It wasn't the books, though, that
evoked feelings of loss, permanent and irreparable.
Dualistic in imagery, concept and process, Liz Young's artwork investigates themes that
evoke feelings of loss and an acknowledgement of the inevitability of nature, its beauty and decay.
Not exact matches
Working It Out In her 1980 book The Courage to Grieve, social worker Judy Tatelbaum wrote that after the death
of a loved one «we must thoroughly experience all the
feelings evoked by our
loss,» and if we don't «problems and symptoms
of unsuccessful grief» will occur.
Sawyer quotes native writer Joan Didion when describing the
feelings evoked by Golden State: «California is a place in which a boom mentality and a sense
of Chekhovian
loss meet in uneasy suspension; in which the mind is troubled by some buried but ineradicable suspicion that things better work here, because here, beneath the immense bleached sky, is where we run out
of continent.»
An image
of a couple holding hands, for example, can
evoke feelings of happiness and love, along with
feelings of sadness or
loss depending on the mindset
of the person viewing it.
Nevertheless, however much the final meeting has been anticipated, it often
evokes new or mixed
feelings in the family: accomplishment at the achievements gained but also
loss of someone who has got close to the family as they were helped to overcome difficult obstacles.