Coffee And Paint Drips Blog
Photo for Friday
Thought for Thursday
“Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I’m not sure about the former.”
~ Albert Einstein
Shopping for Motivation
The Pearl Paint Art Supply in my neighborhood is having a sale of 50% off everything in the store. Are they going out of business? I asked the sales people, but they said no one told them anything. Looks like going out to me if they’re selling to the bare walls. That much off is a good sale, even better than buying online which is usually cheaper. Pearl’s prices are high first of all, and lately they were trying to compete with Michael’s Crafts, which turned me off. If I want craft stuff I can go to Michael’s. I want a quality art supplier when it comes to art stuff.
Well, I picked up a large pastel pad, a couple tubes of MaimieriBlu watercolors, and quite a few half pans of Windsor&Newton watercolors for my travel set. They had some semi-precious stones I liked and for half price I bought a couple. I spent enough yesterday. Paint is expensive. I need to go back another day to get a Vyco cover for my desk. Next week is soon enough unless they close the doors tomorrow which didn’t look like it was happening.
Feeling empowered after my art supply shopping spree, and relaxed from my little tantrum, I got down to business. Amazingly, the light was working in my studio yesterday. I took my purchases to my desk to take inventory of my supplies. I have some older tubes of watercolor that I need to use up. I thought I used up my watercolor paper, but forgot about the cherry blossoms work that was still attached to the block. I’m not sure if I’m done with it, but I took it off the block anyway. Since it was there, bare, and looking at me I found another photo of the blossoms from the swipe file and there I was penciling it onto the paper. Soon as I did that and took some pics, I was filling my water cups, dipping the brush and throwing paint on the paper! Wow, how did that happen?
Knowing myself I stopped before I made a mess of things. Watercolor is not very forgiving, in my opinion. I could take it too far, and then that’s it! So I left it and decided to organize my bead supplies. There I was stringing a couple of bracelets! I finished one and need some findings for the other, but I worked on two pieces. I just need to photograph the finished piece and shop online or in person for the needed findings for the second bracelet.
All in all, yesterday was an amazingly productive day. I’m still in shock that it all went so well! I better be careful and not mess up the momentum today.
Next Thing on the List
The thing with To-Do lists is that you need to actually do the things on the list, right? So how come I have such a long list? Maybe it’s because I’m not getting to anything on this list? What do you think? If I’m not working on the list why am I so busy and tired?
Every day that goes by, every week, the same things are still there on my list, waiting. Want an idea of what’s on my list? Ok, here goes:
- Play in the studio every day for however long
- Organize studio closet for flat storage and upright canvas
- Get a CD shelf at IKEA to replace another shelf and move to studio
- Matte some finished work
- File paperwork
- Get a black handbag
- Make more bracelets for Etsy shop
- Add more finished work to Etsy shop
- Plan Artist Dates
- Remember to take photos while on Artist Date for blog (ugh, keep forgetting)
- Shread 2007, 08, 09 papers
- Visit Pearl Paint for 50% off art supplies sale
- Call cable guy
- Call dishwasher repair guy
- Call electrician to fix studio light and other stuff
- Re-arrange living room furniture, again
- Do Artist’s Way tasks I liked again
- Remove old carpet from foyer
- Paint foyer
- Re-paint bedroom with better color
- Buy picture frames for favorite photos before my babies have babies
- Put photos in albums before babies have baby photos
- Blah blah blah and on, and on, and on.
There’s more, but I’m tired of this list already. Is it the weather? Is it my artist’s block showing up to hold me back?
Somehow I need to shake it off, wake up, show up and get on with it. This is ridiculous.
Done with the Course, on with the Process
I’ve finally closed the book, so to speak, on The Artist’s Way. I re-read the last chapter, answered the Week 12 questions and the tasks, and did the check-in. It’s been a great motivator and there are things I did during the course that I believe I will continue to do for a long time.
The three pages of free thought journaling every morning will definately stay. It’s been wonderful to write down the stupid things I think I do, how dopey I think I might be, and be done with it. And the artist’s date is a must-do, whether it’s an hour or a whole day thing. Anything I can do to keep the creativity coming.
Just showing up at my desk with no agenda has allowed all kinds of ideas to flow. Once I’m there I start thinking about something and suddenly I find myself painting for hours, where I had no intention to do so.
The Artist’s Way has allowed me to be creative in whatever medium I feel like using at the moment. If I knit I don’t feel guilty that I didn’t paint. I know I’m “doing” anyway. I’m more comfortable knowing it’s the process not the outcome. Show up and do, rather than think about it and don’t.
So the last few days have been a little hectic and I didn’t get to paint. Besides, the light in my studio keeps shutting off for some reason and it’s caused me to avoid the space. I hate sitting at my desk in the middle of something and the light shuts off. I’ll have to get that fixed, but in the meantime I was knitting. I finished another pair of socks for the online shop, worked a pair for a gift, and started another. While I knit I think of colors, shapes, textures, ideas, designs, it’s great. Knitting was a mini artist’s date with myself and the process of creating. It’s a must.
Photo for Friday
Thought for Thursday
“The will to be stupid is a very powerful force, but there are always alternatives.”
~Lois Bujold
The Icon Secret
So, as I was saying, I have this icon painting that is pretty old. When my uncle visited my husband’s car repair business with his car, he slipped this icon to him telling him to give it to me. My father’s oldest brother was an artist with wood. He refinished antique furniture, made his own pieces, violins, really beautiful things. When my husband and I were getting married, my uncle was going to refinish a Louis XVI chair for us as a gift. He had three chairs and he was going to use two of them to finish the better of the three. Well, his wife, my aunt, found them in his workshop at home and threw them out with the trash! Louis XVI chairs!
I don’t know what happened when my uncle found out, but he ended up making us a backgammon board with different natural colored woods, inlaid in the typical design and rubbed to a glossy finish. It’s a beautiful piece, but it’s not a Louis XVI chair.
He came to the repair shop with the icon hidden in his coat. He told my husband not to say anything about it as he slipped him the painting, holding his finger to his lips. We never discussed the wheres and the whys of how he came to own it. Not too long afterwards he had passsed away, but thrilled to know I was in possession of this icon. I do know that he wanted me to paint in the parts that were missing. How could I do that? I didn’t want to touch it and left it as it was.
At one time my uncle had his own furniture refinishing business, but it didn’t work out. He ended up working in Manhattan at a company called Dalva Brothers where he stayed for a long time. He had some of his own clients as well and did some work in his home. Maybe someone gave it to him to finish? Maybe he found it somewhere in a shop? I don’t know, but I own it now and it’s hanging on my wall.
The icon depicts the Annunciation of the Virgin Mary. You can see the Angel announcing the news to Mary. What’s interesting about this icon is that God is also depicted, which is very rare, and his word is shown as a dove. It was painted on a wood surface with some kind of fabric backing and it’s curved. A frame was fashioned to fit around the curve. It’s really beautiful. A couple of artist friends looked at it once and thought it may be Venetian in style. Now that I’ve seen the El Greco and Cretan icon paintings I’m thinking the same thing, but could it be that old? What to do now?
This week I plan to do some investigating by looking up someone to bring this icon to evaluate it, possibly at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. It may be the only place I could get an idea without someone trying to steal it from me! Hey, you never know.
On a Date with El Greco
Last week I planned a big Artist’s Date in NYC. I visited my sister’s apartment to see her Christmas tree before she took it down and since I was there I wanted to go to the El Greco Icon Paintings exhibit at the Onassis Foundation/Cultural Center.
I know I’m supposed to go on these artist dates all alone, but I’ll plan another one like that. This was different because we were together anyway so it made sense to go together. The Onassis Center is on Fifth Avenue and 51st Street, right smack in the tourist areas. Nearby is Rockefeller Center, Saks Fifth Avenue, Bergdorf-Goodman, and many of the designer stores like Gucci, and the lot. Of course a pair of on-sale Manolo Blahnik shoes from Bergdorf’s found their way into a shopping bag and followed me out the door, but we won’t go there for now.