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An Index of Bare Trees

12/31/2020

6 Comments

 
"An Index of Bare Trees" - charcoal and acrylic on repurposed plywood, 14.5" x 13" x 1".  Ready to hang (sides are painted; no need to frame.  Hanging wire attached). Part of the series "A View From the Gorge."   Available here and at Artfinder.

A bibliography of falling leaves,
an index of bare trees,
​and finally, a crow flying like a signature
over the soft white endpapers of the year.

from Winter Morning Walks: One Hundred Postcards to Jim Harrison by Ted Kooser


Diving back into the gorge this week with inspiration from Falls Creek Falls, where a long, meandering exit trail took us through deep valleys with boneyards of massive trees straddling hilltops, rocks, bramble and each other.  The oddly architectural lines of the inspiration image grabbed me.  
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An Index of Bare Trees
You've followed me through every awkward phase of my painting and blogging journey, dear reader (well, I'm sure there will be more of those yet)  Now get ready for the awkwardness of my baby giraffe-like video legs.  Thanks in advance for your patience as I learn editing software, camera settings and all the things!

Here's a video in three parts.  With each one the stopping point was a 24-hour pause where I spent time pondering the painting and sneaking up on it during different lighting and from various angles.  In this piece, on a piece of plywood my niece previously painted and then donated to my pile of paint-overs, tools used include brushes, rubber wedge, squeegee, deli paper, paper towel and fingers.  Charcoal and acrylic paint, liberal use of water.  Underpainting in fluorescent orange.
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Inspiration image, Notanized
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The Courage You Go Digging For

12/28/2020

9 Comments

 
"The Courage You Go Digging For" - acrylic on repurposed plywood.  NFS.

The greatest magic you have is the
courage you go digging for,
when your world falls apart,
the light you still hold,
when everything has grown dark

from Wild Embers by Nikita Gill

This year, nearly done, holds for all of us, I think, the "greatest magic" in the courage we've excavated and found in response to all the things the world threw at us for twelve long months.  The "light we still hold" at the end of this - these tender and exquisite connections of courage and resilience - that light shines brightly.
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The Courage You Go Digging For (NFS)
As I ponder my own tumultuous year, I find myself stronger, more courageous, more open and also more prone to tears, softer and quieter - I catch my breath at the breadth and depth of this year's journey.  We are still. here, - you and I, dear reader.   Still wild, still wonder-filled, still digging for courage.  
As a holiday gift to her fans and followers, Irish  artist Pauline Agnew gave a free online class last weekend.  It brought together painters from around the world, playing in the paint​ and learning new techniques, posting our masterpieces and sharing words of encouragement.

And so I'll pay it forward - a little video of the painting in this post, created during the class with Pauline.   Two new techniques/tools to add to your repertoire (thanks, Pauline!):  dragging deli paper (or, in my case, a Tyvec envelope) through wet paint, and painting with the side of your hand - oh oh oh, that's BIG fun!

And here's a little taste of what's been percolating in the studio in preparation for the first auction of 2021 at Artistic Souls Gallery!    Click on the link to head over to their Facebook page and join in the fun!
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A Tree Becomes a Talking Tower

12/24/2020

4 Comments

 

"A Tree Becomes a Talking Tower" - acrylic on repurposed plywood panel, 18 x 18.5 x .75.  Ready to hang (sides are painted; no need to frame.  Hanging wire is attached).  From the series "A View From the Gorge."   Available here and at Artfinder.

In the beginning and in the end the only decent
Definition is tautology: man is man,
Woman woman, and tree tree, and world world,
Slippery, self-contained; catch as catch can.
​

Which when caught between the beginning and end
Turn other than themselves, their entities unfurled,
Flapping and overlapping -a tree becomes
A talking tower, and a woman becomes world.

from I Am That I Am, by poet Louis MacNeice


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A Tree Becomes a Talking Tower
It's funny what you might stumble upon while hiking in the gorge. Including this tangled root web, which dazzled me and also tested my crampon-enhanced boots with slick bark and mud.  I joked, in the moment, that the advertisement for said crampons might read "Prevents slipping on snow, ice, mud and rock.  Will not prevent tripping. "  Ha! 

And then I stumbled upon this poet, Louis MacNeice, while tumbling down the rabbit hole of googling poetry.  And voila!  An Irish poet (and an outsider, no less) I hadn't heard of and now delight in.  And as the tree becomes a talking tower, perhaps this woman can become - not just woman - but world.

About the art: Beginning with an image from a recent hike and a piece of unprimed, repurposed plywood...drawing with charcoal coming in with layers of paint and moving it around with whatever tools my hands can grab.  Fighting the very heavily=grained plywood for several layers, then surrendering to the texture and allowing it to dominate the painting.  It is, after all, a painting of trees and roots and wood.  Which, in its abstracted form, very well could be a talking tower.
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inspiration image from Falls Creek Falls
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Thanks so much for the responses to our READER GIVEAWAY wish list request!  Wonder Mike, after much grumbling and stretching, left his cozy spot on the sofa to choose a winner - congratulations Lisa G!  An original painting is coming your way!
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This Morning the World is Made of Wind

12/21/2020

14 Comments

 

"This Morning the World is Made of Wind" - acrylic on deep cradled birch panel, 9 x 12 x 1.5.  Ready to hang (sides are painted; no need to frame.  Hanging wire attached). Part of the series "A View From the Gorge".  Available here and at Artfinder.

This morning the world is made of wind,
nearly everything creaking or flying,
​even the shingles vainly lifting
as if the house, which at dawn has bobbed
white-belied to the wave-tossed surface,
were drawing wind into its gills.
​
from Winter Morning Walks: One Hundred Postcards to Jim Harrison by Ted Kooser.
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This Morning the World is Made of Wind
On the day of Winter Solstice,  we can breathe with a delicious sigh,  knowing the days will begin to lengthen and the world will warm.  Perhaps a silly thought, with January and February still firmly in our sights, yet it makes me smile.  We've come this far.  And now, the turning point.

In the meantime, the windy, dark and snowy gorge  beckons.  I am slowly mastering the art of the right layers, the best pace, the seeing eyes. My hiking companion points out how challenging it is to keep our attention on the surroundings when descending - the mind wants wander to everyday things when the downhill easy stride begins.  Even in this  place of exquisite beauty, there is monkey mind.  Oy.  

Help!

With 2021 approaching, I want to go FISHING!  That is, cast a wide net for feedback on what YOU, dear reader, want to see more of (or less of) in this blog in the New Year.  More how to?  Less philosophy?  Video?  More appearances by Wonder Mike? More abstracts?  More whimsy?  Less of everything except PIE?  All comments are welcome!  

​Now's your chance to get SUPER OPINIONATED and GET REWARDED!

Leave a comment below with YOUR wishlist for malarkey central!  Wonder Mike will pick a winner at random to receive piece of original art FREE!  And thank you SO much for your help. xo
14 Comments

Before the Leaves

12/17/2020

10 Comments

 
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Before the Leaves
"Before the Leaves" - acrylic on cradled wood panel, 24" x 24" x 1.5".  Ready to hang (sides are painted; no need to frame.  Hanging wire attached)  Part of the collection "A View from the Gorge."  Available for a limited time exclusively at Get the Gallery.


Before the leaves can mount again
To fill the trees with another shade,
They must go down past things coming up.
They must go down into the dark decayed.

from  In Hardwood Groves, Robert Frost



​Late autumn in the gorge is stark and windy.  Leaves are gone for the year, trees stand bare.  The sound of the wind changes without the leaves.  Gone is the rustling.  Instead, the teams moan and creak as they reluctantly move and groan in the relentless wind.
I listen to the trees and think of the humans of the world.  We, too, groan in the winds of change - pandemic,  news, fear, loss, loneliness.  We are reluctant to embrace this thing, and who can blame us?  But we must, it seems, "go down past things coming up" for a little while longer.   I hold in my one hand the fact that I desire spring,  warmth and companionship without worry.  In my other hand, I hold the knowledge that it won't be today.  In a recent interview with Brene Brown, Barack Obama spoke of the ability to hold opposing truths  and to function in that place of discomfort as a sign of strength and resilience.  

As 2020 goes "down into the dark decayed", I wish for you (and for me, dear reader) the ability to hold opposing truths as comfortably as you can.  And perhaps a lovely, warm slice of pie.  Whatever flavor is your favorite. :)

About the art: using the same technique as "Blowing Like Shadows", this piece was created with a strong underpainting and then masking with painter's tape before the final layers of color.  I was so immersed in the process that I neglected to get pics along the way....so you will have to.use your "imaJENnation" !!!
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Blowing Like Shadows

12/16/2020

8 Comments

 
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Blowing Like Shadows
"Blowing Like Shadows"   - acrylic on repurposed wood panel, 24” x 58” x .75..  Ready to hang (sides are painting; no need to frame.  Hanging wire is attached). Part of the series "A View From the Gorge". Available for a limited time exclusively at Get the Gallery.


All night these trees in the woodlot
have been the veins and arteries of darkness, carrying darkness
out to the capillary twigs and into
the thick black leaves that filled the night
but that at dawn are falling,
blowing like shadows over the snow.

From Winter Morning Walks: One Hundred Postcards to Jim Harrison
by Ted Kooser. 

​
(Many thanks to artist Dotty Seiter for recommending this book, which is the perfect way to begin every day in the winter, especially a hiking day.)

The light changes things in the gorge.  Especially at dusk, when the sun hides behind the mountain before your feet have left the trail, casting the valleys into shadows that whisper “hurry, hurry!”   There is pressure to get up the mountain and down in the winter, before the light disappears and you are left in the dark Where The Wild Things Are.

About the art:  beginning with a repurposed wood panel (I think part of a wardrobe door perhaps?) and throwing layers of paint on it.  The goal was to build interesting colors, texture and varying lines and patterns.  I got pretty wild with the color for a sec! But knowing I wanted a night scene, I toned it down a wee bit.  Using a circle-shaped board, I coated it with thick paint in neutral moon-tones and pressed it into the layers to keep it spotty but round.  Then hours of tearing painter's tape (the torn edges make everything more organic) and rolling it down firmly with a brayer.  A fast coat of glaze, sprayed with a water bottle while partly cured and then toweled back in places.  Let the paint dry, pull off the tape and VOILA!  A final coat of clear spray added to protect the colored pencil markings within the paint.
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8 Comments

Wish You Were Here

12/14/2020

5 Comments

 
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Wish You Were Here
"Wish You Were Here" - acrylic on deep cradled  wood panel, 6.5" x 6.5"x 1.5".  Ready to hang (Sides are painted; no need to frame.  Hanging wire is attached)  Part of the series "A View From the Gorge." Available here and at Artfinder.

How I wish, how I wish you were here
We're just two lost souls
Swimming in a fish bowl
Year after year
- from Pink 
Floyd, Wish You Were Here

Another painting inspired by the gorge, but this one tiny.    Back to the trees and lessons learned from Brian Rutenberg.  Inspired by the odd aspen grove found in the forest, along with the strangely dressed trees covered in pale lichens and mosses.  And always, the reminder of fires and resilience.
Perhaps Pink Floyd is an odd choice for titling an abstracted landscape painting.  But maybe we are all feeling a bit of these lyrics during this holiday season - missing those we would normally gather with and the feeling of being surrounded by those we love.

Here at malarkey central, the youngest is preparing to leave the nest and begin his life in Seattle, while those far and near shelter in place instead of coming together for our usual boisterous game nights and late night frivolity.    A big house will seem larger yet - but wait!  Does that mean more room for flinging paint?    Perhaps Wonder Mike will. finally get his own room...
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​And now, to get your Monday started right - a little remix of Pink Floyd, done in a lovely way.  


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Go to the Mountain

12/10/2020

8 Comments

 
"Go to the Mountain" (a diptych) - charcoal and acrylic on unprimed wood panel, 22" x 14" x .1.5".  Ready to hang (sides are painted; no need to frame.  Hanging wire attached)  Part of the collection "A View from the Gorge".  Available for a limited time exclusively at Get the Gallery.


Go to the pine if you want to learn about the pine, or to the bamboo if you want to learn about the bamboo.  And in doing so, you must let go of your preoccupation with yourself.  Otherwise you impose yourself on the object and don’t learn.

-Basho, Japanese poet, 1600’s


Well, Basho, that's not as easy as you make it sound.  Let go of preoccupation with self?  Wait, isn't EVERYTHING about me?
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Go the the Mountain
I jest, but only lightly.  

These many hikes deep into the gorge, even standing at the top of a mountain gobsmacked by the views, I contemplate what it means about me.  It is human nature, I think, to examine everything in relation to ourselves and our own lives.  Initially, the mountain meant I was getting stronger, my spine was healing, my willingness to be cold, wet, muddy, tired, hungry and uncomfortable was growing.  These are all good things, but still, all about me.

After a while, the hikes became an exercise in how long two (or more) humans can slog through extreme conditions over many miles and still enjoy each other's company, or tolerate silence, or maintain conversation.  (The answer is: it's easy if you're of like minds)  But it still wasn't about the mountain.

But recently, on hike with extreme wind and some challenging mud and cold, it became more about the mountain.  The mountain and  its unyieldingly treacherous face.  The mountain and its stony, jagged skin and sinewy fingers at its windswept summit.  The mountain and its voice in burbling streams and thundering waterfalls.  The mountain and its behemoth body, both sheltering from wind and blocking the warmth of the sun. 

Perhaps I am, finally, learning...

About the art:  the end of a hike found me in Hood River exploring a small gallery in which there were a number of charcoal drawings on bare wood.  Intrigued, I had to run to the studio and grab the charcoal and a wood panel.  I added a limited palette of acrylic paint to the base drawing with a palette knife, fingers and a paper towel.  Once dry, the entire piece was sprayed with a sealer to protect the exposed charcoal.  I really like the effect, so will be exploring this again.
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8 Comments

The Tyger

12/7/2020

8 Comments

 
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The Tyger

​"The Tyger" - acrylic on repurposed wood panel, 12 x 12 x .75  Ready to hang (Sides are painted; no need to frame.  Hanging wire is attached) Available for a limited time exclusively at Get the Gallery  Part of the collection "A View from the Gorge."

Tyger Tyger, burning bright, 
In the forests of the night; 
​What immortal hand or eye, 
Could frame thy fearful symmetry?

from The Tyger, by William Blake


Wildfires rage through the gorge in summer and fall.  Like angry tigers, hungrily devouring everything in the path.   Except somehow, many of the trees still stand.  Petrified sentinels, hollowed by fire and yet upright and sturdy. 
"
On a recent hike, thinking I would love to create art with a piece of charcoal from the gorge, I attempted to remove a small piece of charred wood from tree after tree.  Each of these had been reduced to blackened hulls.  Yet they were harder than I ever imagined - unbreakable.  Ultimately, I recovered a small chunk from the forest floor - a tiny piece of a branch, perhaps, that had fallen off in the fire.  The trees were otherwise unwilling to part with even the tiniest piece.

In an odd way, the petrified trees have become part of the mountain...bony, pointy fingers reaching up and reminding us of the peril that exists at certain times of the year.  That Mother Nature can turn her gaze upon things and, like Medusa, turn them to stone.

About the art: In this piece I returned to the compositional fundamentals I learned from studying Brian Rutenberg earlier this year, which I call V, Saddle and Border Snake.  In this one, the tree crossing the diagonal stand in place of a vertical Border Snake, and I think functions well as the focal point and in providing an unusual perspective.  The small hotspots of  cadmium red on the two trees are the whole painting, in a way.  Resist, resist I say! (to myself when I want that glorious color undiluted everywhere).   They provide the perfect counterbalance to the cool Saddle of the lower portion.
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Thin the Window

12/3/2020

4 Comments

 
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Thin the Window
"Thin the Window" - acrylic on cradled wood panel, 18” x 24” x 1.5” . Ready to hang (Sides are painted; no need to frame.  Hanging wire is attached)  Part of the collection "A View From the Gorge."  Available for a limited time exclusively at Get the Gallery.

Love, honesty, and expression are what clean the window of our heart.  And each time we inhabit love, honesty, and expression, we thin the window between in-here and out-there a little more, and this thinning between our inner world and the outer world bring us closer to life.

from Drinking From the River of Light by Mark Nepo

It is tempting to stand in the gorge and view the beauty through the window of a camera lens in a (mostly) futile attempt to capture its vastness and grandeur.  It has become my practice to make time to sit - to feel the wind, to watch soaring falcons and crows, look at the movement of light and the enveloping mist and let  my mind capture the moment, unfiltered.
In that moment of openness and looking, sometimes I can also see.  See the woman inside.  See the expression of that woman on the outside.  See where the window between inside and outside wants thinning.  Here in this space - this blog and these words, the art and its inspiration, dear reader, I move closer and ever closer to in-here and out-there sameness.

I am so grateful for you and the incredible encouragement and positivity you have given me here since the blog's inception in 2014...whoa.  Wherever you are, here is a hug from me to you. xo

About the art:  Taking a cue from a recent portraiture course, I created first a representational painting of the gorge from one of my hike photos, and then bravely, BOLDLY vandalized that painting with with painter's tape and fluorescent paint.  
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December 6-7: Artistic Souls Gallery's final art auction of the year!  Featuring a mountain of malarkey and a rather loud whisper of whimsy. :). Head on over to their Facebook page to take part in what is sure to be an energetic, enthusiastic bidding extravaganza!
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Stellamoona
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Shimmerglisten
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Wintermoon
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Sorbet Deluge
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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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