Monday, May 29, 2017

Epic Seconds


So, I am toddling about on a beach in the mid-Atlantic where wild horses wander, actively pondering the workings of the universe and somewhat annoyed at gaining a few pounds and a few well deserved gray hairs.  I think it is odd that I still see myself as a 30 year old but note that guys no longer give me a second look as I pass. I wander into the beach bath house and notice a young woman around 18-21 years old that weighs about 40 pounds more than me blow drying her hair and sauntering around in her paisley thong and cropped t-shirt.

Her mother has never 'fat-shamed' her.  It was quite obvious that no one ever said to her; "You would be so beautiful if you lost some weight.".  She was a living, breathing, stunning work of art. I was suddenly and instantly jealous and envious and in awe of her. I've never experienced anything like that! She lives in a completely different world and I actually found myself thinking that while I simultaneously love and hate many portions of her world, I want to live in it too.  Then I found myself wanting to believe that I have contributed in creating this world for her in which she can be so confident and comfortable in her skin.  Perhaps I have...

I toddle out behind her as 4 young bucks await her emergence like a plump flutterby from a cocoon, and she did not disappoint.  I wish I had that confidence at any point in my youth.  She was obese and breathtaking!  She looked healthy and beautiful in every way rockin' that paisley thong and cropped tee.  I am still processing it all. She stunned me with her beauty. Again, truly a work of art. Oh what I could have achieved with all that confidence!  My history is a different world altogether filled with many endearing, amazing, beautiful and sometimes tragic and insecure epic seconds which now include her.  I was experiencing such a vast array of emotions in those brief but epic seconds.

I found my mind wandering to a different time in a far away world that is known only to me as My-Story but is as foreign and alien in this time as any planet in the universe.  I still see glimpses of that old world when I walk in the rain or am hiking in the woods or even wandering through a department store-until I see a mirror or some other reflective surface showing an image of the old woman looking back at me.

I am struggling to figure out just when it happened.  I went from a reasonably "hot chick" to an "old woman" in an epic second!  Shit!  I really thought I was paying attention.  It is such an odd & startling epiphany. I wish someone would have warned me.  Shit! Time is fleeting. I want more epic seconds!


Monday, May 15, 2017

Camping in the Rain

I have just returned from my first camping trip of the season.  Taking my 50 year old vintage camper is always a catalyst for a story.  Fortunately, the story is simply that I was thrilled to show off all of the work my hubby and I have done  at refurbishing, restoring and redecorating our charming little TARDIS to her previous owner.

 I toddled off to Staunton , VA where the nearby KOA had a beautiful creek and lake surrounded by lovely willows in the gentle hills of the southern Shenandoah valley.  It was truly bucolic-even in the rain. It rained  on the way and poured when I arrived but it did stop raining shortly after I got to my campsite.  I immediately put up my new home made canopy and was delighted to have a dry area to hang outside and enjoy the more gentle rain and paint. I did not finish my painting yet.

There were three of us that met up at this campground.  One of us lives in Abbington, VA which is as far south west in Virginia that you can manage without being accused of being in Tennessee.  She has the accent to prove it too.  One of us is from the Deale area (aka South County) of Ann Arundel county, Maryland.  She too  has the accent to prove it, not to mention freakishly shiny hair! Then there's me, from St. Mary's County, MD but living in the eastern panhandle of West Virginia.  My theatrical accent coach in college would still be proud since I refuse to pick up the local WV accents and only occasionally let slip the odd "deed so by gawd cap'n" in passing.

 We all enjoyed watching the raindrops creating enchanting whirlpools in the lake that expanded and over lapped in a delightfully quixotic dance of entropy all over the water surface.  The ducks on the lake seemed quite oblivious to the charms of the water droplets, their own attention focused on the variety of campers snacks and feasts all around the lake.  They totally avoided any fisher folk for fear of squiggly worm infested hooks magically descending upon them from the sky as children & adults tried to learn to cast their lines for catching elusive little fish beneath the mystical ripples in the lake.

One reason I enjoy camping is to escape the chaos of the political issues.  No TV.  After a weekend that was 66%  camping in the rain we discovered that we all agree that 48-50 F (9.44 C) feels significantly different in the cold pouring rain than in the bright sunshine.  If only all of us in this country would find something we can agree upon.  Perhaps we should just go someplace and do something different just for no other reason than the agreeable & shared experience.



Monday, May 8, 2017

In the Dark


Some of my paintings seem quite dark and saturated and perhaps a bit "moody."  Well guess what? That is the point.  The world is not always sunshine and rosy.  Certainly not my world.

When I paint something, I do try to create something that is beautiful.  However, my mantra is "representing the beauty and value of wild."  Sometimes my representation is as stormy as the world in which I live.  We are all struggling to survive in an increasingly tumultuous society.  It occasionally manifests itself in my art. My goal is unwavering.  I hope that someday my art will change the world for the better.

Therefore I will make no apologies for a foreboding abstracted background juxtaposed with a bright and beautiful creature.  I think the composition is representative of my emotions.  In trying to blend the dichotomies of my life on a lonely mountain  in an area where my views could be seen as (and some times are) dangerous, my own struggle feels so isolated.

I could babble about those dichotomies for ages but suffice to say I am feeling blue in a red world and that is about as political as I want to get at the moment.  I personally like the richness of color and the feeling of  optimism in motion  in this painting.  This little bird just stays focused and keeps moving forward regardless of the turmoil around him, which is what we all need to do.




...and on a rainy day...

Like most painters, I like love to paint outside but I am not always so excited to be out in the cold rain that falls in the mountains in early May.  It is a chilly 47F (8.3 C) up on my mountain and the howling wind is no
t very inviting.

On this day I decided to stay inside and while sipping my coffee, I got inspired!  I was staring out the window at my hummingbird feeder.  I do enjoy watching them and found myself really studying the little male as he flitted about and hovered effortlessly outside my window.  He seemed to periodically check to see if I was still watching -almost as if he enjoyed having an audience for his antics.  Yes, he seemed as "thirsty" as any Hollywood performer so I was suddenly motivated to immortalize him.

I like painting in this manner as much as painting en plein air.  It is still a quick paint but I love having a subject to focus upon and a very abstracted background.  In fact, I even prefer to abstract my subject more and blend him into the background a bit to create a more ethereal image.

The truth is that my studio is my comfort zone but I cannot ever be satisfied by staying in my comfort zone.  That is also a life lesson that I learned early on as well.

Tuesday, May 2, 2017

Ricoh and my logo


Some have wondered why I chose to use a baby raccoon illustration as my logo.  It is an odd choice when I am known to be obsessive and there are so many other images that may represent that quirk of my personality.  Frankly, I don't need an image to represent my obsessive nature since I just am what I am (as Popeye would say).  However, Ricoh Raccoon is a good story about development, impact, conservation, and art.  Above all, my art is about representing the beauty and value of wild, which he does perfectly.





Over 10 years ago, Ricoh Raccoon was left homeless and abandoned by the bulldozer and the building of my house on a mountain in WV.
 It was heartbreaking to see this little guy running about lost and searching for his mum.  I had to intervene.  While this may not be my most flattering photo,  poor little Ricoh was just so sweet and cuddly and frankly - quite kittenish!


I took him in, early on I snuggled him and bottle fed him.  However, I raised him to stay wild, taught him to forage, and released him when he was old enough to fend for himself.  He hung around for several years.

It was hard because once released, I could not be 'friendly' with him else he would get himself into trouble with less forgiving humans in the area.  I never introduced him to anyone because I knew he would be going back into the wild again and Ricoh needed a healthy fear of my species to survive.

He made it a point to visit occasionally.  I like to think he missed me.  I would spot him hanging out on a tree limb in my north garden early in the mornings, just watching me, while weeding my blueberries.
I never got a single blueberry from that patch, thanks to Ricoh.  Ah, but I was just fine with that.  He learned to forage quite well.

I am pretty sure that Ricoh's progeny are still around here on my mountain.  Ricoh will always represent the beauty and value of wild for me.

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