Monday, May 26, 2014

Butterfly Haiku

Indoor butterflies
speak of the dead, and yet
are very alive.



(These butterflies were posted all over campus at the end of the school year to honor a famous artist [not sure who it was...I believe it was a writer] who had passed away.  Sorry the pictures aren't a bit better...they were taken with my camera phone in dark spaces [the first being a bathroom, the second being a stairwell].)

Happy Memorial Day!

Sunday, May 18, 2014

Goghing, Goghing, done!

Hiya peeps!

I finished my "Gogh and Flourish" piece (it's done, but not gone)!






I'm excited to have this one done now, too.  I am pretty happy with it...happier than I am with my "Road Map" piece.  Not sure if it a good piece or not, but that's okay.  I'm still learning!

Now it's on to new things...what, I'm not sure, but it will be something new!

I'll sign off today by saying congratulations to Joe's daughter, Valerie.  She graduated from college today!  I hope she will "Gogh and Flourish" in whatever she decides to do from here!

Until next time, I hope you'll "Gogh and Flourish," too!

Sunday, May 11, 2014

Beauty and Inspiration

I am a magazine lover.  I'm not always big on reading them, but I AM big on looking at them.  And in looking at them I find many beautiful, inspiring things in them...pictures, quotes, passages of wording.  The bad thing is that I find good stuff in almost every magazine I look at, which makes me want to keep them all.  As our house isn't that big, I can't do that (our house would look like one of those hoarder's homes...yikes!).   So, to appease the girl inside that simply can't throw those things away, I have become a clipper.

I am also a fairly organized person (well, mostly...I am finding that as I age, I am becoming less and less organized, a bad sign for a small home :-) ), so I don't like to see the gallon-sized storage bags with these clippings in them with no rhyme or reason to them.  So, I have started to organize those clippings in small binders.  They look like this:


The pages are filled with the pretty things, quotes, and passages of wording that I found.  I use the small scrapbook papers I find at craft stores (and yes, even Walmart) to make backgrounds for some of the pages, making them even more beautiful to me. And all it took to create these pages was a glue stick (or one of those glue tape gizmos), some clippings, sheet protectors (to keep the clippings safe once I have glued them on the page), and scrapbook papers.







I love to look at these books...they never cease to inspire me to either feel good or want to create something else beautiful whether it is my artwork or more pages in these books.  I have taken something I thought was beautiful, combined it with other things I thought were beautiful, and made them all accessible.  It is as easy as picking up a book and in an instant, I am inspired and happy.

So if you are holding onto magazines, pamphlets, papers, etc. that you love, think about combining them in this way or other ways that speak to you to make them more accessible and relieve some of the space stress in your home.  You never know what interesting combinations you can come up with that are even greater than the originals on their own.

Until next time, stay warm and happy!

Saturday, May 3, 2014

Frustrating beginnings and unsure endings

Happy Saturday (or whenever you read this!) to you!

It has been a bit of a frustrating week in my studio.  I am progressing with projects, but not quite how I planned.

First, I started a new batch of rocks tumbling (lapis lazuli...can't wait to see how they turn out!).  I thought everything was going great...until...things weren't going great.  The barrel that holds the rocks, water, and grit started to leak.  Everywhere. I was fortunate I found it when I did.  There was still water in the barrel with the rocks, so the grit didn't end up solidifying into cement with the rocks encased in it.  The bad thing is I had yuck all over the floor.  It took a while to clean it up.


Not a pretty site at all.  Thank goodness for Amazon...a replacement barrel is winging its way to me as I write this!  By Tuesday night I should be up and running again!

So, needless to say, the beginning of this project was not a happy beginning (VERY frustrating).

I also finished Scattered Time.  I changed the name to "Road Map" instead...it just seemed more appropriate.  I added the poem I wrote to the front (not in the original way I had thought I might...my original idea was too complicated...slow and methodical was the way to go on this one!).  I ended up printing the poem on tracing paper and ripping the edges around the poem and Mod Podging it to the front.  Here it is:


I like how subtle it is.  While it is important, the piece didn't need to be complicated any further with billboards or anything like that.  Here are close-up pictures of the poem (written as a haiku first, then a lune [a lune has 5, then 3, then 5 syllables], then another haiku):




Not too bad.

Here's the back:




I put the poem on the back, too, just in case people have a hard time reading it on the front.  The picture of the lighthouse in the upper left-hand corner is one I took (it is Gray's Harbor Lighthouse in Westport, WA).  Not bad.

It isn't bad...I'm not sure I like it, but I'm not sure I don't.  I'm just not sure.  So, this project's ending is...unsure.  It is slowing growing on me, but I'm not sure it is right yet, either.

I think I am learning to become okay with uncertainty and lack of "loving it" with my art.  I am new at all of this and am doing stuff I have never done before, so it only makes sense that all of it isn't perfect.  I think that is part of the process of becoming a better artist.  "Creativity is allowing yourself to make mistakes.  Art is knowing which ones to keep."  I'm starting to get this quote...little by little.

And on a final note...the flowers keep popping up in the yard!  Here are the apple blossoms from one of the trees in our backyard:



So beautiful!  It is hard not to be inspired by what Mother Nature can do (and fortunately does almost every year like clockwork!)!

So, until next time, stay patient and keep your mind and heart open to like or not like (or somewhere in between) the things you create.  You never know what might happen!

Take care, everyone!