Thursday, March 24, 2011

New Birth

Last week, my first grandchild was born....a little boy, so sweet and so small.  I think about him all the time and every time I close my eyes, I see his little face.  It was love at first sight!
I follow Donna Iona Drozda's blog, Following the Moon, and in her last post she wrote about celebrating the arrival of a new natural year and about renewal and the birth of new things.  I can not think of any better way to celebrate a new year than with the birth of a child and I find it a perfect way to reflect upon the experience of rebirth and renewal.  To associate that with my ART/LIFE, I purchased a Visual Journal sketchbook and plan to use it to capture images of  the new grandson, Owen, as he grows.  I will photograph or sketch him each month for at least the next two years creating a visual journal of his early life to be given to him on his second birthday (or maybe I will continue it longer?).  The first of such images is pictured here as the first installment in the series.  It was created from a photograph taken shortly after his birth.  Charcoal was used for the preliminary sketch, then collage materials and finally acrylic paint.  I will post others as they are completed. 

Friday, March 11, 2011

The Great Escape


Last weekend I had the pleasure of being at "The Great Escape" with six wonderfully creative ladies. 
That was the name of the beach house that we stayed in at Sandbridge, and what an aptly named location for a weekend of relaxation and renewal.


Along with flavorful wine and delicious food we managed to also get our creative juices flowing in the form of fat books, ATCs, fiber arts, and "shrinky dinks". 


There is nothing more stimulating, nothing more rewarding or life enhancing than being around other artists.  Their generosity and love for all of life feeds my soul and lifts my spirit.


Friday, March 4, 2011

Art for the Week

The Mid-Atlantic Home and Flower Show is this weekend, March 4-6, at the Virgina Beach Convention Center.  If you go to the show, please stop by the art exhibit near the entrance to the show. There you will find three of my paintings, one of which is pictured here.  The theme for this year is gardens and this entry is an oil painting of a lotus garden. 
There are two events that I attended this past week that I will write about.  First, the Mid-Atlantic Quilt Show was held in Hampton last weekend with an impressive display of amazing and varied talent.  The meticulously crafted examples of every possible design from complicated geometrics to unbelievable realism was awesome. 
One of the quilts had recently been in the news because of controversial display of nudity.  I found that particular quilt to be beautifully crafted and a poignant reminder of the plight of the homeless.  This quilt was part of an international display of quilts on the subject.  The quilt was created by Kathy Nida from San Diego, California.  Congratulations to her for helping to change the perception of quilting from copied patterns made by little old ladies in a quilting bee to quilting as an original art form that is creative, symbolic, and conceptual.  Kathy describes her quilt as "depicting a homeless woman and her unborn child living in a cardboard box....and about being one paycheck away from desperation and begging for help." 
Also, this past week I saw the movie Wasteland, directed by Lucy Walker, about the renowned artist Vik Muniz.  It is a phenomenal movie that I highly recommend.  Vik Muniz has gained my utmost respect and admiration as an artist who had the genius to take materials so disgusting and transform them into images of beauty and worth and along the way, change the lives of the Brazilian people who became the subjects of his photographs.  These inspiring characters worked in the world's largest garbage dump, Jardim Gramacho, in Rio de Janeiro.  The movie sheds light on the utter despair, but proud dignity, of these people and leaves you with much thought for discussion. 
Art has many purposes and both Kathy Nida and Vik Muniz use art to bring attention to deploring social conditions in order to change and lift the human spirit.