
wonder if by design or adaptation,
we crave to move from port to port. 

Wonder what we make of the future,   
caves to high rise, we rule the sky,
time and space, change our earth,
and we look up to heaven and cry. ~  

Nature on the Wall mural by AV Rotor (30ft x 5ft), at author's residence Lagro QC

An emerging new generation before a wall mural of nature painted by the author at his residence in Barangay Greater Lagro in Metro Manila, 2015

 
 
Wall mural of Nature by the author at his residence in QC is often visited for respite or photo,  for the sake of art to make-believe imagination.  Among the recent visitors is a grandmother and her grand daughter from the neighborhood. May 1, 2017   

Time has changed - and continues to change: 
Mother and Child to Grandmother and Child 
image at the altar to scenario of  Nature.
prayer to friendly relationship with Creation.
real to the senses, yet only by imagination. ~ 

Where have the father and mother gone, 
the grandfather too, other members as well?
where is this living stream,  this pristine view?
wonder this little child in her youth and power    
to chart change as seen in this I'll corner.  ~  

Markus 1 (in stroller), with friends at home in Lagro QC, 2016

Flow gently, sweetly with the breeze
and sing with the little children;
whisper with the rocks and trees,
make every creature their friend.

Sing the songs of the forest deities,  
the cheerful crickets and birds,
lullaby of Mozart, chorus of Liszt:
“grow and be happy,” they urge. 

Who is afraid of the creatures living in the deep blue sea? 
Who is afraid on a dark island in the middle of the sea? 
Who is afraid of the surging tides and hissing wind at sea? 
“Not I” said little Markus, “as long as I’m with my Daddy! ~
                                                     

A Tropical Rainforest Wall Mural (3.5 ft x 15 ft) in acrylic by Dr Abe V Rotor at his residence in Lagro, Block 61 61, Lot 55 (corner Kudyapi St and Lam-ang St) 2015. The mural is an integral part (3rd panel) of a larger mural (7 ft x 30 ft). The mural is made up of three sections as shown in the above photos: Emergent trees and their tenants (top); Exploring a forest stream (middle), Food web and energy flow (lowermost)

Among the countless creatures of the tropical rainforest that comprise its rich biodversity are: a rat, giant among its kind in the lowland, lives in a hollow of a tree; boa constrictor adapted to arboreal life, transient gulls adapted to both sea and forest life; tree iguana that branched out of marine iguanas, and those that live in dry conditions; chameleon the master of camouflage and mimicry; sloth, mother and young, clinging on a tree motionless and sleeping most of its life.

 
My grandson, Markus Andrei, 6 months old and his nanny - guardians of this rainforest wall mural. 

The Green Gate.  
Where is the closed gate? Open Sesame may be the password to a hidden treasure
in Ali Baba's children's tale. In this case the treasure is Nature's beauty and bounty.
Mural painting by the author 2015.

Side gate of the author's residence at Lagro QC. The gate is contiguous with the mural paintings on the walls on both sides.

It's a gate in reverse, going to Nature from the outside
     into a humble residence in the city,
where nature is borrowed in make believe sceneries
     on the screen, picture and study.

It's a gate of a far away place, forgotten or unknown,
     pristine by the laws and rules of nature,
away from the influence of man and his technology,
     the exploit of industry and agriculture.

Welcome to Nature, a representation through the art;
     but it's just a shade to the real thing;
to the senses the waterfall tumbles, the birds sing,
     but to the inner being, alive and serene. ~

  
A wall transformed, emptiness to green scenery,
amidst buildings, noise, and busy feet;
"Would you drop by for a li'l rest?" it seems to say;
a chance passersby for a moment meet. 

"Would you drop by for a li'l rest?" Green Stage on the Sidewalk.
 
To school, but quite early;
there's time to explore 
in make-believe, the wood 
on the wall, with nanny 
in a happy mood.    

The school van can wait idle,
    so with the kindly driver;
let time pass awhile waiting
    for the children to prepare.

Reminisce the youthful years,
     by the stream and forest, 
a tunnel of time and space,
     to go on living afresh.

Wildlife in our home, why not?
In imagery and reflection,
the archival art of Nature
for the future generation,
time to make up for our fault,
a grim reminder for action

Once in a while vary the scenery
     to the depth of the sea;
 bring down the sun to refresh memory
     of man's triumph and folly.    

Capture the rays of the sun,
     white doves flying for fun,
while you're innocent and young,
     and the happy days gone.

Nature is always there as you grow up;
she doesn't grow old in her own way;
only in human hands she tires and cries;  
thus the challenge of true beauty of a lass
to be a deity of Nature in mythology. ~

                       

My Garden Pond at Home, wall mural by AVRotor, 2010 QC.
Closeup of Oscar fish

I'm with Nature reading the morning paper,
     whatever news it brings for the day;
I'm with Nature with brewed coffee piping hot,
     rising in mist, whiling time away. 

I'm with Nature, with a bit of the mountain, sea,
     of rivulets, streams and lake;
I'm with Nature, clouds rising on the horizon,
     white and dark, into rain they make.

I'm with Nature, the ocean spreading out
     in a grasp from shore to its end;
I'm with Nature, in the sky of deep azure
     birds fly free to heaven.

I'm with Nature, confined yet boundless,
     by lianas, the lowly bryophyte;
Dissolving the old prison walls and bars,
    that for years barred my sight.

I'm with Nature, from sunrise to evening,
     writing my life in a poem,
While Midas touches everything to gold,
     save where I brought Nature home. ~