Tuesday, November 29, 2011

.sketchbook.project.3.



Two more spreads closer to finished...

The 2012 Sketchbook Project has been announced - Limited Edition. I'm so very very tempted, but it's outside of my budget at the moment. Perhaps after the New Year, after this book is finished and submitted, if there's still space in the project I'll join in.

Friday, November 18, 2011

.weekend.goals.

Next weekend, by some fortuitous nock of chance, I have a lovely five day weekend. I would like to spend at least 70% of my waking time with friends, or Finally playing Skyrim. The other 30% of my time will be spent cooking food for Thanksgiving Feast Day!

So I have to get a bunch of stuff done this weekend, mostly things I've been avoiding for the last two weeks....
• Unpack three suitcases - 2 from FaerieCon, 1 from East Meets West
• Finish 2 paintings
• Make a bunch of bindi and other extraneous jewelry
•' Clean the House (which my lovely fiance will be assisting me with)

I like goals.

Monday, November 14, 2011

.semi.expansion.

Was I going to expand on this weekend?
Maybe.

It was amazingly fun. I met some truly wonderful ladies, and reconnected with people I really wish I could see more often. I wish I could have seen more the show show Saturday night - there were a few performances I missed that I really really wanted to see. But this happens, and hopefully YouTube can catch me up on some of what I missed.
I also discovered, despite the frequency of my trips to St. Louis, that I hate driving in St. Louis - I'm fairly certain the highway system was designed by a roller coaster engineer. The city looks normal on a map - but driving around is just....wow. So much so that, rather than stopping to finally see the Arch on our way out on Sunday morning, I vetoed the plan; it was much easier to get on the highway and get out of the city. So, I still have not seen the Arch, or stopped at it. It's hard to miss if you're just driving around, but still...

On the way home Mitti and I found many treasures at one of the antique malls we stopped at - hopefully I can integrate some of them into jewelry projects soon.

I also finished my Baby Jelly painting. Yet to be titled, and only a blurry photo at the moment...
It might go on the "Not to be Sold" list - though I have nowhere to hang it.

.east.meets.west.

this is what 6:30am looks like

classes and vending at Lotus Arts Studio

Sunset over St. Louis

the St. Louis Arch, and Ami Amore dancing at the Urban Cabaret


note to the hotel staff...


foreward of a book we found at an Antique Mall on the way home...

Elaborations, paintings, and video to come later....

Friday, November 11, 2011

Also!


If you're going to be anywhere near the St. Louis area tomorrow - I'll be teaching an arms focused bellydance workshop for Exotic Rhythms Bellydance, alongside Ami Amore teaching "Meat & Potatoes". The classes start at 10:30am, so you can snooze in a bit, and I believe there might be one or two class spots left. Or, if you're less dance inclined but still in the mood for voyeurism, come to the show in the evening. I'll be performing along with a few darling St. Louis locals - and the show line up looks to be excellent.

art, science, and nature


My favorite artist of all time has to be Andy Goldsworthy. A British artist who specializes in collaborations with nature, I first saw his work in an article in Discover magazine way back in the 90's when I was in high school. His work transcends reality - primarily because he exclusively uses natural materials in the area where he found them - that his art quickly reverts back to nature just makes it more beautiful to me. From his own webpage:
At its most successful, my ‘touch’ looks into the heart of nature; most days I don’t even get close. These things are all part of the transient process that I cannot understand unless my touch is also transient—only in this way can the cycle remain unbroken and the process complete. I cannot explain the importance to me of being part of the place, its seasons and changes. Fourteen years ago I made a line of stones in Morecambe Bay. It is still there, buried under the sand, unseen. All my work still exists in some form.
There is an excellent documentary about Mr. Goldsworth, title Rivers and Tides, during which you can watch him constructing an ice sculpture not entirely dissimilar to the one pictured above.

Yesterday afternoon, I was listening to a How Stuff Works: Stuff to Blow Your Mind podcast (which I highly recommend) titled This is Your Brain on Art. The podcast was primarily about the relationship between art and neuroscience, but one of the examples that was brought up during the podcast was the curious Courting rituals of the Bowerbirds. I'd heard of Bowerbirds before (who hasn't?) and heard about the Bowers that the males construct to attract females, but listening to the podcast, and being in front of Google, I was finally motivated to look up these constructions.
And they are gorgeous. The birds themselves are gorgeous, particularly the Satin Bowerbird, which has the most amazing blue eyes (a bird with blue eyes - who knew?), but the bowers they construct, without the use of hands or thumbs - I was floored.

from the Birds in Backyards website - of a female Satin Bowerbird

photo by Barry Hatton, via Elmtwig

image from ARKive

But these constructions - and you really should look them up and read more (the Satin Bowerbirds actually paint the inside of their bowers with chewed up berries and charcoal), remind me quite a bit of Andy Goldsworthy's work.
If I ever get back into sculpture - this is the kind of work I'd like to do. Now if only creating the kind of art you loved to look at was a guaranteed thing...

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

.more.paintings.

"nebula 2"
9" X 12" - acrylic, glitter on canvas, 50$

"volvox 1"
12" X 12", acrylic, glitter on canvas, 75$

I was dismayed to realize this morning that I only actually have 9 paintings finished...so I'm brainstorming a list of things to round out what I'm doing: diatoms, baby jellyfish, cyanobacteria, pulsars, black holes....
If you have any suggestions I'd love to hear them. Of course, like the Volvox painting above (which is sort of a rough draft for a larger multi-volvox piece I have in mind) these things do not often turn out as exact reproductions of what it is I'm painting - it's much more "inspired by..."

Monday, November 7, 2011

FAERIECON!

For the second year running, I joined up with a bunch of friends on the East Coast for FaerieCon 2011 in Hunt Valley Maryland - an annual Convention of Awesomness that is not to be missed if you can help it. You don't need to believe in faeries to go; you do need to be willing to let go of convention for a few days and have fun.
Otherwise what's the point?

Oh! And a costume. Or two....or more. Trust me. And bring your own ears. And glitter. And.....
....no. That should be good.

On to pictures!

Getting ready to leave - better remember where you parked your car at the airport.
Apparently people have a problem with this.

Plane to Baltimore!

Emily accepting Faery Alter Offerings at the Good Faeries Ball...

My Blue Faery costume - photo by the Gorgeous Ken Morrill of Yenra

Hanging out with trolls at the Bad Faeries Ball
I don't know who took this one - I cite the case of the Monkeys - after all, it was my camera.
 
Oh wait...did Emily and I accept more Faerie Offerings?
photo by Cayti Kyle Abbott

For more on why I'm really not allowed to eat food, particularly apples, in public, go read my old blog post: When food is an inappropriate activity in public...
And if you want to see more pictures, go check out the FaerieCon website, or the FaerieCon facebook page.
Or go yourself next time, because SRSLY!

Meanwhile, while I was adventuring, I probably missed the only earthquake that will probably ever be felt in Missouri. How disappointing! But not really...

Thursday, November 3, 2011

.paintings.

I got a notion in my head last weekend to work on a bunch of small paintings to accompany the larger Microcosm/Macrososm series, not only as tie in between the various paintings, but also because smaller paintings are way more affordable (though they don't seem to take any less time when compensating for size) so I can make art for people with less disposable income, like me!

"radiolaria 1"
12" X 12", acrylic on canvas, 80$

 
"radiolaria 1" - detail

"volvox 1" - in progress

I think some baby jellyfish might be upcoming on the menu...