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Thanksgiving 2016

November 24, 2016 Earnest Painter

It's Thanksgiving Day. I hear Barry in the kitchen making the dishes that we'll be taking to his mother's house. I should be in there making Green Slime (AKA Ambrosia Salad), but I'm still drinking my first cup of coffee. 

I can reflect, though. I can reflect on the recent political upheavals and remember that I am thankful that we still have a free press, where opposing opinions can be published. I can be thankful that I am employed and I have a place to live and food to eat. There was a time, not too terribly long ago, when I wondered about these things. (Poor life decisions have a way of catching up with you.) Amidst the cat hair with which I live, I can be thankful for the feline personalities that have taught me to understand cats and myself.

I am thankful for art, now more than ever. As I slowly drag myself to the canvas again, I am grateful for the artists that I know. I am so honored that they consider me their friend. I am thankful for the studio that Barry has been working so hard to remodel, and the opportunities that it offers us – an opportunity to bring the community to us, to engage with us at one level or another.

So, I will share a couple of images from an artist that will be a part of our studio this year. I have been asking her for a few years if she'd like to join us, but she has always had conflicts with her own studio's schedule. This year, something cleared up and she said she'd join us. (I'm a little guilty that I feel grateful that a workshop she had planned didn't work out, but I'm too happy for her to be with us to be very guilty about it.) Barbara Francis combines two things that I love – ceramics and doodling. I love her ceramics and I love the patterns she incorporates into it. I saw her briefly describing methods she uses, and I hope to talk to her more in depth, so that maybe I can write a post all about that. In the meantime, here are a few of her images.

View fullsize Barbara's Image.jpg
View fullsize Barbara's Image-2.jpg
View fullsize Barbara's Image-3.jpg
View fullsize Barbara's Image-4.jpg
View fullsize Barbara's Image-5.jpg

If you'd like to see more of Barbara's work, you can visit her website or her Facebook page.

What are you thankful for this year? Are you stretching your goals? Reaching for new ones? Are there secret goals or dreams that you haven't had the courage to take seriously yet? 

In Art Tags Art, Artist, ceramics, Doodling, Earnie Painter, Art Studio, Thanksgiving
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We're Still Alive

November 13, 2016 Earnest Painter

I have not posted regularly in the past couple of weeks. To be honest, I haven't taken adulthood very seriously until recently, and I don't quite know how to deal with some of it. I've had anxiety issues for the past few weeks, which I cannot really explain. I think I was anemic for a while, and I'm probably still not 100% recovered from that. The anxiety seems to have started around the same time, so I think they're related. Also, I don't deal well with futility, which is what my daytime job is about, to a great extent. When true anxiety hits, I have zero creativity, and I've only recently learned this. I'm working toward straightening all that out, because life is too short.

Then, this week hit. My father was in the hospital, the election (which was a shocker, no matter which side one was on) and then the very next day I learned that somebody very close to me has been struggling with his own demons and I was unaware how big the problem was. My underlying anxiety + a rough week = not much writing. 

So, maybe I'll play the game of counting my blessings. Rather than just counting all of the thousands of reasons I should be happy and feel blessed (we are truly living in a wealthy nation and I have it super easy compared to other places) I will pick one thing and contemplate that.

Art. I had the fortune of having an art teacher in high school who encouraged me. In college I didn't care enough about anything to finish the degree or pursue the career, but it laid a foundation of sorts for me. Then around 15 years ago I met Barry Perez, who has introduced me to an aspect of the art world that I would have otherwise not known. He has been a professional artist for 30 years and he ran a sort of circuit of art festivals around the country, getting to know other artists in the process. I have benefited from these years by getting to know some of those friends and I have collected a bit of their artwork along the way. Also, now that I live with him I have the benefit of all of the art he's collected. We eat every night on artisan-made ceramic plates and bowls. I have hand-blown glasses. Artwork is on every wall and in every corner. Now, I think about the people who made the things I see and use, rather than the department store they came from.

I'll post some images below of items that I've seen recently – not necessarily things that I own but things that I like. This will make for a happy post.

View fullsize Alejandra Almuelle - Aniccas
View fullsize Ann Feldmeir
View fullsize Barbara Francis
View fullsize Barry Perez
View fullsize Both Hands Studio
View fullsize Dan & Lori Dudleyhttp://dirtonyourskirt.com
View fullsize Deana Hinchliff
View fullsize Deana Henchliff
View fullsize Deana Hinchliff
View fullsize Debbie Little Wilson
View fullsize Don Brimberry
View fullsize Don Pimpler
View fullsize Pine Mills Pottery
View fullsize Glo Coalson
View fullsize Glo Coalson
View fullsize Green Dog Studios
View fullsize Jan Byron
View fullsize Les Mitchell
View fullsize Mickie Bruce
View fullsize Leslie Wortham Bruce
View fullsize Lisa and Cecil McKenzie
View fullsize Patricia Day
In Art Tags Art, Alejandra Almuelle, ceramics, Patricia Day, Barry Perez, Glo Coalson, Anxiety
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Baubles in the Sun

October 17, 2016 Earnest Painter

Just got back from out of town. I was going to write, but this day has escaped me and I have no idea what I've done with it. So, in the meantime I'll leave you this picture that I took.

Lisa & Cecil McKenzie glasswork

In Art Tags Contemporary Art, art, Edom, Glass
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A Partially Fictional Story of a Dragonfly

October 5, 2016 Earnest Painter

By: André Karwath
File: Sympetrum flaveolum - side

In some ways it's easier to communicate when you're alive. You have a voice, for instance. Hand gestures, facial expressions, these things lend themselves to relaying what you're trying to say, inasmuch as people are willing to listen.

There's the key. That's where you can really take advantage of having passed from human life. I always told everybody that I would come back as a dragonfly. Who knew that would really be an option? So, I make an appearance occasionally to remind the ones I love of who I am. This is SO much more effective. I could talk until I was blue in the face and my friends wouldn't listen. Let me die, and suddenly everything I say is golden. Why? Who knows? Who cares, really? I just take advantage of it.

At first it was ridiculous. For instance, I love Johnny Depp so they had to go rent every Pirates of the Caribbean movie ever produced. And, then cry. Who gives a rat's ass about that now?! Move on. I didn't even like them that much. Or if I did, I stopped once I crossed over. (Okay, maybe I liked Chocolat that much.)

A dear friend of mine has been struggling. I know it; he knows it. The world of fine arts has been turned on its ear and he couldn't navigate the new currents. The internet creeped into every aspect of the art world and suddenly anybody could be an artist at a minimal initial cost. We used to have to have several sets of slides created of our work, to send to galleries and festival promoters - professional slides. Nowadays, everything is submitted online, images are tweaked and the general expectation is much lower. The promoters are making money hand over fist on application fees alone with thousands of applicants. Why should they care any more about how the show runs? Suddenly, all loyalty to the artists who they had worked with for decades was gone, and a new generation of promoters and curators emerged. A somewhat colder, less involved group. We used to be a family of artists, all traveling on a circuit of festivals and galleries, running into each other periodically. Little by little my friends complained that they didn't know anybody any more; that the people they knew weren't there any more. I wasn't alive to see that shift happening; I could only watch from a distance.

I really wanted my dear friend to get in front of the change, though, and take advantage of the new opportunities. They were there, just in different places. The people who were familiar with the new world were the ones who would succeed. But, I had to start slow with him, at his level. He was at a street festival, so as a dragonfly I flew around his jewelry case, then popped out and landed on his foot. I sat there on his foot, slowly fanning my wings. He didn't seem startled or curious, even. He just watched me as I sat there. Eventually, he talked to me. He asked how I was doing, how I liked his art and his new designs. He gave me updates on some of our friends. Me talking to him was the challenge. I wanted to say, "I'm with you. We're going to make it through this together." Just to comfort him at first, then to kick him in the ass to get him moving.

Later, I had to move coins and such to get his attention. I would time my dragonfly appearances when I felt his thoughts were heading the right direction. Just, nudge him into facing the future - turn his head, little by little. Open up his mind to what he could do now, to the possibilities. For a long time he focused on what I had said before, back when we talked about the art world and how to make it. When I was alive, I would encourage him, but I would try to push him as well, to apply to more festivals and galleries. To pay the extra amount for the professional photography because that made all the difference. All of that may have been true then, but times have changed and it's not all true any more. It's difficult to make people change, to see things from a new perspective – especially when they've been doing something so long. In some ways it's easier for me now, though. (Now that I'm no longer among the physically alive.) Why the hell people listen to the dead more than the living is beyond me. I know that's the way it is though, so when I can communicate with him now, everything I say has that much more value.

I don't know how much longer I can do this. I've used twenty dragonflies to channel me so far. I'm a little tired – a spirit kind of tired, not a physical one. I feel like I need to stay around to see my friend through just a little more, but part of me feels like I need to move on. Like, maybe I'm the one who is trying to cling to the past. I keep getting the feeling that I've almost broken through, like I've almost made him hear me... and then I'm back to where I started. Maybe I'll try a wasp. To sting him. Just to take my frustrations out, and for no other reason. I might do that, but no, I won't go anywhere. I'm with him... still with him.

In Art Tags Dragonfly, Life After Death, Artist, Art, Earnie Painter, Rather Earnest Painter, friends, love
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Odd Shots from an Artist Studio

September 26, 2016 Earnest Painter

A Jeweler's Workbench

We had fun in Barry's studio yesterday with a friend. She is a graphic designer, but she was fascinated by the hands-on experience of a metal-smith's studio. She learned how to press a pattern into metal, how to cut metal, how to make a bead out of gold and how to use a hammer. For my part, I learned how to look at his studio from a different angle. I'm used to seeing these tools laying around, but it's fun to get up close and see the textures. I don't know what life would be like without hearing the clinking of metal and the hiss of a propane torch as a background. The sizzle as a hot piece of metal hits the liquid after he's soldered. These wonders have become a part of my life, and I thought it might be time to revisit. Below are a few pictures to start with.

Soldering bench

Soldering bench

Honeycomb - used in soldering to ventilate

Close-up of a dot - a Barry Pip - on a soldering honeycomb

In Art Tags Barry Perez, Jewelry, Art, Contemporary Art, Rather Earnest Painter, Earnie Painter
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