Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Endeavor

Rosmarinus officinalis 'prostratus' -ink on paper, 1999


My blog has served many purposes for me over the last seven years and 1855 posts. Now, we are in a time of transition -not only of place, but also our work and identity as artists. One of the things I would like to do here is bring the artist to the fore whereas previously it hummed in the background. This means I will write more about my projects and exhibitions, but it also means I will seek to contextualize my actions as art. I think my readership is open-minded and will welcome this. 

On July 26 I will be giving a presentation in New York City at a salon called Presenting at 17. Presenting is orchestrated by my good friend and fellow artist (and Italian-American!) Elise Gardella. The salon is open to any and all guests, albeit standing room only beyond the fixed number of seats. My goal for this long awaited moment in time is to recalibrate all my experiences, productions, and insights into a string of connected actions -a life of curiosity and the land. Expect me to utilize this blog as the forum to stitch different ideas together, many that will be pulled from prior posts. I may publish the presentation here simultaneously, although without the effect of my physical presence and voice, a hot NYC room in late July, and a dozen plus sweaty bodies.

I will be teaching my intensive week long course in Vermont this summer at Art New England -2nd year running and with greater enrollment! I will develop this class each year it is taught, eventually branching it into different courses to be taught elsewhere. 

I have seven(!) paintings in an artistically diverse exhibit, Arcadia: Thoughts on the Contemporary Pastoral. My good friend and fellow artist Steve Locke curated this outstanding and provocative collection of art for the Boston Center for the Arts Mills Gallery. I will be there for either the opening (Friday, July 10) or the roundtable discussion (September 18) or both if I can swing it.

There will be reminders about these events as they near and, as always, journaling my experience of the land. Posts may be less frequent as I enter this very busy time. It is summer, of course, so we're mowing lawns, evading mosquitoes, and absorbing reflected green wavelengths while sipping cold drinks.


Rosmarinus officinalis 'prostratus' -pencil, gouache and watercolor on paper, 1999



4 comments:

  1. Haven't followed you long enough to have seen a lot of your work, but i do like these two. One of the items on my wish list for retirement is to take a course in botanical illustration - this from the queen of stick figures! Your drawings remind me again that i want to attempt this so that my garden notebook can have illustrations .... of some sort. Thanks for the inspiration, and i hope your summer goes beautifully. such good plans for creative endeavors!

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    Replies
    1. Webb,
      Don't think about your ability to draw, think about your ability to see. Drawing flows from seeing and any drawing makes a garden book better.

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  2. "Bring the artist for the fore"--sounds wonderful!! (Although to me, that phrase already applies to your posts.) Looking forward to more, Leslie in Oregon

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