Posts Tagged ‘sketchy’

double

July 27, 2010

i had intended something a little more obscene with this week’s illustration friday prompt, “double.”  but then the lines in her hair reminded me of a rainbow, and i couldn’t help but think of the double rainbow guy.  i lummeesum double rainbow guy.  in my current state, i would not need to be intoxicated to be so deeply moved by a double rainbow.  i can assure you, i too would sob and plead with the universe for the meaning.  what does it meeeeeean?  and i would answer myself: it means absolutely nothing and “full-on” everything at once.  it all has meaning, and then double meaning.  it all counts.  every breath, every thought, every glimmer, every shadow, every sound, every letter, every space, every single punctuation mark.

[breaks down, sobbing]

!

graphite and watercolor pencil on sketch paper.  and also maybe a little saliva.  to, uh, wet the brush.
graphite and watercolor pencil on sketch paper. and also maybe a little saliva. to, uh, wet the brush.

wild geese

March 16, 2010

 

watercolor and ink on arches hot-press.  (snapshot)
watercolor and ink on arches hot-press. (poorly-lit snapshot)

Wild Geese

You do not have to be good. 
You do not have to walk on your knees 
for a hundred miles through the desert, repenting. 
You only have to let the soft animal of your body 
love what it loves. 
Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine. 
Meanwhile the world goes on. 
Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain 
are moving across the landscapes, 
over the prairies and the deep trees, 
the mountains and the rivers. 
Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air, 
are heading home again. 
Whoever you are, no matter how lonely, 
the world offers itself to your imagination, 
calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting–
over and over announcing your place 
in the family of things.

Mary Oliver

My Promiscuous Muse

February 15, 2010

I have a promiscuous muse. My muse wants to own every color, work in many media, and in numerous genre. (Mary Klotz)

drift sketch

 

And hooray for the swing of the pendulum, though broody does hold such a special place in my heart.  I’m sure I’ll see it again soon.  No sense mourning the  lack of mourning.  hmpf.  And I suppose it is a more pleasant feeling, but it is not so different from last week’s rage-y-ness.  Crazy is crazy is crazy.  Y’know?

My current task is no longer to prevent falling apart crying in public, but to stop myself from hugging everyone I see.  It’s a little ridiculous.  I mean, where is the balance?  Could we please just find a comfortable little monotonous feeling, maybe?  (Or, not.  That would be boring.) 

Also, I’m having to really work today at focusing on mundane tasks.  The voices that are singing melodies and telling me about the scenes I missed, and the images that are poised and ready for paper are all bouncing off of the walls and into one another.  I tell them to wait, but they scoff at the dishes and interrupt picture books and serenade diaper changes.  And then, when I finally sit down at the piano, for example, they are nowhere to be seen (heard).  So I love them, but I sort of hate them, too.

In this state I’ve thought up a few really cheesy ideas.  There is one, in particular, related to this gushy omnibenevolence. I’m trying to keep it under wraps, because it sort of makes me cringe, the cheesiness.  But I’m afraid I might burst soon.  So, you know.  Fair warning.

Oh, and P. S., my tube socks have arrived.  Hello.

 

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 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. 

 

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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.)

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

on this harvest moon

October 4, 2009

Mowgli and I drew this together the other day.  I had no clue that he was copying me, and when I asked what he had drawn, he looked at me like I had betrayed him.  He pointed at his page, then mine, then his,. . .  “Of course!”  I said,  “I see the curve now!  And the spirals!”

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So, this is posted as the Harvest Moon rises.  In college, my friend Carmela taught me to play the first three cords of Neil Young’s “Harvest Moon” on the guitar.  I’ve since forgotten how, but I think of it every year.  It is a good night to watch this video–and, look!  There’s a close-up of the riff!  I will practice tonight on Kiki’s guitar.

P.S.  I want to be a rock star. 

Infinite

September 24, 2009

Be out of your cell. There are infinite possibilities, infinite ideas, infinite approaches. (Alev Oguz)

I drew my first Illustration Friday-inspired sketch in a long time yesterday.  And, it’s Thursday today, which means it’s Friday tomorrow, which means I’d better share it now because that’s the whole point of the site anyway–connection and expression.  Right?

So the prompt was “Infinite.”  Right away, I was thinking about borders.  To me, infinite is not the lack of borders, but everything outside of them.  Drawing is such a meditation, so as I drew I really began to feel the power of infinite, outside-the-box thinking.  I thought of how empty, how insufficient, “the box” is.  I guess by “the box,” I mean a few things:  mainstream, the norm, standards, labels (self-imposed and otherwise). 

The chicken scratch on the drawing goes something like this:  and suddenly I realized that it’s not so much thinking outside the box, as it is knowing that you already are there.  It is not something to be sought or reached or aspired to, because you are already a part of it.   Everywhere lies infinite possibilities, combinations, personalities, voices, inspirations, pictures, opportunities, poetry, music, connections. 

IFinfinite

ink and marker on Moleskine

To infinity!  And beyond!    . . .I’m sorry.  It was all just getting too serious.  I couldn’t help myself.

And so turns the seasons. 

Tonight, the dark claims victory over the light, the night after Autumnal Equinox.  The leaves may now fully embrace their spectacular tragedy.  Persephone has returned to the underworld.  Acorn-hoarding, Southward-migrating, Christmas-knitting creatures everywhere felt the tip of the scale.

Me, too.  This is my favorite part, the in-between, barely beginning.  (In fact, I think, that’s my favorite part of anything.)

Today, the hermit in me was more than happy to indulge Shortcake when she just wanted to sleep in my arms.  You know, sit-and-cuddle-sweet-toddler versus do-the-dishes-and-clean-the-toilet is generally a no-brainer.  Is it not?  I read a chapter or so of No Impact Man, and made me some doodles.  It felt very hankering-down-ish.  (hanker down.  is that the expression I’m looking for?  whatever.)  edited to add:  it’s hUnkering down.  Yeah, I knew that.

"actually, I wanted her to go down in her crib...  I was hoping to develop a roll of film.  but can I REALLY complain?  When this soft, sweet, warm little cheek is resting on my chest?

 And, just because she is so darned cute, here’s a “real” picture of her—just a snap in the bath after I tried to cut her hair the other day.

DSC_0402

And I Like To Do Draw-rings

September 19, 2009

I’ve started a routine of daily sketchbook journaling.  That is, if doing something for three days straight counts as a routine thing.  My Moleskine has been sitting in my junk drawer, mostly blank, for months.  I decided I didn’t like the paper.  I decided I wasn’t good enough at drawing.  I decided I didn’t have the time.  I decided I couldn’t decide what to designate the book for (thoughts, dreams, practice sketches, photo ideas, don’t-forget sketches, technique experiments, etc.).  I decided it was too small.  I decided it was too expensive to waste on my juvenile skill. 

Moron. 

I paged through this book, which I picked up at the library, and realized how idiotic and arrogant I was being.  I’ve been wanting to draw.  I love to draw.  It is one of those things of which I simply do not tire, and cannot get enough (like chocolate).  I’ve been wanting to improve my skill, to work out kinks in technique, vision, and medium.  I’ve been wanting to record a few of the little glimpses of beauty that surprise me daily (and evaded my camera).  And all that was stopping me was a group of really pathetic excuses.  I have the book, I have paper, I have pens and inks and graphite and acrylics and markers and brushes.  What, again, was it that I was waiting for? 

(Ready, set, go.)

This is definitely an exercise in letting go of expectations and perfection.  I now try to have the book open on my counter (requires a clean one, though), or in my purse, or in the front seat of the van, and I jot down thoughts and doodles.  I just draw, without intention, whenever I get a chance.  It’s still extremely frustrating, not being able to give it my all.  But I’ve come to realize that I can do this, or I can do nothing.

So, in the tradition of SNL/Mike Myers’ Simon, I’m overcoming my humiliation, and showing you a few drawings from this week.  (Well, hello, my name is Terri.  And I like to do Draw-rings.)  This is from my second Moleskine day.  It’s just something little and rather insignificant, but it felt so good.  (…which is somewhat ridiculous considering I do actually doodle all the time, on envelopes, on the sidewalk, on shopping lists; but this sort of felt like committing?  I guess?)

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Then, Hercules took all four kids to a local football game the other day, and I had precisely one hour to a) sleep, b) clean, or c) cook.  I chose to. . .  draw.  The next drawing  (pencil and sepia ink on rough watercolor paper) is a hint of a vision that has been trying to work her way out of my head.  It was either very, very good to scratch this particular itch, or very, very bad, in a past-the-point-of-no-return way.  I will be restless until I resolve what this is trying to “say,” and how to “say it.”

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Today, I was an unjustified martyr, as I watched a friend’s kids (and mine), while she went out by herself for her birthday.  For the first couple hours, I was without the youngest.  Figure that: “freedom,” with six kids under my care.

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Oh!  And, this is important, if only indirectly relevant:  Our very good friends moved here from England a few years ago.  When I learned that the Mr.’s name was Simon, I couldn’t help but walk around the house singing, with a very sad Mike-Myers-impersonating-British-child accent, “Well, hello, my name is Simon, and I like to do draw-rings…” all day long.  I did exercise good social skills, however, and restrained myself when accepting our first dinner invitation.  Dimples, however, marched into their house singing the Simon song, with an even sadder mommy-impersonating-Mike-Myers-impersonating-British-child accent. 

I would have been humiliated, but I was still trying to digest the fact that upon our arrival, Simon was planting grass seed on the front lawn.  His greeting for his first-time dinner guests: “Whoops!  Oh, Dear.  You’ve caught me spreading my seed!”

No, maybe that wasn’t important.