Box Turtle

Box Turtle

Shoo Rayner, the exuberant British illustrator, did a great lesson on staying inside the box — or getting the box in your head.   Draw hundreds of boxes!  Draw, draw, draw!  I took his advice.  I think taking time to draw has made me pace better and not get mover’s hysteria or extreme fatigue and arthritis flare ups.  I’ll see how it works moving day — the day after tomorrow!

It hasn’t been all packing and drawing, though. I finally finished Mr. Beardsley, a grandpa doll I’ve been working on for my friend Sara, a graphic & fabric designer at Saraink, and her son little Lincoln.  My husband was NOT the model — he just happens to have a beard.

My husband Jim checking Mr. Beardsley for huggability

Little Lincoln is only 17 months old and is already almost as tall as him mom.  Good thing Mr. Beardsley is rugged.

Sara & Lincoln & Mr. Beardsley

Now all the sewing supplies are packed (along with a few more unfinished projects).  Tomorrow the big journal and colored pencils go into a box and I’ll  have just the journal in my purse and the pens and pencils there — a mere half dozen.  I think I’ll survive.

 

 

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Moving and drawing

I’ve found drawing to be a nice sort of meditation during these days before I move.  I’m going to have a much smaller studio space but a much bigger heart and head space.  All my life I’ve doodled and talked about drawing. Now at 51, I need to start walking my talk.

Metallic ink & colored pencil

I have a bit of mixed feeling about my skills, so I figure one good thing about having a blog is that it can give me a deadline.  I can go ahead and show my work, and get over it, so I can move forward.  I’m posting these ink and pencil drawings because I had such fun doing them — the repetition of pencil strokes and pen lines are strangely (and wonderfully) soothing.  Tone and texture builds up and suddenly my scribbles actually describe something — for better or worse.

pencil interpretation of Claudia Nice's ink drawing

I’m heartened by all the art journals that are now posted on line.  When I get through moving, I think I’ll do some posts directly from my journal — bad handwriting and all.  There’s a certain magic homeliness to hand written script now that our lives are drenched with technology.  I’m not trying to make any big statements with my art right now, but I do believe that the arts — writing, music, stories, drawing, and painting — are democratic and an asset in every life.  It shouldn’t be left entirely to professionals.  We see a lot of beautiful and skilled work in our lives and it makes us feel we can’t possibly do it.  But by not learning to use the arts as amateurs, we deny our souls these avenues of communication.  Even if my art is scribbly and off-key, it provides me with a way of describing life and seeing it better.  And it’s fun.

ink tree

Let yourself have some fun today.

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Visionary Art of Dan Rhema

I posted a review of I Close My Eyes to Sleep, an artist’s ebook,  on my Chronically Inspired website, but wanted to share it here, too.  The art is wonderful/wonderous.

http://chronicallyinspired.com/2011/10/28/visionary-art-of-dan-rhema/

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The Turtle Rider

Like magic, The Turtle Rider is ready.  I took her out into the backyard for some pictures.  She probably deserves a better pedestal but she seemed content.   The green and red boot on her leg is a turtle-shell patterned brace.  I think she’s heading to Harper’s Playground.

Thanks to my friend Lynne for the great fabric!

I signed it on the bottom, which I’ve painted in a mixture of brown and copper, so I wasn’t able to photograph it very well, but you get the idea:

The Turtle Rider will be auctioned off at the Harper’s Playground Art Auction on Friday, September 30th at Disjecta studio.  You can read more about it here on an earlier post.

Well, now that The Turtle Rider has appeared like magic, I wonder if the studio will clean itself up like magic?

My studio exploded!

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Turtle Pace

I made some progress on my turtle rider piece for the Harper’s Playground benefit, but things are taking longer than I planned, as usual.  I got the first coats of paint on the turtle and the doll built.  Tomorrow the fun part — finishing the costume, finishing the painting, posing and mounting the piece — and finishing!

Drying the gesso

sculpting the girl's brace

hair makes the girl

many coats of paint

 

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The Turtle Way

After he saw my piece, Iris and Aurora, at the Somewhat Secret Place: Disability and Art show, Cody Goldberg, the Executive Director of Harper’s Playground, asked if I might be able to contribute a piece to an art auction for his organization.  Harper’s Playground will be an inclusive playground here in Portland, Oregon, for children and adults of all abilities.   Here’s part of the letter he sent:

Harper's Playground Plans

“Harper’s Playground is co-hosting an auction of art to help fund the public art that will adorn our first inclusive playground at Arbor Lodge Park. Please visit www.harpersplayground.org to learn more about our project.

Here’s the score thus far:

We have raised $240,000 of the $350,000 we need – the city of Portland has pledged the final $50,000, so we are just $60,000 short of our goal.

Our co-host, Disjecta (www.disjecta.org) is on-board and excited. They will allow all of our pieces to hang one week prior to our event and will co-promote and co-produce the event with us. We already have some beautiful rare vintage 60’s and 70’s rock posters from Victor Moscoso and Stanley Mouse. We will thus bill the lot as “Rock N Roll Poster Art and More. Zoltron is sending some stuff as well, and Upper Playground will be kicking down, too.

Funds raised from this auction will go directly to the costs of public/functional artwork inside Harper’s Playground from two very talented sculptors:

Pete Helzer – http://www.petehelzer.com/

James Harrison – http://www.jamesmharrison.com/

Auction is Friday, September 30th , 6PM-9PM”

An art auction to get art work for an inclusive playground?  How could I refuse?

I’ve had an idea for a long time about making a girl with a leg brace riding a turtle.   The turtle is my animal symbol.  I’m slow but I get there; I carry my entire house with me wherever I go (you should see my purse), AND you can’t make me come out of my shell till I’m good and ready.

This seemed like the perfect opportunity to actually start working on it, especially after Cody told me that they loved turtles, and the art for the park will feature Pete Helzer, whose does brilliant turtle sculptures.  I sketched out my idea, although the piece itself won’t look like this exactly.  For one thing, a friend of mind gave me a wonderful bit of fabric with painted turtles on it years ago that I’ve been waiting for the right time to use.  I’m pretty sure that will be the girl’s skirt/dress.

Drawing and fabric sculpting are such different mediums that I never know exactly how things are going to turn out, and that part of the fun.

I decided to branch out into paper sculpting with this piece, another thing that I’ve had on the back burner of ideas for a long time, so that’s going to add another element of surprise to the mix.

I did a lot of consulting on Jonni Good’s website, Ultimate Paper Mache, and found a great step by step guide for making a Ploughshare turtle.  I wanted a longer, imaginary turtle, but the structural advice was great, so I went to work on the armature, using paper, foil, duct tape and wire.  I also had my great turtle reference book.  Turtle shells are so beautiful and wild, I really wanted to paint this one instead of using fabric or embroidery.  I decided to use Celluclay for the first layer and then do the finer details with Paperclay.

 

To speed up the drying process for the first layer, I put it in the oven between 150 and 200 degrees for half a day turning it over once an hour.

Guess what's for dinner, honey!

Looks done to me!

Next, I’ll sculpt the feet and details of the face and shell with Paperclay.

It’s going to be a slow process, but I’ll get there.

You can keep up with Harper’s Playground events and progress on their Facebook page:

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Harpers-Playground/116844595027607?ref=ts

As I am writing this, they’re having a Benefit Barbeque at the Arbor Lodge New Seasons (Saturday and Sunday, August 27-28) from Noon to 4 p.m.  If you get a chance stop by and enjoy a group of people who have made play a priority.

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Art at Beaverton City Hall

The exhibit at Beaverton City Hall will be up until the end of August.  We’ll be taking it down on the 31st.  If you haven’t had a chance to get there yet, it’s a great reason to go to City Hall!

 

I made my second deadline for the two art exhibits I’ll be in this month.   This one is:

Crossing Borders/Breaking Boundaries: Oregon Women’s Caucus for Art Member Art Exhibition, Beaverton City Hall, 4755 Southwest Griffith Drive, Beaverton, OR.

There is no official opening planned, but the art is on display Monday through Friday, 8am- 5pm, in 1st, 2nd, and 3rd floor hallway galleries from Wednesday, July 6th through Wednesday, August 31st.

In this exhibition, OWCA members were encouraged to push their personal boundaries to explore new ground, content, materials, and methods.

My art will be on the third floor with the fabric and mixed media art.  It’s a beautiful building, full of light.  It’s wonderful that the city hall provides such a great space for art.  The OWCA has added a wonderful range of art work to browse through.

I have three pieces in this show.  I am showing an older piece, The Reader, a fabric sculpture.  She sits on a pillow reading a  handmade book.

The Reader

The Reader - side

I made a new Wheelchair Mermaid, part of a series I make that explores the challenged body, using mythology, whimsy and color.  This is a fabric sculpture and mixed media piece.  This is called Muriel – The Wiser Mermaid.

Muriel - The Wiser Mermaid

Muriel -side view

I wrote up a little story to go along with her and attached it to the back of the chair:

The Wiser Mermaid

I believe I’m breaking boundaries by working in fabric and pushing the limits of it’s sculptural aspects.  The third piece I made is a high-relief fabric and paper wallhanging.  It’s called Unfolding.  I made a surreal figure out of wire crochet and cloth, a determined figure with starry beads for eyes.  She is undoing the wire, letting out crumpled bits of her self.  They unfold and refold into origami birds.  I used another head and hand to show the transformation made by letting things go.  It’s really hard to photograph, but I did the best I could.

Unfolding

Unfolding - side view

Unfolding - close up

We took the pieces down to Beaverton City Hall this morning and were delighted by sight of so much artwork being hung.  The OWCA has artists from the very young to the very seasoned, working in many mediums.  All the art work is for sale.  It’s really worth a trip there.  Later in the month I’ll go back and take a few pictures and post them here.

Here are the sculptures on their plexiglass pedestal.  They look happy!

Art on Pedestal

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