Asheville Strong: Celebrating Art and Community After Hurricane Helene

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Our local Art Museum is sponsoring an exhibit by artists who live and work in the areas affected by Hurricane Helene. I was overjoyed to see so many people at the opening. Events that bring people together are so important now. One of my favorite pieces from the evening was by Jon-Delia Freeman, a digital photograph titled “Pine Sap (Tears of Helene), 2024.” It was a reminder of all the tears that have been shed since September, and how we are all interconnected: people, animals, spirits, and the land.

“Pine Sap (Tears of Helene), 2024” Digital Photograph by Jon-Delia Freeman

During October, much of my time was spent among fallen trees. Picking up branches that had fallen in my yard, chainsawing trees that had fallen to the ground, chopping bucked trees into firewood, stacking firewood to allow it to season. There was one log that was particularly difficult to split. I used a maul, I used a wedge, I used an axe. And when it finally opened, this amazingly beautiful pattern presented itself. Even among the destruction, there is beauty.

Pattern in a split log in a tree downed by Hurricane Helene

4 responses to “Asheville Strong: Celebrating Art and Community After Hurricane Helene”

  1. bowlandclimber Avatar
    bowlandclimber

    Your log ‘art’ comes out the winner.

  2. Lori Avatar
    Lori

    Awww, thank you ❤

  3. Lisa Schuyler Avatar
    Lisa Schuyler

    Ooo I like the tears art. Your wood split is also beautiful. I love that you let your inner lumberjack come out to play.

    1. Lori Avatar
      Lori

      My inner lumberjack has been seeing a lot of light of day lately! It’s truly amazing, and heartwrenching, to see how many trees fell.

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