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“Butterflies”: A beautiful poem (and painting!) by Donna Williams

Thursday, November 26th, 2009
Filed under: Regular ContributorsDonna WilliamsThemesAuties & Aspies

butterfly

By now, you all know Donna Williams. Here’s a poem called “Butterflies” that Donna wrote recently.

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if someone takes your disabilities and makes them your
gilded cage
then you take charge of your disabilities like never before
for they are your fallibility, the keys to your cage

a key you allowed someone else to call theirs
because they taught you this was love and caring
and in the light of day you realise it had nothing to do
with you

so you look in the mirror and say, wow, there’s a fool
and brush off the dust and say, ok, so the world is full of
fools so I’m in good company

and you look at your life and say, wow, there’s an island
but islands can build bridges

and you look at your smile and say
wow, I’d forgotten I could wake up with this

and you look at your time and say
you ain’t Florence Nightingale, so follow that smile
because a heart shouldn’t be heavy
it should be light
because a heavy heart will never fly
and butterflies can.

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Buy Donna’s gorgeous (and reasonably priced!) paintings

(Holiday tip: Nothing says "I love you" like original art!)

Check out Donna’s band

(With a name like Donna and The Aspinauts, how can you resist?)

Read Donna’s blog and visit her website

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If you live in Canada, you can support Donna and Irked SIMULTANEOUSLY:

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Read Irked posts tagged “poetry”
Read Irked posts tagged “painting”
Read Irked posts tagged “autism”

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Introducing a new masterpiece by Irked’s Alphabet Souperintendent!

Monday, November 16th, 2009
Filed under: Regular ContributorsLewis SchofieldThemesAuties & AspiesQuIrked KidsArt Gallery

Undersea_Stroll_by_Lewis_Schofield

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This is Mr. Lewis Schofield’s latest painting. It’s entitled “Undersea Stroll” and it’s about to be exhibited at an autism conference…

Isn’t it totally awesome?!

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Click here to read the story behind the artwork >>

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Announcing the release of the 3-volume “Encyclopedia of American Disability History”: the FIRST reference book of its kind!

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009
Filed under: Books & Book Reviews, Campaign Watch

Quoting a recent announcement written by editor Susan Burch, Ph.D., published on the History of Disabilty listserv:

Encyclopedia_of_American_Disability_History

On behalf of the advisory board and our publisher (Facts on File), I am pleased to announce the release of the first historical encyclopedia of disability in America. The 3-volume “Encyclopedia of American Disability History” showcases nearly 800 subject entries and includes more than 350 authors. A wide array of primary sources, including letters, interviews, paintings, newspaper clippings, photographs, cartes des visites, pamphlets, speeches, laws, song lyrics, and literary works complement many of the articles. The extensive chronology of significant events in American disability history extends from the colonial period to present day. Throughout the volumes, breakout quotes from “common folks” offer insights into daily lives that typically have remained in the margins of historical study. The bibliography includes hundreds of books, articles, and documents, as well as sections on electronic resources: CDs, DVDs, videorecordings, and Web sites. A digitized version of the encyclopedia will be available in several months. We hope that you will find this a useful tool and encourage institutions, organizations, and libraries to order copies of it. Most major booksellers are offering the encyclopedia. You may also visit the publisher’s website by clicking here. This encyclopedia simply could not have been completed without the hundreds of talented and generous contributors. We offer our deep thanks to everyone who participated in this project.

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Maple_Leaf_iconNOTE: If you live in Canada, you can buy this historic book AND help support Irked Magazine! We hope you’ll do just that…

Buy_Now_graphic_via_edkohler_Flickr_photostream

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Philip Patston, and the Diverse Perspectives Portrait Project (D3P)

Friday, May 22nd, 2009
Filed under: Regular ContributorsPhilip PatstonThemesCerebral BallsyWheelchairman of the BoardArt Gallery

Quoting from creativemomentum.wordpress.com:

As part of his show, A Bit of What He’s Got, in the 2009 NZ International Comedy Festival, comedian and social entrepreneur Philip Patston has launched the Diverse Perspectives Portrait Project (D3P) to explore the interaction of attitude and perception using portraiture. Unitec Fine Arts students have contributed over a dozen portraits of the gay, disabled comic informed by different attitudes, which will be hung in the foyer of the Herald Theatre…

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Ricky Trione, back by popular demand!

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesBlind VisionariesIrked Videos

Ed’s note: We received a substantial number of emails about blind painter Ricky Trione after publishing yesterday’s feature—messages from readers who were inspired by Ricky’s boundless ability, and quite a few from readers who were wholly intrigued by the concept of a fiercely talented blind painter…and wanted to know more.

More about Ricky after the jump…

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Meet Ricky Trione, an unbelievably talented painter who is blind

Monday, April 6th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesBlind VisionariesArt Gallery

About Ricky Trione:

Ricky’s vision left him one eye at a time. His left eye was permanently damaged in an accident while on active duty as Captain in the Army in 1993. A logging truck slung an object through the open window of his vehicle, destroying his retina. The second accident happened years later in 2000 when Ricky’s vehicle overheated along Highway 59 in North Baldwin County, Alabama. Ricky pulled to the side of the road to check the engine of the vehicle just as an 18-wheeler drove by and threw a large section of tire tread from the truck. The debris hit him across his right eye and knocked him unconscious, causing permanent blindness.

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Zen, Riva Lehrer, and the Art of Disability

Saturday, December 8th, 2007
Filed under: Art Gallery

“One of the most central aspects of Circle Stories is that the person sitting for me has control over their imagery, and that the portrait reflect their own honest experience, and as much as possible that I wouldn’t impose my own ideas to the detriment of their own reality.”

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Recovery Through Art – a gallery by Mara McWilliams

Wednesday, September 13th, 2006
 Filed under: Regular ContributorsMara McWilliams,  Themes, The UpDown Report, Shoutout from the Cutting Edge, Art Gallery

Creative Art Therapy

by Mara McWilliams

See more of Mara’s work at www.recoverythroughart.com.

 

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