Me: "Who has the best seat in the house, me or daddy?"

Adam: "Well, Daddy's is nice, but yours is best. Your's is squishier."
Showing posts with label painting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label painting. Show all posts

Monday, March 8, 2021

Timing



Sometimes the timing is juuuust right. Or just, right.  I don’t know if you can feel the subtle difference there, but I can.

Nine years ago, I participated in an art show called the 20/20. Twenty paintings by each of twenty artists, displayed throughout a gallery in Midtown, Sacramento for one month. I was super excited when I got in. The workload was very heavy, but wow, what growth! What a great opportunity to push myself!  Individual artist's pieces were hung together in large grids, and participants were actually required to submit twenty-five paintings so that there would be back-ups in case works sold off the wall.  No gallery wants a big gap up there.

(Paintings from the 2012 show)

But a lot has happened in nine years... Natalie, clots, selling-then-buying a house, moving to a far off land (cuz, yah, an hour can be far), two promotions for Guy with accompanying challenges, two sons moving out, caring for dad and his passing, and good old Hashimoto's.  Art took a big step back. Like, back to the garage part of my brain.

But recently it stepped back up, and said, "hey!  Hey you!  Remember me?  I make you happy.  Move over a skootch and make some room for me."  I began to think about the 20/20 show, and to wonder if it was still going on.  Not three weeks later I received an email from the gallery inviting me to apply again.

Just right.

Do you ever get a little ping in your heart?  Like, a soft little elevator-door-opening-sound that says, yup, or, ooooh, yah, baby...?  It was like that, only less creepy.  The email made that little *ping* in me (I hope you are saying it in your head with the right sound.  Don't you dare just read "ping" like Kevin Costner is narrating your shopping list (he is by far the most boring narrator on the planet, and not just of shopping lists).  Together, now: *ping!*

Just, right.

I printed the application and let it sit around here for a couple of weeks, pondering.  I had to come up with a theme.  

My usual painting theme is, "Because That's What I Felt Like Painting Today.  Duh."  Probably that would not have gone over well with the guest judges.  The application said I needed a theeeeeme to tie all my works together.  I think last time I just made some lame thing up, like "Crap Around My House" without using the word crap.

I started really praying about what I -should, could, would want- to paint TWENTY FIVE paintings about.  I settled on making black and white hand carved s'graffito tiles (yes, that's a real word) and let that be the connective thread.  I did one (if I do say so...) gorgeous tile.  It took a booty-long time and I didn't get it fired in time (teeth stuff, darn it).  I realized there is no way I could make twenty four more in less than two months.  Nuh-uh.



Back to the drawing board (bwaaa-hahahaha, no, stop, I'm killing me) (but it was a painting board so now the joke isn't even funny).  I pondered my life's experiences and wondered if I should tap into some of the darker chapters.  Nope.  Didn't feel right.  Humor?  Figures?  Still-lifes? (that looks funny, and spell check is scolding me, but no, we don't paint 'still-lives', like sedentary old people.  It's still-lifes.  Still looks weird, though).

I finally prayed that God would help me paint something that would honor Him.  In that moment a picture I had seen online popped into my head.  It's of a little black and white bird with a golden breast, a warbler, that is mentioned in the book, "My Side of the Mountain".  Jonah is reading it to me now.  It's slow going, much harder than the last book, but boy - that kid is a trouper.  So I said, "Okay, Lord," and that night I started painting.




I went through the usual agony of my process, which includes plenty of self doubt and a little bit of loathing (why am I doing this?  I suck at this!  Who am I kidding?  Nevermind, I won't apply), and finally got through it.



I drove to Sacramento Friday afternoon.  I was all jittery and shaky, even though I knew I was just dropping the painting off, and probably it would be some employee who took it and set it to the side with an unenthusiastic thank you, and that the judging wouldn't be till at least Monday, and that the worst they could say was that it was trite and kitsch and lacked sophistication (nothing I hadn't already said to myself, and I wouldn't be there to hear them), and then I would get a call Tuesday that said thank-you-for-applying-we-went-a-different-direction-but-please-consider-trying-again-next-year, goodbye.  Why be nervous?

I stepped into the gallery but the front desk was empty, and I could hear voices in the back.  I wandered a little heavy-footed through the space (hello!  I'm here!) and then returned to the front.  Eventually, the muffled conversation lulled and a head popped around the corner.  It was the gallery owner, Misha (or Michael - his card says both, and I'm scared to get it wrong so I just said hi!), who recognized me a little, or is a good faker.  My application sat on top of my small painting, which felt like a little kindness it was doing for me, hiding my probably-shameful painting for a few moments more.  We made chit chat as he looked over my paperwork, then he pulled it aside to see the painting.  He gave a tiny gasp and softly said, "Oh, my God, that's beautiful".  

Instant relief.  I was high.  Just high.  I floated a little, while he said that since he is not on the selection committee, he couldn't say, of course, but that if he were, he would certainly let me in the show, and that he imagined I would have no problem getting in.  

I only have to wait a few more days, and after waiting for cancer test results three times this year, I hardly care.  No. Big. Deal.  Perspective, right?  I let myself have the night off and met my sweetie for dinner and a tootle through Hobby Lobby, which is an awesome date night these days.  But rather than wait to find out if I got in, I am going on a little hope, and last night I started the next few paintings.  After all, if I do get in, I only have 55 days to get it all done.  Timing, you know.

One down, twenty-four to go.





The last 20/20 in 2012 please don’t let her know how much weight she will gain in the next nine years!
  

Saturday, March 16, 2019

Sisters ~ Lost Post #1


These two girls are 

black and white
sweet and salty
cool turquoise and warm lavender

They fought over what color they would paint their room for weeks.  
Finally, I took the decision away

"Grey.  End of story."

Maybe I can help them find the neutral ground in their relationship.

*****
 Whenever they fight, 
I tell my girls they need to understand something...
(here is my lecture, in case you need to use it sometime):

"Your sister is the best friend you will ever have.  You will have a million friends in your life, but most will disappear in 5 years.  If you are lucky, you will still have one or two of those friends when you are an adult*see note. But your sister is the friend that God hand picked for you.  She will be at your wedding, and your births, and she will be there for every important event in your life, for the REST of your life.  You need to cherish your relationship with her.  Protect it and take care of it.  
(blah blah blah, ten more minutes of similar content)"

I worry, though.  I really believe what I am saying.  And I know that some sibling relationships develop deep wounds in childhood and teen years that leave scars.  Big ones.  But then there are some siblings that have sweet and amazing relationships, and I can only assume those seeds sprouted in childhood, as well.

I want that for my kids (the seed thing, not the scar thing).

The grey space where they both can Be.
Together, but unique
Supportive, with boundaries
Helpful, but not codependent
Individuals, but never alone.



 



*Remember in the lecture when I said that bit about only having one or two lifetime friends?
That might have been a fib, but only because I have been soooo blessed in my life with many dear and amazing life-long friendships.  True soul sisters.  But I don't think that is how it is for most people, and I never take that blessing for granted.

*****
This post, and perhaps a dozen others, were begun and never finished since I have been sick and overwhelmingly busy in the past year.  I was going to let them go, but then I realized that since this blog is really for my family, it doesn't matter when I post them, only that I do.  So this is the first of many Lost Posts that I will publish.   

Sunday, May 18, 2014

Delayed Redemption


If you have been reading here for any length of time, you'll know my list of post topics is a short one; my mothering missteps, my hubby's cooking, blood clots, crazy days with my kids, the occasional nice days with my kids...oh, and guilt posts.  I write a lot of those.  If you thought Catholics and Jews had the monopoly on guilt, you never met a Mormon.  Most Mormon women who embrace the legacy of self flagellation (not flatulation, as in tooting.  Flagellation, as in kicking one's own butt),  will focus their woe-ing on their inability to bake while sewing while playing the piano while modestly nursing under a dropcloth, whilst also listening to the scriptures on CD.  Not long ago Ruth invited us to their Passover Seder.  We stayed to help clean up at the end, but had to get Ethan somewhere and couldn't stay till the last matzo crumb was swept up.  I apologized to Ruth.  "It's the Mormon in you," she laughed.  Ah, she knows me well.

Now, I can't say we have any more guilt than anyone else, but in my case, I've got my mom-guilt ("I should play with my kids more"), mixed with my Mormon-guilt, which here diverges into two strains of guilt; doctrinal ("I should be reading my scriptures more") and cultural ("I should have my genealogy memorized in song form - that I wrote myself - all the way back to Adam").  I have added a few new layers to my own guilt parfait; doula-guilt ("I should offer my services at a discount to deserving mothers!"), writer-guilt ("I should write on my blog 3 times a week and never offend anyone!"), and artist-guilt.  Yep, you heard me.  Art.  Guilt.  Two words that were meant to go together.  

I should have finished the painting shown above a long, long, LONG time ago.
The folks who commissioned this painting are the nicest people.  The image was taken from a photo -the last photo- of their two sons together.  It went through a billion degrees of frustration and revamping.  I quit about 8 times.  I was heard to utter the phrase, "I suck at this!!!!  What ever made me think I could paint?", weekly.  I repainted the entire painting at least 3 times in most areas, up to 10 times in others.  Why?  Because I needed it to be perfect.  It was their son.  Their son who had died in Iraq.  And I couldn't mess it up.

Have you ever heard the phrase, "Perfectionism is the mother of procrastination"?  
Yah.  Well I'm its stepmother.

At one point in the development of the painting, I was invited to these boy's parent's home.  When I came home I told Guy, "This is all wrong!  I know what I need to do now!"  After having been in their home, surrounded by their favorite things, I understood my painter's-block.  Their style is very bright, and cheerful.  Vibrant!  

The painting had not been vibrant.  It was more like an overcast day, washed out and colorless by comparison.  I attacked the painting with my palette.  I turned dull sands and bland skies into vivid fields of color.  I added edges of purple and crisped horizon lines with red.  It started to look like it belonged in their home.

And now it is in their home.  Finally.

After they left with their painting, I felt about five consecutive minutes of utter relief, followed by two full minutes of not being sure what to do with myself, which was immediately trailed by the need to return to the studio.  I have two more overdue commissions to complete.

Gosh golly darn.  That's Mormon for, "Oy vey".

Warrior Son Derek... his nephew, who was born after his uncle had died,
 walked right in and said, "Hey, that's Uncle Derek!"  The best compliment ever.

The Brother who was left behind.
 I feel like I know them both and I have never met them.