I am writing from a rehab facility with my leg elevated due to fractures in 3 places in the tibia near the ankle. It is held together with screws and plates. Next week I will get a real cast and hopefully it will be weight bearing so I can get around easier. I am developing upper body strength, however.
I was working at the RV resort helping with arts and crafts when, carrying a large box of plastic bottles for a sand art project, I miss-stepped and crashed to the ground.
So I am meditating on the meaning of this sudden change in my lifestyle and the fact my summer plans have been redirected. My husband’s plans were changed and the RV park plans were also messed up. I shall leave it there until I see the direction I am meant to go.
An Opportunity Long Wished For
Many times I have perused the back of Artist Magazine and read exciting offers to come away to some foreign land and paint under the guidance of an experienced teacher. I say to myself who does this? How lucky they are to be advantaged enough to enjoy this luxury. To pursue their art in an atmosphere conducive to creating and learning and discussion and immersion is pure joy. I was given this opportunity this June, on short notice, and of course rushed around to get everything I needed for the trip.
| Skopelos |
I came home from Greece a couple days ago armed with paintings, sketches and photos and potential for lots of artworks. I flew over in business class with a longtime woman- friend on a 747 and was treated like a queen with Taitinger champagne, a seat that morphs into a bed and a menu of culinary delights. Changed planes in Heathrow for Athens and overnight in Athens in a hotel that looks out on the Acropolis. We met our artist companions and our teacher on the rooftop along with Tom and Isabel Dempsey, who operate The Center For the Arts on Skopelos, and who organized the next 10 days. Next morning we hopped on a bus for the 3 hour drive to the port then took the hydrofoil boat for a three hour ride to the island of Skopelos. Skopelos is about the size of Nantucket. The Aegean Sea was heavenly blue but I would see it change to turquoise at the island. What followed was nine more days of painting, walking to the port to get food and a critique of the days work. We worked on a variety of media, experimental for some. I tried using paint sticks-oil paint in heavy crayon form which one can mix with a medium to make it goopy. It was fun but if I decide I like it I will need a lot more plat-time with it.
| Chapel on top -site of Mama Mia movie |
| A street in the residential area of Skopelos |
From then on I went back to the familiar watercolor paint and Arches quarter sheet paper. The teacher, Nan Hass Feldman, gave us parameters every day such as – using complementary ( color wheel) colors, using contiguous colors, doing a panorama and paint without a prior sketch. Nan would come around and see what we were doing and make suggestions or show a different technique. At 6PM we met at the terrace and she gave us all a critique. Isabel, well versed in Skopelean culture and language gave us a talk on the history and culture and taught us a few useful words in Greek. She said the people would be delighted if we tried, anyway.Then we went for supper. We ate outdoors under the stars at a different taverna every night. We always had a Greek salad-fresh, ripe tomatoes, cucumbers, black olives, onion slivers and a big slab of delicious feta cheese on top. The island recently got electricity and indoor toilets which were very nice and spic and span. The last night we went to Isabel and Tom’s house for supper and Greek dancing and a poetry reading by Prof. Alan Feldman, who was given a real laurel wreath for his head by Isabel. They live high up in the hills overlooking the crescent port. It must be a 45 degree angle driving up those tiny narrow roads but the view is spectacular. Wine grape vines climb over the portico. Olive trees everywhere. The people who have olive trees get the olives pressed locally and it is so sweet. I tried to buy a small container but that was not available. There are no screens in the windows or doors. No need. I felt like I lived outdoors for 10 days. Cats roam the port and sit by every taverna table looking for something to drop. they aren’t really pesky but rather polite. We had car trips to other parts of the island for painting opportunities that were gaspingly beautiful.
| Temple of Athena |
On the return trip we stopped for an overnight in Athens and a climb up the Acropolis to the Parthenon, the temple of Athena, the Erectheum and the amphitheater.. It was 100F and boy o boy, it seemed like a frying pan up there. Oddly, I saw two cats hanging out up there and decided my storied cat, Godfrey, will have to have an adventure on the Acropolis. F. harry’s toe
Situated for creativity
Maybe serene settings are too relaxing for working at writing and painting. This is an RV Park in Massachusetts and the leaves are still soft and pale like infants. It’s quiet. So quiet you can hear the barred owl whoosh from one tree nearby to another, meet his friend and whoosh away. Then a shriek breaks my reverie and a night hawk is announcing his arrival. A chipmunk noses out some Bulgar wheat I poured out on top of the head stone at the fire pit. Ah Ha, Tex the cat is interested. I don’t know how he heard Mr. Munk but Mr. Cat flattens out his body and watches, motionless but swiveled eared. How can I work with all these distractions! The food chain playing out. The hawk holds the power. I better get my cat in.
A medium change

A medium change



Seize the Day
For years I have been fixed on several goals; to paint as I travel the country and accrue paintings for my one woman show–(which happens to be this coming January 7th,2012 thru March at the West Brookfield library on Main Street at the lights. Reception from 11:00 to 2:00) and to write and illustrate my children’s book series.
Since October 2011 the manuscripts have been shelved temporarily and serious painting has slowed. I am painting with an interest in small 3 1/2 X 5 1/2 watercolors. Maybe these will be easily saleable. . My new site on etsy.com named zsazsa’s art studio is a test to see how well they are received. They are quick to paint, (though they are carefully done) come with mat and backing and in a clear sleeve. They are easy and inexpensive to mail and affordable.
Through the ages artists have adapted for the commercial purposes. Starving in an attic studio is romantic and idealistic but survivors cave to reality. This is my way of doing what I love without piling up stacks of canvasses creating a storage problem.
Little paintings of birds and wildflowers and sets of 4 little herb pictures are being offered. Also, glass Christmas tree balls with painted birds and mistletoe personalized for the buyer with any name on them. Naturally this is seasonal.
On the etsy site I go by the name swedishblond.
connections
I can’t decide if people understand the occupation of a painter. To the question of ‘What do you do” I say ‘I paint’ (or words to that effect). Then people say ” Oh my mother used to paint” or “my six year old loved to draw”. Isn’t that nice, I say. What does that information mean? Are they saying they understand the frustration of trying to capture the atmospheric color change in pond water at dawn on a cold April morning? Are they commiserating-remembering the hours spent working on one’s craft? Maybe they recall mother sitting at the kitchen table after her housework is done dabbing away at the paper or canvas copying a pretty picture and getting Oh’s and Ah’s from her amazed family that the painting looks just like Aunt Felicity.
Satisfaction and joy is felt by both handwringer and dabber. Her family will treasure mom’s painting as will the family of of the agonizer. Perhaps the agonizer will develop her art that will reach more people with it’s message.
Or, maybe it is simply a way of people connecting with each other on a human level.
Recording star
When we were in Texas, Larry and I went to a recording studio to take advantage of a special low price they were offering.
We made a CD of
17 songs-solos, duets and 2 of Larry accompanying himself on the guitar. It was a lot of fun. All the songs were done one time, no retakes, which would have added to the price. So I hope our grandchildren will forgive the mistakes. I would love to have a recording of my parents and/ or grandparents-heck- any forbears voices. Larry has a recording of his father singing and playing several instruments. It’s great even the mistakes, on amateur recording equipment.
I took the kids today to Walmart to buy toys with the money they had earned and played the CD on the way there and home. They sang along to some of the songs and Boy!, I was quietly tickled pink.
