Archive for August, 2007

Autumn Imagery & Flower Power

Cedar August 28th, 2007

I’ve got deadlines for getting new work to the galleries, so I’ve been painting like a madwoman.

My new creations:

Swirling Leaves
12″ x 16″ Acrylic on Canvas

swirling leaves

Drifting Leaves
12″ x 16″ Acrylic on Canvas

drifting leaves

Autumnal Giants
24″ x 18″ Oil on Canvas

autumnal giants

Flower Power I
10″ x 8″ Oil on Canvas

flower power i

Flower Power II
10″ x 8″ Oil on Canvas

flower power ii

Flower Power III
10″ x 8″ Oil on Canvas

flower power iii

In other news, I’m learning how to bake bread. It’s pretty work-intensive and time-consuming, but it’s thrilling when I get it right. The most exciting part is when the yeast does its thing and the ball of dough doubles in size.

I’ve got a meeting today about a big commission. More on that later…

It’s in the air…

Cedar August 23rd, 2007

I can feel it coming–the big harvest, the mist of breath against the crisp bite of cold air, copper, red and brown leaves swirling and crunching underfoot, sharp branches against the barren gray sky, hot cocoa and cozy socks inside, howling wind outside. This summer has gone by so quickly I’m still not really sure what happened. After all the nonstop action, I am ready for the more steady pace of fall.

Winter Foretold
Oil on Canvas
24″ x 36″

winter foretold

October Hawks
Oil on Canvas
24″ x 36″

october hawks

Blazing Canopy
Oil on Canvas
24″ x 18″

blazing canopy

Potatoes!

Cedar August 14th, 2007

I’ve just harvested my first potato crop ever from my garden plot in my back yard! I planted red potatoes…mmmm. They were surprisingly easy to grow. All you have to do is wait till the green part of the plant shrivels up and turns brown…then you dig, and voila!

I unearthed these beautiful specimens:

potatoes1

Some were a standard medium potato size, and some were really tiny:

potatoes2

I’ve decided to learn more about investing. I’m reading “Smart Women Finish Rich” by David Bach. I’d recommend it to anyone (even if you’re not a woman.)

I’m thinking a lot about autumn lately. Where I live it is still hot and humid every day and there aren’t really any overt signs of the season changing yet, but everyone seems to be slowly getting into that back-to-school, can’t-wait-to-wear-sweaters, gotta-wrap-up-my-summer-fun kind of mode. The other day I canned 8 quarts of tomatoes, to be used for delicious home-made sauce all through the winter.

Tomorrow morning I’m leaving for a few days vacation in the Outer Banks. (Family reunion on my husband’s dad’s side.) I’ve never been and always wanted to go, so I’m really looking forward to it. The place we are going is called Emerald Isle. Based on the name alone, it certainly sounds beautiful.

When we return next week I’ll get back to painting, and all that other stuff I’m supposed to be doing.

Lotus Art, Canton Gallery & Whitewater Adventures

Cedar August 8th, 2007

I’ve been reading a little about lotus flowers lately, and was inspired to paint them. The lotus is such an amazing plant. Lotus flowers symbolize many things, including divine beauty, purity, love (romantic & non), faithfulness, and expansion of the soul. You see them a lot in Buddhist and Hindu art. The lotus is a metaphor for the light of the human soul transcending the darkness that surrounds it. It grows out of a mucky, scummy, vile swamp but is pure, clean and vibrant, perfectly symmetrical, delicate and fragrant. Every part of the lotus plant is edible. The seeds can lie dormant for hundreds of years and then be successfully germinated! Read more about lotuses…

Here are three new paintings for you. They are meant to be displayed together, but look great by themselves too. I love how they turned out and I plan to do more like them. They are all 20″ x 20″, Oil on Gallery-Wrapped Canvas.

Lotus I

lotus i

Lotus II

lotus ii

Lotus III

lotus iii

Great news! I am now officially represented by three galleries. On Monday, I signed with the Canton Gallery in Baltimore. They have nine of my paintings on hand and I’ve promised them three more by September.

I met the owner, Carolyn, and the resident framing expert, Mercedes. I really clicked with them…both of these ladies are friendly, knowledgeable, passionate about art, and generally fun to be around. I’m really happy to have started such a great new business relationship, and the best part is they’re local, so delivering new artwork to them is not a big deal.

If you live in the Baltimore area, check them out! It’s a small, cozy gallery near the inner harbor.

canton gallery

Canton Gallery
2935 ODonnell Street
Baltimore, MD 21224
(410) 342-6176

In other news, I went whitewater rafting for the first time this weekend. We went 80 miles down the New River Gorge in West Virginia. The area is known as one of the top five spots in the world for whitewater rafting. These were quite possibly the most beautiful mountains I’ve ever seen in my life–the river cut through rock faces climbing up 50 feet in the air, and above that, mountains upon mountains straight up. The air was full of blue mist. I can’t even come close to describing it.

The trip took 9 hours, including a lunch break. Most of the rapids were class 3 but one of them was class 5 because the rocks were so close together. Certain parts were so scary I could hear my own heart pounding in my ears. At one point I climbed to the top of and jumped off a 21-foot cliff into the water. At certain points they let us jump off the raft and swim with the rapids. Then there were more peaceful parts where the water was calmly drifting and we just floated along.

The water was warm and the weather was perfect. All in all, it was incredible and I really want to go again. I might go again in the fall or the spring, when the water is higher and the rapids are all class 5.

There was one part where they had a photographer waiting on a rock to snap our picture. Here’s the picture. (I’m second from the front on the left side.)

rafting