An artist who lives on my
street has been hanging 3-4 art pieces every week for several months on the street
level window screens of an apartment building. Some are collage, some drawings and few oil or watercolors. They are meant to be taken by
passersby. I have been pausing each time I go by to listen to comments of the
folks who stop to look. They are usually positive, sometimes expressing a great
deal of appreciation. Most people look and then leave them in place. But, in a
day or two, all of the art has been claimed by someone. The
artist dates the pieces. Some are new and some are from past years. For those
of us who write or paint or do photography with virtually no hope of making a
sale, it seems like this sharing is a viable and sensible way of getting “recognition”
for your work---and for clearing out your house!
Tuesday, July 22, 2014
Tuesday, July 15, 2014
inspiration to passion
The “artists’ book” is art
that is realized in the form of a book. There are major collections of these
works and the Pacific
Center for the Book Arts
mounts a significant exhibition every three years at the San Francisco Public
Library’s Main branch. The passion and devotion of artists for their special
area of work was so apparent last Saturday at a walk-through with the artists.
From concept to completion of a final work may take months, even years. The
central medium of the art ranged from non-traditional book forms, including photography,
collage, hand-made paper to more traditional art forms of printing and the
plastic arts. As each artist discussed their work, I thought of how we are
called to a “passion”. In sports, dance, writing, in caring for family &
loved ones, or for preserving a cultural heritage ─ what inspiration takes an
individual from interest to passion?
I did not take any photos at the
exhibition, but thought in this time of the World Cup, the passion of so many
of my neighbors seems to be soccer and this photo might do to represent it..
Sunday, July 6, 2014
lost in the sunlight
Are we given dusk to see what
would be lost in brilliant sunlight? Do the smudgy, darker days of our lives
sometimes have a greater clarity than those full of sun? Or, is it that the gloaming
slows us for night? Night followed by
dawn. And, then it all repeats in a slightly different variation. Life, I
guess. (However,
I did get a chance to use “gloaming”…which was the word that came to me
when I took the picture.)
Thursday, June 26, 2014
a second butterfly moment
Several years ago, on a warm
summer day a magnificent painted lady butterfly landed on my arm. It was one of
the most amazing moments of interaction with nature that I have ever
experienced. We, the butterfly and me, stood silently interacting for long moments
and then the painted lady moved on. This morning, sitting in my garden enjoying
the soft fog-littered breeze, a Monarch landed on my arm and seemed to be
observing me. It then moved to a flower, its more normal site. The photo is
terribly out of focus, but so glad to have it. The poem is from the previous
encounter.
When a painted lady touched my arm
Vanessa Cardui. Hina,
messenger of truth.
Wings in symmetrical
mandala:
symbol and man in a gyred
dance.
You migrate from a
somewhere:
on a code,
a portent, a command?
Unsure passing:
as real as death, certain
as life—
signaling the intricate
contingencies of love.
Oh, butterfly. Be not the
trickster.
Be the painted lady who touched my arm.
Be the painted lady who touched my arm.
Sunday, June 22, 2014
like the belt
Yesterday, I started to put
my belt into my newly-washed Levi’s. As I have for my entire life, I threaded
the belt into the first loop on the left side of the jeans. Suddenly, I
realized that the belt, and probably dozens of belts before this one, could just
as easily have been threaded through the right side. It simply had never occurred
to me that there was a choice. It started a cascade of thinking about choices
that are never made in life. Something seems to work and I go with it without
even realizing there are options. I know the belt issue is silly, but how I
view other important aspects of life, faith, history, politics and relationships
are often like the belt.---un-examined and not questioned.
Sunday, June 15, 2014
imported beauty
The beauty of nature in its
myriad forms fascinates me. Yet, I wonder at what point do we look to the
exotic, the imported and the unusual, but miss what nature provides at our
doorstep. This glorious peony was at the sidewalk display of my local flower vendor.
And, it had a tag “imported from Oregon ”.
Peonies were magical expressions of the fullness of spring when I was growing
up in Colorado .
My grandmothers and my maternal grandfather were exceptional gardeners and were
tremendously proud of their spring gardens: peonies, iris and lilacs. But, it
does not get cold enough here in the Bay Area for some of these to thrive. So,
we import them. I love them and love the memories. Yet, I wonder if we sometimes
miss what our generous climate gives us when we “import” beauty.
Sunday, June 8, 2014
summer in the city
It was just a normal, crazy summer Sunday in
On the light rail coming
home within hearing distance of where I sat you could determine 5 languages….Spanish,
Vietnamese, French, German and another lilting Slavic that I did not recognize.
Not one word of English. I simply loved every minute! What a day.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)