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I forgot, I thought today was Tuesday. So this is a Self-Portrait Wednesday. Me, trying to stay focused on me, my life, my son, my art, my job, my skills, my flowers, my photography, my friends, and each minute of my day, which literally feel like they are jetting by in some weird warped speed. I am waiting for Christina, then we are off to Port Townsend! Will report back soon with lots of fun ideas to share. ')
Cherries and hydrangeas by Cora Ogden. Lake Reflection by Jeffrey Vaughn. More artist found at the Sherry French Gallery.
Lots of my favorite thing via Sa Marraine la Fée. Take a walk on the beach with David Hibbard. Rock piles at Rialto Beach.
My friend, Jared, has a nice write up about his extraordinay body of work on lines and color. Not only is he very talented, humble, he is the nicest person you could hope to meet.
I would love to make beautiful things like these by Karen Nicol.
Look, more butterflies! These woven our of stainless steel (how does she do that?) by Michelle McKinney.
Stuart Haygarth light, color and whimsy.
All of these links found on the delightful blog dear ada, Thank You!
Friday Flickr Fix ;) and the Flickr pool , go have a look, it is very, very fun photo combinations.
JPG Magazine has some incredible photo submissions, now in themes, visual inspiration.
Michele Unger
Rise Up!
Details
Welcome, ghosts.
z shift
2 to 9
cherry blossom mandala (from flickr).
Daryl Hannah has a video blog about the environment.
I am addicted to Click and Clack. Their recently hired staff (hysterical). I listen to them at work on Saturday mornings and laugh out loud! A little background about the hosts - Thomas L. Magliozzi and Ray Magliozzi.
Add to all the things I would love to make, From Prints into Journals from five and a half, via Camilla.
I have been considering the option of not going to ArtFest because I have so much to do at work, in my personal like, etc. My family says ... "No! You must go". And in the last couple of nights of forcing myself into the studio to do these little canvases of butterflies, I realize, I do need to go and enjoy a couple of days of creating art without any disruptions. Fill myself up with ideas, get away and just sit at in one place for hours and think about nothing except the process of creating.
More butterflies, I still have a couple drying downstairs. Finally using all of those envelopes, monopoly money, specialities papers, that I have sitting in sacks all around the studio, and that feels good! I attached threads for the grid on the canvas, and I just loved the flow and randomness of them hanging down and can't cut them off. Tonight I added a couple of single butterflies to them. Still having fun.
I can't wait until Sunday to see this!
"More than five years in the making, PLANET EARTH redefines blue-chip natural history filmmaking and continues the Discovery Channel mission to provide the highest quality programming in the world. The 11-part series will amaze viewers with never-before-seen animal behaviors, startling views of locations captured by cameras for the first time, and unprecedented high-definition production techniques. Award-winning actress and conservationist Sigourney Weaver is the series' narrator""
This is so cool, art work by CrisVector via kriegsnet blog, Jason Krieger, who has the extraordinary online magazine (and one of my favorites) Phirebrush. Go have a look at Desktopography, Natural Designer Wallpaper Exhibition.
Now, I am having a little too much fun. ;)
I almost finished 3 of 4 8x8 art for ArtFest tonight ;) I blame the butterfly punch.
Blossoms are soaking up a gentle rain today.
I almost forgot it is Tuesday, which means, Self-PortraitTuesday. "Wanted for being a bad photographer" wouldn't fit ;)
I completed two of my projects yesterday. And managed to do a little art studio cleaning. I can't talk about my project because it is secret and I signed a confidentiality clause ;)
I love art for housewives, clever, cool and all about the recycling effort! I wish I had hours per day to read and comment of all of these cool blogs. I found many of these links there today.
WasteNothing - Use everything and waste nothing!
One/Change – Making one change at a time.
Harriete Estel Berman's sculpture, square yard of grass made from pre-printed steel, copper base.
Michele Brody, Land-Scaping. "Three walls of windows covered with lace curtains hung from CPVC pipes overlooking an herb garden. 7 curtains sewn together with pockets in which 7 different culinary herbs were planted and watered by a drip irrigation system." "Garden Lace" seen below, isn't that fabulous? You must go look at her incredible installations!
Heritage Salvage via a wonderful blog recycle-ryoanji.
Making art from plastic bags.
Tamar Mogendorff via Happy Cavalier via another wonderful blog this is love forever. So many great blogs out there ... I wonder why I keep doing it myself. I should just become a viewer.
I have mentioned Angie Lewin before but her work is so stunning, This Island Teasels reminds me of this alien seed pod I found on an old dirt road.
The cutest closets by Kast van een Huis via Bloesem.
What a clever idea, paperback swap.
Thankfully I looked up while I was cleaning the studio to see an Art Close Up segment on PBS and caught Pat Keck's work! Wonderful stuff. She hand carves all of her pieces and does all the mechanical work. Brilliant. I had a little tear fall from my eye while watching it.
And the photographer, Arno Minkkinen, made me smile. Please, do yourself a favor andh check out his work!
Dominque Browning, Editor of House & Garden magazine, has an excellent editorial in the April 2007 issue on "Our Planet, Ourselves".
National Geographic has a special report in the April 2007 issue on "Saving the Sea's Bounty". As a side note, this is piece was shot by Randy Olson (and his wife, Melissa Farlow, also a wonderful photographer) that D and I have the privileged to know. I have been feeling guilty for sometime when I eat fish. The idea that of over-fishing takes the pleasure out of eating crab, lobster or any fish for that matter. I hardly ever do. I have not been to one of those steak and lobster restaurants in over 20 years. And I am thinking my neighbor Laura has the right idea, go vegetarian.
2005 was one of the hottest years ever recorded.
We all know something is running amuck in our world. We read the news and see the evidence. I am in constant discussion with my friends about the subject. I do my little bit, turning off lights, combining driving trips to the stores, recycling. But I know these things are not enough and I keep wondering ... what are we to do? What does an individual do to help out our world in crisis? What can the blogging community do? Have you guys heard of anything extraordinary that we can do? I mean really DO. I am feeling very helpless, frustrated, worried and SCARED.
Ran across Stanker site tonight looking for instructions on how to make recycled tin charms (an artfest endeavor -- we will see if that really happens).
Stanker
Daniel Depoutot
Stefan Lehner
5.5 Designers
No Art
Free People
Hair Raising is an exhibition designed and hand-sewn by Sandy Suffield via 30gms.
Hair wreath found at the Victorian HairWork Society. A hair museum?
A wall of pseudo-english, chinese, hindi, arabic and world ethnical maps made of human hair with african shorn hair on the ground.
Mee Ping Leung's hand-made shoes of human hair.
My addiction smells good, is a visual treat and a little gift from nature, Flowers! Addiction for Photo Friday. More of my addiction here and here.
My best friend from college, Faith, and her posse, Mackenzie, Ian and Nita came to visit! Yesterday we did Pike Place Market, Bodies Exhibit, driving around Seattle. Today we headed out to Fort Casey, Deception Pass, La Conner (and a couple of daffodils fields) and Mt. Baker. Tomorrow skiing (for some) and the Glass Museum for some of us! And today I turned 51 :) where did the year go?
Pike Place Market
Going into the Bodies Exhibit
Fort Casey
Something found on the beach.
I was there, at Fort Casey
Daffodils at La Conner
Are we there yet?
Driving to Mt. Baker, trying to see the Ice Caves.