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The Birth of Creation

Dave White’s Blank Canvas (July 8, 2024) and Kiana Jimenez’s poem Blank Canvas capture the paradox of emptiness and potential—the tension between void and creation, silence and expression. Both works remind us that what seems empty is never truly barren; it is waiting to be transformed.
The illustration presents what first appears to be a stark white expanse, but on closer inspection reveals movement. Wisps of color swirl faintly at the edges, whispering of what could emerge. Shadows create depth, evoking both the weight of hesitation and the exhilaration of possibility. The canvas, though “blank,” vibrates with a restless energy—alive with everything that has yet to be imagined.
The poem mirrors this visual, describing the mind as both void and storm, absence and yearning. The speaker longs for color, for vibrancy, for the return of beauty that once filled their world. From sunrise hues to autumn leaves, from lavender skies to ocean waves, they crave the full palette of existence to break through the blankness.
“I want it all back, I want to feel,
I want to fight, though I’m so tired.
The canvas waits, silent and patient,
For a moment yet inspired.”
But the poem does not end in despair. Instead, it turns toward empowerment: the realization that the artist—the creator—is within. The blank canvas is not emptiness but invitation. Every stroke, every word, every act of will can transform the void into something luminous, alive, and wholly one’s own.
Together, illustration and poem form a dialogue about potential. The blank canvas is not absence—it is possibility. It is fear and hope entwined, silence vibrating with songs yet unsung. And in the act of creation, both art and poetry affirm that even the void can bloom with life.
The Silence Before Color
The Silence Before Color — A digital download pairing Kiana Jimenez’s poem Blank Canvas with Dave White’s illustration, exploring emptiness, longing, and the moment before creation begins.
25 in stock
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