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Magic Moves Side to Side

4/30/2020

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"Magic Moves Side to Side" - acrylic on wood panel (baltic birch, uncradled) 24" x 24" x .5".  Ready to hang (back has been pre-wired for hanging).  Available here and at Artfinder.

Gravity moves up and down
magic side to side.
 - Alicia Jo Rabins, Fruit Geode


A day wandering through the trees atop an extinct volcano here in Portland left primordial daydreams in my head.  The towering pines, laden with birdsong and bee swarms, needed only a misty covering and the thundering of giant reptilian footsteps to transport us to the time of volcanic activity.  

The world "out there" seems in a hurry to resume and inundate with busyness again. Yet  I am still gathering moments of stillness.  I want to drag my feet in protest. 
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Magic Moves Side to Side
This same stillness is oppressive to my newly graduated son, recently returned home from university with his life put on pause just at the moment his momentum was mounting.  His feet ache to race forward, even as mine are stubbornly dragging.  Sometimes our feet all stop their nonsense and meet in the kitchen for conversation and coffee.  

The planets we strained to reach
That was how being young tasted...
​I am no longer young except to those who are older
​In the way that youth moves along 
The conveyor belt
At a consistent distance

- Alicia Jo Rabins, Fruit Geode


About the painting:  beginning with a greyscale composition, then adding thick layers of acrylic paint directly onto the board and blending with an extra large brush.  Spray bottle and water.  Then more paint and a fluffy dry-brushing.  This one nearly  painted itself - the paint knew just where it wanted to go.
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Pangur Bán

4/27/2020

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"Pangur Bán" - mixed media on wood panel (baltic birch, uncradled) 24" x 24" x ,5".  Ready to hang (back has been pre-wired for hanging).  Available for purchase  here and at Artfinder.  Available for rental at getthegallery.com

Pangur, white Pangur, How happy we are 
Alone together, scholar and cat
Each has his own work to do daily;
For you it is hunting, for me study. 
Your shining eye watches the wall;
My feeble eye is fixed on a book.
You rejoice, when your claws entrap a mouse; 
I rejoice when my mind fathoms a problem.
Pleased with his own art, neither hinders the other; 
Thus we live ever without tedium and envy.
 - PANGUR BÁN, English translation by W. H. Auden


Wonder Mike and I often sit together and ponder the cats.   It is no surprise one showed up in the art.  Which sent me hunting for poetic cats.  Which led me to Pangur Bán, a 9th century Irish poem.
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Pangur Bán
Our cats are not hunting mice (flies, perhaps.  And lint.) but mostly neither hinders the humans (though the dog feels free to bother everyone).  Highly adept at social distancing, these inscrutable beasts manage to live their days without much input from the rest of us, apparently without tedium.  We cross paths throughout the house, sometimes interacting, sometimes without as much as a glance.

So in peace our task we ply,
Pangur Ban, my cat, and I;
In our arts we find our bliss,
I have mine and he has his.

  - PANGUR BÁN, translated from the Irish by Robin Flower
Here's a little something else inspired by the poem...I wonder what the cats would think?  

About the painting:  this began as an abstract, with a composition of low saddled darks and a misty sky.  But the shapes began to take on a whimsical feel, so when the cat decided to sun in the studio window, well, she ended up in the art.  Acrylic, water-based inks, colored pencil and a wee bit of faerie dust.
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Inside the House of Imagination

4/23/2020

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"Inside the House of Imagination" - mixed media on wood panel (plywood, uncradled) 26" x 24".  Available here and at Artfinder.

Whatever a house is to the heart and body of man - refuge, comfort, luxury - surely it is as much or more to the spirit.  Think how often our dreams take place inside the houses of our imaginations! - MARY OLIVER, Upstream

Here we are, inside our houses, stuck with our own imaginations.  And thus there will be unexpected horned beasts and whimsical tomfoolery.

I'd like to blame Portland...where everyone, everyone has made their homes festive with side-walk chalk, painted rocks, posters, teddy bears, free boxes and anything else to lift the spirits of the community.  The result is a whimsical wonderland of walking.  Which makes me want to go home and immediately put a life-sized dragon on the roof.  Which we just might do...
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Inside the House of Imagination
These homes we are spending so much time in can be dream-machines for our spirits.  A playground for imagining all the things we once thought there was no time for.  And perhaps, for those with a pile of paint on the table, a chance to put some of those imaginings into action.  My spirt animal is apparently a new species of goat-yak-creature. 
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​The more of life out there that is peeled away, the more I want to stay home and play.  Will you join me? Well, from over there, I mean. :)
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Peanut assists with paint selection

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About the art:  a truly wandering painting - it began as a figure inspired by a photographer friend's work, then became a abstracted landscape before wrestling me to the ground and demanding to become this beast.  Many, MANY layers of everything in the toolbox on this creature, who appeared with a P-POW and brought a big smile to my face.
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Michael Faced West

4/20/2020

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"Michael Faced West" - acrylic on wood panel, 16" x 10".  Available here and at Artfinder.

"I used to think the human brain was the most wonderful organ in my body.  Then I realized who was telling me this." - EMO PHILIPS

I've been doing a lot of thinking about, well, thinking.  And about the brain and its place as the chief mucky-muck in charge of everything, even while it exists as just another vulnerable organ AND is the repository of our entire life's memories, thoughts, experiences and feelings.  Whoa.  

As I continue reading along in the Mark Manson book, my thoughts about thoughts are morphing and changing even as I watch the world transform around me.

"Don't trust your conception of positive/negative experiences.  All we know for certain is what hurts in the moment and what doesn't.  And that's not worth much." - MARK MANSON
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Michael Faced West
Hmmm.  This got me thinking...what do I know for certain?  Which opened up another can of worms (well, and of course beans to go with the rice because all this thinking makes me very hungry, I mean, a brain's gotta eat) which landed me with Manson's next jewel: "Certainty is the enemy of growth."  

Whoa.  Manson posits that we should be looking for doubt - about everything.  Instead of trying to be right, we should look for where we are wrong. Because being wrong means we can change and thus grow.

While I think about that, here's my new favorite video about a deeply thinking cat.

About the painting: This began as an abstract composition in grayscale.  Which inadvertently became a palette for paint from another painting (what can I say...my paintings and my paint palette often look similar).  Which began to have a form.  This is acrylic mixed with white gesso (to make the paint matte and chalky) with a little bit of colored pencil.  
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The Great Paradox of Being

4/16/2020

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The Great Paradox of Being
"The Great Paradox of Being" - acrylic on wood panel,  11" x 18" x .5".  Ready to hang.  Available here and at Artfinder.

​It is a great paradox of being that each of us is born complete and yet we need contact with life in order to be whole.  Somehow we need each other to know that completeness, though we are never finished in that journey. - MARK NEPO, The Exquisite Risk

​There is a melange of work going on in the studio.  Abstract, figurative, whimsical...and then this - whimsicalized abstracted trees?  Well, this is what happens when you leave an artist to her own devices for weeks on end.  With cats.  And a chihuahua.  And a studio partner who may be painting, may be recording music or may be building custom creations from wood.  And sunshine.  And open windows and breezes. And a world shouting STAY AT HOME!

​Things will always break apart and come together. Yet, in our pain, we often lose sight of their transformative connection: that each cocoon must break so the next butterfly can be.  And it is our curse and blessing to die and be born so many times.  So many sheddings.  So many wings.  But in this is the chief work of love: to comfort each other each time we break, to midwife each other each time we're born, and to be the missing piece in what we need to learn, again and again.  - MARK NEPO

Things as we knew them are surely breaking apart...and also coming together.  Perhaps in new ways, surely in unfamiliar ones. There are so many deepened connections - people reaching, comforting, midwifing each other's dreams, supporting and encouraging one another.  Is it just me who finds this sense of unmasked connection (irony intended) and social vulnerability refreshing and encouraging?  We unmask even as we are masking.    The missing pieces are, perhaps, coming together?

​About the painting: as is my current tendency, a grayscale composition in gesso to begin.  Layers of acrylic paint and acrylic paint mixed with gesso.  Liberal use of a water bottle and sprayer, along with rubber wedge, paper towels and chopsticks.  I won't swear to it but there might be a few cat paw prints hidden in there, too.
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Strange Truth

4/13/2020

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Strange Truth
"Strange Truth" - acrylic on wood panel, 24" x 28".  Available here and at Artfinder.

The strange truth is that, while we are being battered by existence outwardly, we are, in spite of ourselves, growing inwardly, the way weather causes vegetables to grow. - MARK NEPO, The Exquisite Risk

Another week in the land of introverts, where social distancing is embraced with sighs of relief.  Portlanders know how to be alone. :)

In the studio, the pile of wood panels grows smaller (and not just because Wonder Mike decided they make excellent chew toys) as the paint jars empty.  There is a delicious gloriousness in painting at all hours and looking at the calendar to see days and days of empty squares - nowhere to go and nothing that must be done.  We are growing inwardly, like Nepo's vegetables.

In actuality, we have little control over our time on earth, other than the degree to  which we choose to root ourselves and stand tall before the wind and rain and sun.  As human beings, this translates to being present and staying open.  There are silences which, if entered, will sing. - NEPO

A world of people forced to root and stand tall.  A bazillion abodes with occupants being present.  A bajillion silences to be entered,   All these songs to be sung.  

​About the painting:  gesso'd grayscale composition with layers of acrylic paint and acrylic mixed with gesso.  Liberal use of scrapers, chopsticks , paper towels and spray bottles of water.  Many thanks to the Facebook critique group, Next Level Artist, for generously providing excellent feedback toward the end of the process and making this piece SING!
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Peak

4/9/2020

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Peak
"Peak" - mixed media on wood panel, 24" x 18".  Available here and at Artfinder.

​We recently spent an evening watching a time-lapse painting video by Ornulf Opdahl.  Which plummeted me into a quest to paint in the completely opposite style of Brian Rutenberg - fewer shapes, larger shapes, limited colors, heavy textures, abstracted monoliths.  I thought it would be easy.  Ha.  Let's just say there are seventy paintings underneath this painting.  A lot of  layers, each one a fail.  But here it rests and, at last, I am satisfied.

Self-awareness is like an onion.  There are multiple layers to it, and the more you peel them back, the more likely you're going to start crying at inappropriate times. - MARK MANSON, ​The Subtle Art of Not Giving a Fuck
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I am so relieved that no one can peel back the layers of this painting. :)

The more time I spend in this revised life speed of "20 is Plenty" (going slower than I have to), the more "ahas" and epiphanies pop up and smack me in the forehead.  One of them is this: I really, REALLY like slow living. 
What is objectively true about your situation is not as important as how you come to see the situation, how you choose to measure it and value it.  Problems may be inevitable, but the meaning of each problem is not. - MARK MANSON

​So, as we lay in the grass in the sunshine here, contemplating cloud dragons, listening to crows and selectively choosing the meaning of our current problems, take a look at Ornulf in his element.   After which you, like me, may have studio-envy.
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A Call to Action

4/4/2020

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"A Call to Action" - mixed media on wood panel,  24" x 18".   Available here and at Artfinder.

Who you are is defined by what you're willing to struggle for .  MARK MANSON, The Subtle Art of Not Giving a Fuck

There are SO MANY paintings going on simultaneously in the studio.   This is what happens when the world conspires to keep me focused on art.  A small silver lining in the chaos that is the Eggplant that Ate Chicago (the plague).  This beauty wanted to be painted amongst a bevy of abstracts.  Who am I to refuse her?

And, of course, the universe gave me an interesting chapter in the Manson book to accompany her creation.  The chapter, called Happiness is a Problem, proposes the question we should be asking ourselves is not what do you want  but instead what are you willing to struggle for?  He clarifies: What is the pain that you want to sustain? The path to happiness is a path full of shit-heaps and shame.

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A Call to Action
Let's follow the logic....you might want to be a MotoGP racer, for example (yes, I am obsessed with this sport - thanks to Brian).   But once you're out there on the track, going 200 mph with nothing but a leather jacket between you and the gravel, you decide maybe it just isn't worth the pain (abrasions, broken bones, concussions, fiery death) and so you say "meh" and pursue another dream.  Which means you really didn't want to be a MotoGP racer in the first place, perhaps. 
Manson's point is a good one - the thing that will really make us happy is the one we're willing to go through hell to get to.  
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While we're contemplating that, let's scrape the ground with body parts while we zoom around corners at speeds too fast to be reasonable...

About the painting: beginning with a grayscale underpainting in gesso and a basic drawing in Posca paint pens, followed by many layers of acrylic, acrylic mixed with gesso and water-based inks liberally spritzed and toweled and scraped.  Finished with oil pastel highlights.  The title, also from the book, is taken from this quote: "...negative emotions are a call to action.  When you feel them, it's because you are supposed to do something."
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Simple On the Surface

4/2/2020

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​"Simple On the Surface" - mixed media on wood panel, 11" x 18" x .5"  Ready to hang (back has been pre-wired for hanging).  Available here and at Artfinder.

WARNING!  

THIS POST CONTAINS SALTY LANGUAGE!

While not giving a fuck may seem simple on the surface, it's a whole new bag of burritos under the hood.  I don't even know what that sentence means, but I don't give a fuck.  A bag of burritos sounds awesome, so let's just go with it. MARK MANSON, The Subtle Art of Not Giving a Fuck


Yep, I've gone there.  To the land of books I've postponed, put off, set aside and procrastinated about. .  This one is a big ol' smack in the head.  And given the world is trying to cause me one big feedback loop from hell in my thoughts, now seems to be the PERFECT time to stop giving too many fucks about the wrong stuff.  I will let you know how it goes.  In the meantime, if you see a girl throwing a bag full of (insert more expletives here) off the second story balcony, don't worry, that's just me doing my homework.
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Simple on the Surface
Let's follow the book's train of thought for a minute, shall we?  Here I am, safe at home, stocked pantry, lights on and an AMAZING new love bringing me coffee and kisses in the shower each morning (yep, I said it), and yet if I pay attention to the world (news, social media, my neighbor) I feel like I should be filling my head with worries about all the things I can't do anything about...and then I feel guilty for NOT worrying enough and I wonder if something is wrong with me for not worrying more.  Which makes me worry.  Mission accomplished, news cycle.

Manson's argument is that we only have so much room for caring about stuff (fucks given, so he says) and should not rent that room for caring to the entire 350 million things a day we are bombarded with out there.  Funny that he wrote this before the current Eggplant that Ate Chicago (see prior post) began taking over the world. Hmmmmm.  If we have finite room for caring....then we should choose carefully what we care about.  Rationing the number of fucks given, so to speak.

​Now that I've infused your day with excessive salty language and the thought of a bag of burritos, here is a meme to use in the event you decide to liberally exercise your right to be less concerned about some things.

About the painting:  beginning with a composition in gesso'd gray scale, then adding the requisite 800 million layers of acrylic and gesso mixed with acrylic paint.  Care taken to isolate shapes using rubber wedge and small, flat brush.  Finished with oil pastel.
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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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