Archive for the ‘Drawing’ Category

selkie

February 1, 2010
watercolor and ink on arches hot press watercolor paper

watercolor and ink on arches hot press watercolor paper

 

As Shortcake was making her way into the world, I was listening to Aine Minogue’s (an Irish harpist, singer, and folklorist) song The Selkie on my iPod.    It’s beautiful, and it resonated deeply with me the first time I heard it.  But I had no idea what she was saying!  I had heard of the mythological selkie, but knew only that it had something to do with water. 

Recently, the Celtic myth of the selkie has come back into my life en force.  She is a shape-shifter, a sea creature whose sealskin allows her to live in the depths of the ocean.  Her home is there, in Sule Skerry, but she can take off her sealskin and become human for a short time as well.  In the myth I’ve just read, a human man falls in love with her in this form, as she is sunning herself on the warm rocks, and she becomes his wife.  The husband (jackass!) hides her sealskin, so she remains on land, gives birth to his son, and starts to get all parched and peely and icky.  She can live without her sealskin, but only for so long (7 years, I think?) before she needs to return to her watery home.  It is her son who later finds her sealskin, and she returns to Sule Skerry.  Her son is able to travel between the two worlds, and he is who I really identify with.  But enough about me . . .

Here the selkie looks out to the ocean, dreaming of Sule Skerry and longing for her sealskin, pregnant with the child who will eventually aid her return.

I know this feeling well.  Don’t you?

I’ve listed the original painting on my Etsy, and will be listing prints soon.

 

img767x

 

 

 from my moleskine today:

{yes. there are dishes and there is laundry and there is the floor, which Karen Maezen would suggest attending to attentively.  and zen . . . . . “meditation” according to the man in orange robes is “doing what needs to be done joyfully mindfully etcetera” but it always seems like this is the thing that “needs” to be done and so then what is the other stuff?}

I should let you know straight out that I’m going to talk about tarot cards.

And that this post, once again, contains tube socks.

Are you still with me?

Heh . . . lo?

So this drawing / painting / sketch /whateverthehellyoucallit was supposed to be about patience.  I was thinking about natural intuition, reception—patiently waiting for that small, directive voice in the stillness.  I was deep breathing and feeling all openness and attentiveness and patiennnnnce-ommmmmm.  But then her hair got out of control, and before I knew it, it was all wildness.  And then her face took on an impatient scowl.  And then the restful, crossed arms became tense and ready to burst.

And I saw, not patience, but impatience.  More than a simple restlessness, I saw a woman attempting to restrain herself, trying desperately—and almost sorrowfully—to keep her wildness under wraps, betrayed by her crazy hair. 

 

img748x

watercolor, arches hot press paper

It perplexed me, as those frequently-occurring paradoxes do.  (I!  AM!  ALL!  PARADOX!  It isn’t just me, is it?  Aren’t we all?)  And, to further complicate things (I just said that two blogs ago), my feelings regarding this paradox itself are split.  It is the eight of swords vs. the red shoes.

Are you still with me?

Heh . . . lo?

Journey with me, if you will, into my soul.  Oh, come on, it’ll be fun!  Does this restlessness-emerging-from-patience-piece point to this or that?

The eight of swords.  (this)

Tarot cards are, despite what you might think, not about fortune-telling, but about inner journey.  I am a visual person (obviously?), and the images on the cards can really assist me in finding psychological, philosophical, and spiritual clarity.  They mirror aspects of nature and of soul, which, perhaps, are one and the same anyway.

I first saw the card years ago, when Dimples was a baby, and I was in the depths of some Postpartum Depression / darkness / soulcraft-ish descent.  My cousin Amy and I would play with tarot cards, then she would babysit as I went crying to my therapist.  The eight of swords came up in a reading for me, and I considered the image: a blindfolded woman, arms loosely bound behind her back, standing in the center of eight swords (go figure!) that had been thrust into the ground around her like a cage. 

Yes!  I thought.  This is me!  Bound and constrained by motherhood and culture and circumstance, unable to fulfill my potential!  But when we studied the card further, we realized that the woman was not so terribly constrained.  She could easily escape the “cage,” and could free her hands and eyes with little effort.  Instead of relief, I felt offended.  If I were not a victim of my circumstances, if I could simply remove my blindfold and carry on . . .  Well, that was quite a lot of responsibility.  “Victim” was so much easier.

So “this” is one thought that came as I considered the drawing.  Have I given myself a new mental straight jacket?  Is there something inside me (some creativity, project, wildness) that is screaming to get out, and am I holding it back for some unnecessary and imaginary purpose?

–OR–

The red shoes.  (that)

To further encourage the eye-rolling of my most cynical readers, I will now, once again, allude to a story in the book Women Who Run With The Wolves.

Heh . . . lo?

The tale of the red shoes is, in short, about a resourceful little peasant girl who fashions for herself a  pair of red shoes.  One day, a rich old civilized lady takes the girl to live with her, gives her new clothes and shoes, and burns her old things.  The old red shoes had been so special to the little girl, that she tricks the old woman into buying her a new pair of (scandalous!) red shoes.  The girl becomes obsessed with these new shoes, and even when she has had a taste of their power (they magically cause her feet to dance, taking control), she craves them.  In the end, the shoes take over, dancing wildly and threatening, essentially, to kill her with exhaustion.  She is unable to remove them, and so, desperate, she asks a woodsman to chop off her feet.

The author (Clarissa Pinkola Estes) compares the little girl to a feral woman—originally and naturally wild (handmade red peasant shoes), but confined like a depressed animal at the zoo (shoes/wildness burned, child civilized).  Sighting the new red shoes is similar to when that caged animal (or woman!) snaps, remembering that bit of wildness that remains within.  But instead of having the knowledge or opportunity to reincorporate the natural way of being, she latches desperately onto anything wild-ish, even at the risk of losing complete control.  The girl dancing like a lunatic in pretty red shoes, the snarling tiger who suddenly turns and attacks the loyal zookeeper, the well-behaved mother who suddenly loses her mind, or becomes addicted to something dangerous, or abandons her family for the cruise ship attendant. 

I mean, not that I have a cruise planned anytime soon.  But you know what I mean.  (Do you know what I mean?)

And so in this light, restraint can be a good, natural, healthy thing.  It can be having the patience to ignore the flashy red shoes and holding out for what you intuitively know to be your thAng, or just hanging on to your old handmade shoes in the first place.  And so is it “that” that I’m seeing here?  Sort of an alert patience?

–OR–

None of the above, it was just a millimeter of a stray brushstroke on her eyes, or the espresso. 

 

(Now all of this passed through my conscious thoughts in approximately 15 seconds—-Eight of swords?  The red shoes?  Espresso?—-but it took, like a billion hours to write.  It would be so much easier if you could just understand my thought processes next time.  Thank you.)

(Destruction and) Renewal

January 5, 2010
watercolor on arches hot press, ink/digital

watercolor on arches hot press, destroyed with ink/digital

And so, apparently, my muse is pregnant.  And hott.  And she wears tube socks.  I can’t shake the tube socks.  But she is unable to tell me how to stop ruining everything. 

I began my routine of late-night art Mondays last night.  I developed a crappy roll of film–an entire roll of images I knew I didn’t need to take; began a beautiful ink drawing, but screwed it up by ignoring my intuition to just stop; then made this watercolor and destroyed her, too.  This one I “destroyed” by getting crazy with the ink. 

What you see here is my desperate attempts on photoshop to cover the ink mess.  Desperate attempts=digitally making most of the inky crap black.  I think I made it even worse.  It looked really good when it was all white.  Sort of unfinished, but in a good, wispy way.  And then, as I had just done with the ink drawing, I ignored that little voice that said “that is enough,” and assaulted it with black ink.

I am on a “ruin everything” mission, it seems.  Yesterday, I forgot to add salt to the bread, and ruined it, which, in turn, ruined the cinnamon rolls I made with the same dough.  And there was last night’s mess of an art session.  And today I ruined what should have been a really good curry dish for lunch.  I mean, Julie ate it.  And had seconds.  But it was RUINED!  RUINED, I TELL YOU!

I’m reading Women Who Run With The Wolves (a title that Hercules had a hard time checking out from the library for me), and I’ve just read a tale about a girl who, essentially, carried a magical doll in her pocket that told her what to do: turn left, turn right, stop talking.  I’ve got that magical doll, we all have that intuition.  I think my current task is to remember how to listen to her.

I think I get it.  I do think I hear her (so many voices up in here).  I do think that I can decipher between internal and external.  But I tend to disobey.

The Illustration Friday prompt is “Renewal.”  I had read that a couple days ago, and remembered it as “Rebirth.”  Close enough, right?  My intuition tells me “yes.”

Laisse Tomber Versus A Rock

January 1, 2010

Be patient toward all that is unsolved in your heart and try to love the questions themselves, like locked rooms and like books that are now written in a very foreign tongue. Do not now seek the answers, which cannot be given you because you would not be able to live them. And the point is, to live everything. Live the questions now. Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it, live along some distant day into the answer.

~Rainer Maria Rilke,  from Letters to a Young Poet

samothrace

an "unfinished" watercolor, winged victory of samothrace-inspired.

 

As the Earth turned at Winter Solstice, and now again as the calendar switches to 2010, I am, like everyone else, feeling old things passing away and beholding all things becoming new.  Is it an actual connection to nature?  Is it the collective unconscious?  Is it the bandwagon?  Is it all in my head?

It is a new year, and for whatever reason, I am feeling 2010.  The sound bursts out of my mouth and my mind.  TWENny TEN!  Losing the “thouuusand” feels good.  Like shedding skin, and emerging with shiny new scales.

Except maybe shedding skin doesn’t actually feel good?  I’m not sure.  I was thinking about this skin-shedding, thanks to that Pixie girl, last week-ish.  I had said that I would happily let my old 2009 skin fall as it would, laisse tomber*.  I was feeling perfectly smug and laisse-tomber-sheddy, then, when I visited a pet store a day or two after the Solstice.  Kiki had asked for a lizard for Christmas, and, against my better judgement, I was checking out the possibility (and quickly sqashing her hopes).  And there, thrashing around her tank, was a gecko shedding her skin.

The flaky white scales were not actually just falling off.  Her old skin stuck out in all directions, looking like dried Elmer’s glue.  She was crazed—jittery and writhing against her little fake rock in one moment, still and exhausted in the next.  It might not have been painful, but it surely wasn’t easy.  And there was epiphany and aha! for the stupid human observer.  Of course.  Sometimes the old ways of being/thinking/feeling/doing just fall off.  And hooray for that.  But sometimes, and usually, I suspect, you have to rub yourself up against a damn rock!  You have to piss down your leg, play the fool, venture far from shore, live the question, experience The Dip, do the thing, ready or not, in the midst of/despite/because of the chaos.  It is a natural process, but it is not a passive one.

And if I have an official resolution this year (or reVolution, as my kids say, appropriately), it is that. 

What?

That. 

I don’t know.  It’s not a word or sentence, I guess, it’s a feeling.  It’s that.  The lack of an answer to the question, “What is your New Year’s Resolution?  Who are you?  What are you doing?  Is it photography or writing or drawing or mothering or . . . ?”   It is the commitment to putting it all out there: the idea, however inarticulate . . . the painting, however unfinished.  (Why the concern with finishing, anyway?  Finishing is just done.  Which is like, dead.)  It is the motivation to experiment with that photo project, and follow through, or the self-forgiveness to abandon it if it doesn’t work.  And perhaps, more importantly, it is the doing of it.  It is the few-weekly scheduled late nights (NaNoWriMo-style) in which I rewrite and edit that damn novel, develop that damn film, ink that damn paper, experiment!  The skin that I need to rub off is the stuff that keeps me from the doing.

Not doing this thing  is so 2009.

 And, I’m telling you.  TWENny TEN is so all about the kicking of ass.

 And so, let’s.

  

( *laisse tomber:  a French way to say let it go, drop it, fuggedaboutit, let it fall.)

  

  

  

 

for erin

December 5, 2009

for erin

 

for erin

who’s inspired me

among other things

to try watercolors

and who i thought of

while i made this

my first non-crayola watercolor painting

 

shortcake likes it.  she said “aw!  cute nursies!”

 

This is what I do with my draw-rings.  I don’t know why.  I am never satisfied, and I don’t do it enough to find a “flow.”  So I get pissed off, crumple them up, and throw them away. 
Untitled-1

This is appropriate to my post-NaNoWriMo blog because I sort of feel like doing the same thing to my . . . novel.  (holy shit, I wrote a novel?)

And I almost feel like I could do that—delete the entire 50,140 words—and still feel good about this past month of obsessive insanity.  Almost.  Because I have learned so much.  (I wonder how many “What I Learned From NaNoWriMo” blogs there are going out today?)  I learned:

1.  That it doesn’t take anything special to be a “writer.”  It is only the writing, and the stubbornness to keep on keepin’ on.  And I think that goes for any creative endeavor.  I mean, I’m assuming that if you can read this, you know how to write.  And everyone can use a pen, a paintbrush, a camera.  Easy.  I’m thinking, if you have something to say, it should be said.  Or written.  Or whatever.  (Or at least, attempted.  Right?)

2.  Despite my whining about “not having any time for myself,” I actually do.  Yes, it may be the stretch between 10PM and bartime, it leaves me exhausted the next day, and it requires Hercules to deal with the Sleepless Shortcake for a few hours, but it is there.    I cannot do this every night.  That was a tad o. ver. kill. ish.  But, a couple nights a week?  Yes!  We!  Can!  (And!  We!  Will!)

3.  I love writing.  Even if the book sucks.  (because, actually, I think, it does.)  But still, I loved doing it.

4.  I love other things, which I learned by reeeeeeeeally missing them.  I missed jogging (weird!!!).  I missed developing film.  I missed taking pictures on that film.  I missed drawing.  Today and yesterday, I’ve got this craaaaazy need to just draw draw draw draw and doodle paint sketch.  I missed cooking good food.  I missed showering.

sad little abandoned rolls of film

sad little undeveloped films

5.  I need a deadline.  I HATE goals and deadlines.  Hate.  I think they set people up for failure, and don’t allow room for following one’s own creative path.  In other words, I’m a lazy shit (who has recently been converted to the beauty of the deadline).  Deadlines are good.  I’m a moron.

6.  If you build it, they will come.  And by build, I mean show up at the laptop/page/camera/canvas.  And by they, I mean the words/muse/pictures.  I knew this, of course.  But it is very infrequent that I actually “show up” and invite the muse.  Usually, the muse follows me around all day, watching over my shoulder, impatiently, as I change a poopy diaper or moderate a fight or help with homework or read a picture book or chaperon a vanful (etc.).   And then she laughs as I try desperately to cram her genius into the teeny little morsel of opportunity that may or may not present.  And then I cry when I miss it.

7.  I am losing count.  Like did I say the thing about “making time” yet?  Because I think I did.  And PS, that reminds me:  It’s important.  And it really solved the problem of restlessness, for me.  Instead of thinking aaaah!  I really want to write!,  I knew that that time was there, waiting.

8.  I learned, tangibly, about “the dip.”  I felt it at about 38,000 words.  And then all the way until the end. 

9.  The people who love me, and even just kinda like me, are awesome and supportive and just really, really nice.

 

And there you have the last thing I will say about NaNoWriMo.  Ever.  Because I’m sure as hell not going to do this again next year.

 

(and, no.  I’m not going to delete the nanowrimo draft, for goodness’ sake.  I’m just not even going to look at it for a while.)

angst and ink on paper

November 10, 2009

This is one of those posts that precede an influx of concern for my mental well-being.  Before you send prescriptions, chocolate, or flowers, know that all is well.  Just yesterday I posted this to my twitter:  “minor issue 2day: want to hug/kiss everyone i see. i don’t think i am even drunk.”  So this is probably just an extreme-cheerfulness rebound.

Alright.  Send chocolate if you must.

Today, I was thinking about an interesting effect that motherhood has had on me.

Some people need to fast, take drugs, experience near-death, meditate, journey, perform ritual.  Some people need these things to strip themselves to the core, to know the profound emptiness of being.  I only need motherhood.  This gig has left me drained, sucked me dry (literally), pecked me to the bone.  And without fail, in my moment on the brink of breakdown, it hits me.  This is the kind of thing people pay good money for!  There are workshops, retreats, e-courses, and books, all centered around trying to get here: a place of stillness and surrender, complete with ego destruction, soul encounter, epiphany. 

I cried myself here today, blubbering and pathetic, overwhelmed by the fighting and the screaming and the whining and the clinging and the endlessness of it all.  And right on cue, in the midst of the darkness, glimpsed a lovely little epiphany regarding my nanowrimo protagonist.  I’m grateful for the experience, but to be honest, I think I would have chosen walkabout today, were I given the informed choice.

Shortcake and I had a quickie post-tears art session today, she with yellow paint (currently all over my jeans), and me with ink on (wrinkled) hot press watercolor paper.  The illustration friday prompt this week was “blur.”  I’m deciding that this is appropriate because it looked blurry through my tears.

blur

 

For all my talk of darkness and descent, I do so love the Summer.  And I miss it.  One of my absolute favorite summer-things is sidewalk chalk.  We had what was likely our last warm, sunny day of the year a few days ago, and my first impulse was to get out the chalk.  I searched desperately through the garage, but could not find any.  I even searched the neighbors’ lawns.  It was a little reminiscent of that damn silver cord (which I still have not found). 

 
So today, as the year turns toward it’s darker half, the day before I plunge myself into introversion, myth, and archetype, I’m thinking of sidewalk chalk.
Shortcake and her fabulous legs.  A digital shot, from my sister's front patio this summer.
Shortcake and her fabulous legs. A digital shot, from my sister’s front patio this summer.
 

 

TAF_1238xb

on our sidewalk

Just Like Artax

October 13, 2009

I’m so damn tired.

And I’m so damn tired of being so damn tired.  (Is that a country song?) 

I’m also so damn tired of complaining about being so damn tired.

So instead of a complaint, let met tell you the funny thing Shortcake did today at 1:30 AM.  I had tried for the bajillionth time to put her down in her crib.  She lay there whimpering for a few moments, then stopped.  “I’m crying.”  She informed me.  Like, hello!

This afternoon, I used the tried and true drive-around-so-they-fall-asleep strategy.  It was not so true to me today:  Fail.  The ink bottles and the brushes and the little jar of water and the clipboard and the hot press watercolor paper all stared at me with puppy dog eyes from the passenger seat.  I tried to ignore them. 

I made up a haiku, and recited it out loud:

Forest of rainbows

White car with purple headlights

I am so tired

 

The kids did not at all enjoy it.  They told me to go home and make them chocolate chip cookies.  And so I did.

 Thanks for noticing me,

Eeyore Terri

 

p.s. I have written a braggy post all about my fabulous weekend, but I am much too deep in the Swamps of Sadness today for that.  And if Atreyu had saved Artax, he never would’ve met Falcor.  And if you don’t know what I’m talking about, you’re like Gmork.