1.07.2010

Shoestring Artist Collective


Last weekend I helped my friend Mark Boyd install a show at St. Andrews/Sewanee School in Tenn. We will return, along with our buddy Beth Schaible, in two weeks to lead a 4 day workshop for the school as well as a community workshop that Sat. Workshop title: Zines! As part of the show Mark has started a blog. Soon students will be able to contribute their musings and/or images.
later tater

12.04.2009

the Big Crafty




I'll be at The Big Crafty on Sunday selling Two Sisters calendars, note cards, bookmarks and t-shirts, PLUS a selection of original paintings on wood. The Big Crafty is an indie crafts fair in Asheville that happens twice a year. I always look forward to being there to show and sell my work. What a treat to see old friends as well as to meet new people in the midst of a festive, low key event. It will put you in the Holiday spirit- in a GOOD way! Above are a few of the small paintings I did just for this show.

11.16.2009

Mail Yourself




The first weekend in November I taught 2 classes at Gallery Shibui in Raleigh, NC. Cloth Books was on Saturday and Mail Yourself on Sunday. In Mail Yourself we created small accordion books that can be used as cards to send to family and friends. I also taught an origami container structure that can be filled with a small card or accordion book. Each person had time to play around with the different structures and complete several projects. Check your mailbox- you might be the lucky dog that receives one!

Alice Southwick, owner of Gallery Shibui and generous soul, is moving her book, paper and teaching studio to Rebus Works this month. Rebus Works is a wonderful gallery and frame shop in the Boylan Heights neighborhood in Raleigh run by Shonna Greenwell. It's worth a visit if you are in the area.

10.20.2009

cards, dogs and smelling roses




Much of my studio time over the last couple of months has been creating 3-d work, but I've also tried to fit in time to paint on paper. I usually let the idea define the media I choose to work in. Over time I have found that there is a natural rhythm to my choice of media. If I've gone a while without working flat, I swing back that way. Sometimes deadlines and commissions make media choices for me, but I try to keep my schedule loose enough for flexibility. One way I satisfy my interest in drawing and painting is to create cards that I mail to friends. It gives me great joy to communicate with people this way- it's the hand in this age of multi-tasking and machines- the same thing as slowing down and smelling the roses for both the sender and receiver. A bonus is that these cards often duplicate what I gain from my daily journal practice- time to draw/paint/collage without filtering and editing. The images that come are often the seeds for later work. The first photo is a Thank You card I made for a friend. This led to 2 paintings of the same dog (Lucy Brinkley) for American Folk Art and Frame.

10.14.2009

Sometimes it doesn't come together- Part 2




Back in July I started work on a crown that gave me some trouble. I wrote about my struggles with this crown in a July 22 post. I have had the wire armature sitting on a table in the studio since then. Well, one day last month I walked in the studio and found myself picking up the armature. What made that day different from any other? I don't know, but once it had my attention I was off and running. It's the first crown that incorporates one of my paper mache animals.
The name of this piece is A Bird in the Head is Worth 2 in the Hand. I used book pages, gesso, gouache, graphite, cloth, shellac, and thread. It is on display at the Penland Gallery's current show The Barns :2009.

Sometimes it does come together.

10.01.2009

FYI


My friend Terry Taylor has a new book out this month- ECO BOOKS. Here's the low down-

ECO BOOKS:Inventive Projects from the Recycling Bin
Terry Taylor

Here are projects for the “pages”: 40 innovative book-making ideas using recycled and green materials! More than just earth-friendly, they’re also beautiful, clever, and witty, stitched with traditional binding techniques. Egg cartons, wood, beer cans, and cassette tapes morph into covers, while brown bags, coffee filters, and discarded newspapers are transformed into pages. Create a boxed set of cereal box books, an exposed stitch sketchbook out of cardboard and remnants, and even a faux leather journal made from teabags.

In addition to how-to drawings, close-up detail photographs, and simple stitch diagrams, a gallery of eco-books from an international roster of artists provides inspiration.

140 pages

You can purchase it from Lark Books
http://www.larkbooks.com/catalog?isbn=9781600593949

9.14.2009

Goodbye Dolph and Jessie



We finished our class with a group shot (photo 1) and a toast to a great week.
photo 2: class show and tell