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Piggy-Cat Ride!

4/30/2018

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"Piggy-Cat Ride" - acrylic on aquabord, 16" x 20".  Ready to frame.  Available here and at Artfinder.

The studio has gone wild.  I no longer have creative control.  Wait - did I ever?  Probably not. :)

It started with some gorgeous big cats in Japanese art.  And then a book on Japanese art cats from the Morikami.  And a board that needed painting over, and words playing tricks in my head until "piggy-back ride" became "piggy-cat ride" and well now there you have it...shenanigans and malarkey.

But I also learned you can carve into aquabord (the fake writing is carved into the paint) and make quite a nicely textured effect.  So there are some redeeming qualities to this piece of whimsy.  And it makes me smile.

And now I am diving into The Hokusai Sketch-Books (James A. Michener) and I never want to emerge.
My dad was a huge fan of Hokusai, but of his well-known fancy pieces, elegant and supreme.  I don't think he knew about the sketch-books, which are wildly whimsical, animated and quirky, to my surprise and delight.

Hundred upon hundreds of sketches - grasses, trees, architecture, people, animals, mythological creatures and even a gunstock or two.
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The copy I managed to buy is from 1962.  It was originally a graduation gift to someone (based on the inner inscription).  Oddly wonderful that 1962 is the year of my birth, so I figure this magical book was meant to drop into my hands eventually.

The book demands hours of study.  But more than that, it reminds us that sketch-books are an important part of artistry - a place where ideas can be explored and refined, practiced and perfected.  
It also tells a little secret...that even some of the greatest artist of all time might not have been in control of their studios.  Whimsical creatures and quirky characters seem to have a long history of dazzling and demanding attention, all the way back to the kaiba (oriental seahorse) and suisa (water rhinoceros) of Hokusai.

​Don't tell that to the pig and the cat, though.  Shhhhh.
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Dark Places

4/25/2018

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​"Dark Places" - acrylic on mat board, 11.5" x 8".  Ready to frame.  Available here and at Artfinder.


​There is a recurring theme swirling about me.  Stuff.  Things. Collections. Knick-knacks and whatnots.  Not just mine, but those belonging to others.  I ache for those who are forced to part with things before they are ready.  I celebrate with those who are jettisoning stuff because they want to.  And I cringe as things multiply in my own house even as I admire this vase or that sculpture or that delicious, fluffy pale rose blanket at the end of the bed.

So when 
this article popped into my inbox, I was mesmerized.  "I am my things and my things are me. I don’t want to relinquish them. This reluctance is not acquisitiveness: it is that I don’t want to abandon myself."  Whoa.  Lee Randall speaks my language.  And yet I have a love/hate relationship with stuff.  
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I just finished reading The Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaning,  which prompted me to toss all my old journals and personal diaries.  The author suggested we all have a box labeled THROW AWAY to store our personal items in, and then trust our families to do just that when we die.  So I raced for the trash can with armloads of journals.  Why?  Because when my dad passed last year, we found a folder labeled FOR GEORGE'S EYES ONLY, and of course we opened it immediately.  I can't unsee the contents of that folder, and wouldn't want any of my kids to be scarred unnecessarily by my own private whatever.

As the trash truck drove away with about thirty years of my scribbles, I was prepared to be upset - to feel that I had abandoned myself, as Randall said.  What I wasn't prepared for was the feeling of vast space inside.  A space that could be filled with new imaginings, new dreams, new anything.  Hmmmmmm.  That got me thinking.

My husband and I played "Let's Move to Nebraska" during Hurricane Irma.  Lately that game has morphed into "Why Not Move to Oregon" and some daydreaming about living along the rugged seastacks of the Pacific coast.  So I asked him during one of our nightly dog walks/philosophy sessions what he thought about leaving everything behind and beginning again.  To my surprise, my stuff-hoarding man was open to the idea of re-defining ourselves and our space.  But I suppose it isn't so scary when we would still have each other: witnesses to our lives and reminders of halcyon days gone by.  Also our conversation was pure conjecture.  A safe zone for risk taking.

But I am looking at my stuff with fresh eyes, wondering what else I can drop-kick to make room for more potentiality.  I have been firmly instructed, however, to keep my fresh eyes off a certain someone's baseball hat collection.
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Jenso

4/23/2018

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​"Jenso" - mixed media on SOHO urban painting board, 12" x 16".  Ready to frame.  Available here and at Artfinder.

I was playing with the art of enso  using my sumi-e brush and some ink last week.  But what do you think happened?  A bit of malarkey and my own "jenso", who is collaged with materials at the Morikami Japanese Gardens last month.  A little sideways visit to Japan, one might say.

​I consider this piece a failed enso, but a happy whimsical accident.  She makes me smile with her pretty kimono and side buns.

This is also my first time using SOHO painting boards.  They are less expensive than aquabord, and a bit heartier than Crescent board or Canson art board.  This one held a ton of liquid without buckling, but doesn't generate the same groovy textures as on the aquabord.  I will use it again, without inks, and see what happens.
Using ink in a painting is pretty much a forced surrender.  The ink cannot be controlled, nor can it be completely covered. Like an old hurt deeply buried, ink returns - seeping up through gesso and acrylic paint, regardless of the number of layers.  A reminder of what came before, and the need to embrace all that is our experience, even the parts we wish to bury.  Ink becomes a lesson in making lemonade of lemons.  Who knew certain art supplies mandate a personal archeological dig?

There is one aspect of the enso process I truly enjoy - vocal painting.  The more theatrical of the enso painters use large brushes (imagine brooms) and martial arts stances, along with guttural growls and shouts.  Now DO try this at home!  There is something delightfully mischievous about shouting and growling as you paint circles with big arm gestures.  Not to mention the looks you get from certain family members wandering by your studio door...though it might be more impressive if I weren't in a flowery bathrobe and pajamas.  

And speaking of physicality in artistry, here is a previously unreleased recording of Prince, along with a video montage of his incredible dance moves to start your week off right.
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Release and Bind

4/18/2018

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"Release and Bind" - mixed media on aquabord, 18" x 24".  Ready to frame, or can be leaned agains a wall upon a shelf.  Available here and at Artfinder.

Let's dive back into Mark Nepo's The One Life We're Given.  Because Nepo has been slapping me upside the head.  The chapter Wanting to Go Back tackles our inner chicken...you know, the one who is all gung-ho about crossing the road until there are cars, potholes and buses to contend with.  Then the chicken is all "oooooh life was just fine on this side of the road" and stops moving forward.  Yep.  I have an inner chicken.

Nepo describes our inner revelations, our aha moments, our lightbulbs of insight that catapult us forward to try new things, make changes, grasp brass rings...and then the chicken that drags us backwards once the work of change begins.  "We feel refreshed and then enervated," says Nepo.  "Every day has its release and bind."

Ouch.  Stop slapping me, Mark Nepo!
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There are forces in my life pushing me forward right now.  Daring me to do this or try that, abandon one thing and pick up another.  And then my fowl feathers sprout and I am all flapping arms and BAGAAAAAAWK.  Nepo has no room for chickens: "Since there will always be voices calling us back, a central part of the work of awakening is the need to stand firm in our newfound wakefulness."  Logic tells me standing firm requires strength, like a super hero chicken or something.  But Nepo says no, standing firm requires honoring the gift of our sensitivity, our tender heart, and allowing that to become the source of our strength.

Our human nature turns us back from change because there is comfort in the familiar. "The only way is forward, a step at a time, becoming ever more sensitive and resilient," says Nepo.  My sensitive inner chicken is going to need a cape and a mask.

Thank you, dear readers, for your many comments and shared stories about the art in your personal spaces this week!  My underpaid assistant (um, husband, I mean) drew a name at random from a bowl this morning.  Congratulations, Mary C!!!!  A piece of art is on its way from me to you.
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Queen Ursula

4/16/2018

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​"Queen Ursula" - mixed media on aquabord, 16" x 20".  Ready to frame, or can be leaned against a wall upon a shelf.
Available here and at
Artfinder.


I'm finishing up some odds and ends in the studio.  Not to say this one is odd...I think she is sweetness itself.  Ursula began at the Miami Watercolor Society demo waaaaay back in January.   She is delighted to be fully dressed and ready to receive visitors. :)

Ursula means "little bear" or "she-bear."  There is some good mojo in a name like that.  Her dress is made of gelli-plate printed paper from four different sessions, and yet somehow all this little pieces wove a beautiful fabric together.

Kind of how life sometimes all comes together even when the bits that are merging seem oddly paired.
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Over the last year, I've been curating a collection of art for my own inspiration.  A piece here, a piece there.  None with a decorative purpose - just following my heart's desire and grabbing those that move me (and that I can afford).  Slowly, methodically they've been framed and hung.  There are odd pairings and quirky bits, sentimental pieces and show-stoppers.    It is nearly done.  Nearly.  What I wasn't prepared for was how much these pieces impact my day-to-day life.  Walking into a room with something wonderful on the wall (or a couple of walls) elevates my mood and changes the energy in the space - I feel a little boost of joy when I catch one out of the corner of my eye.

As an artist, I hear a lot of industry talk about art being a non-necessity - that people won't buy it during troublesome times, that it is a luxury item and so on.  And perhaps, for some, it is so.  But through my own collecting I am experiencing the opposite: art is more necessary during dark days and uncertainty.  It brings a feeling of hope and limitlessness, adventure and possibility.

And so I am curious, dear reader!  What impact (if any) does the art on your walls have on you?  Are there pieces you treasure and why?  Leave a comment below.  One of you will be selected at random to receive a small piece of my art.  Let's deck the walls!
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Three Tinas

4/11/2018

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"Three Tinas" - mixed media on 300 lb watercolor paper, 22" x 15".  Ready to frame.  Available here and at Artfinder.

Another start from the Pat Dews workshop - this one with a whimsical twist!  

It began as a dark abstract, with lots of shapes that made no sense whatsoever.  During the workshop, in a dramatic move of complete frustration, I covered the entire piece with thick white gesso and began carving into it with the end of a paintbrush.  Floral shapes appeared in the etchings, and so I followed the pattern with paint.    I like the failed underpainting showing through the gesso.  The texture on this piece is rich and thick.
It must be whimsical week in the universe, as I was led to a post on the artist Tsuguharu Fujita, someone I'd never heard of.   His art  is whimsical and quirky, just as  his personality and manner of dress.  I've read he was quite successful as an artist, a testament to the popularity of whimsy even a generation ago.  A kindred spirit from the past...thanks, universe!

If we drop further into the whimsical rabbit hole, we stumble across an online magazine dedicated to whimsy and a article introducing us to some current whimsical artists.  STOP RIGHT THERE!  There is a magazine about whimsy?  Indeed!

Naive (or whimsical) art is a genre crossing continents and generations.  It is a fast growing category, which some hypothesize as a response to a world which is increasingly dark and stressful.  But what IS it exactly?  "Naive art uses childlike innocence to lighten reality" says Nirel Matsil, Naive Art Online.   Nirel further defines how naive artists accomplish this:

• Bright colors – Naïve art utilizes colors and mixed media that are not true to reality and often juxtaposed against one another.
• A childlike perspective – Naïve art often creates the illusion that objects are floating or positioned without anything solid anchoring them in place.
• Live creatures, people, and flora – The focus is almost always on animated characters and never on inanimate objects.
• Precision of detail – Naïve artists often pay very close attention to the soft borders, intense backgrounds, and fine lines of their figures and objects.


Maybe you fell asleep reading this description because you haven't had your coffee yet...perhaps a video is more your style?

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Floating Stones

4/9/2018

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​"Floating Stones" - mixed media on paper, 22" x 15".  Available here and at Artfinder.

It was soup weekend here at malarkey central.  Thanks to a recommendation by my sister (who has been dubbed by our family "Queen of Soups"), I have in my hands a copy of Clean Soup  and many quarts of magic mineral broth.  A few cloudy days and a sprinkle or two after many months of unrelenting sun provided the kind of dreary atmosphere that drives me into the kitchen to make soup.  

The dry season is coming to an end in Florida.  Rains are whispering of hurricane forecasting and humidity and hot summer.  Spring break tourists have left our beaches and the snow birds are heading north.  As the rest of the country looks toward warming temperatures and summer outdoor activities, those of us living six inches from the sun begin our seasonal hibernation.  It is a backwards world down here.

I continue communing with Diebenkorn, finishing this piece with great glee!  Those small spots of color - a tiny line hither and yon.  Yum.  This was another start from 
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the Pat Dews workshop, and I couldn't be happier with the result. :)  I've got my sights on two more of the starts this week.  Also in my viewfinder - Mark Rothko and Willem deKooning.  Giants of abstraction and people I long to understand.

Even as the number of pieces in progress in the studio grows, I hear Mark Nepo's words tumbling about behind the scenes of my creations. "What we accomplish and create matters.  But we're not defined by what we create.  We're defined by how the engagement of our being shapes and creates us."  Oooooooh he's a smart one.  What defines me is how engagement shapes and creates me, even as I am shaping and creating other things.  It isn't what but how.  And in its circular and confounding sense of humor, with this thought the universe has just abstracted the concept of creating even as I create abstracts.  Oy vey.  I am gonna need more coffee.
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Mild Euphoria

4/4/2018

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​"Mild Euphoria" - mixed media on paper, 15" x 11".  Ready to frame.  Available here and at Artfinder.

The last of the visitors are gone.  The house is quiet, the cupboard is bare.  My heart is full of laughter, late nights and adventure with some of the best people on earth.  But now it is time to paint!

This piece began as one of the small starts from the Pat Dews workshop.  It really didn't have any direction, so I decided to seek inspiration from one of the greats - Diebenkorn.

I spent hours with one of his paintings (well, a photo of one of his paintings.  Wouldn't a Diebenkorn on the wall make my house magical?)  And then a little time learning about the man himself.  You can't read about Diebenkorn without stumbling across a list of unusual rules...
Notes to myself on beginning a painting - Richard Diebenkorn. 
  1. Attempt what is not certain. Certainty may or may not come later. It may then be a valuable delusion.
  2. The pretty, initial position which falls short of completeness is not to be valued - except as a stimulus for further moves. 
  3. Do search. But in order to find other than what is searched for. 
  4. Use and respond to the initial fresh qualities of the paint but consider them absolutely expendable. 
  5. Don’t “discover” a subject - of any kind. 
  6. Somehow don’t be bored but if you must, use it in action. Use its destructive potential.
  7. Mistakes can’t be erased but they move you forward from your present position.
  8. Keep thinking about Pollyanna.
  9. Tolerate chaos.
  10. Be careful only in a perverse way.

I am secretly delighted by some of these....perverse carefulness is intriguing!  As is using the destructive potential of boredom.   Chaos, now, that is a steady state in my studio and in many of my paintings.  It is certainly the state of my calendar.  "Attempt what is not certain" - this is a call to ADVENTURE and EXPLORATION!  Oh yes!  My heart sings at that one.

And so, this little piece, following some of these rules on top of a workshop start, leaves me a little giddy and mildly euphoric.  Can one be just a little euphoric?  Perhaps that makes me just a smidgeon Pollyanna. :)
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Lady Bird

4/1/2018

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"Lady Bird" - acrylic on aquabord, 16" x 20".  Ready to frame, or can be leaned against a wall upon a shelf.  Available here and at Artfinder.

A wee bit of malarkey and a pop of spring for Easter Sunday.  We've transitioned from friends visiting from afar to family to even more family, so the house is abuzz with activity and late-night board games.  An attempt to play Bears vs. Babies helped to reaffirm our love for old standards like Dixit, but I was a bit fascinated with building a manatee in a suit with a torpedo arm to take out the evil land babies. 
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Lady Bird
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​There is no time for painting with the parade of fabulous visitors, so this fancy bird was completed just before all the shenanigans began.  We've been busy needle felting, however, and this bowl of sleeping bunnies made us squeak with delight every time we spied it on the counter.  Who doesn't love a bowl of sleeping rabbits?

​I am short on sleep but brimming with inspiration this week.


Multiple visits to Flamingo Gardens, a beach walk and a day at the Morikami Museum and Gardens have my pile of potential painting images spilling over.  Several lazy movie days and time to read a fabulous fantasy novel have my brain mulling all kinds of new characters to add to the studio menagerie.  Julia Cameron would approve of the bounty of artist dates this month has held.

​A new month, a full moon, rising temperatures and dates set aside for graduation celebrations are a reminder of change taking place all around.  Our little mango tree, planted three years ago when we first moved to Florida, is brimming with tiny mangoes for the first time.  And these three unlikely companions (right) held a pose for me as if to point out that anything is possible when spring is in the air.  :)
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Here's the blue wild, where
tiny dreamers ride beasts, speak
​ birdsong, hold the moon.

(by poet Mary W. Cox)
​


​Art prints available on request
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