Preparations for Hello Art Holiday Show

On December 2, I’ll be participating in the Hello Art Holiday Show at Union Station in Kansas City.  Twenty local artists were chosen to be a part of the show.  In addition to the three-dimensional pieces I’m working on, I’m doing a few traditional easel painting of various sizes.  Here are a few things I’ll show.  All of these are small works, 8″ x 10″ or less.

Estelle was sure the Chrysler needed new tires

The River

Water 1
(This piece is not finished; this is just a first pass at the canvas)

Visual diary of a project #2

Below are a couple of photos of stage two of the project.  I gessoed the piece first and then added plaster to create texture to the flat area.  The plaster has a tendency to crack a bit, so when it dries completely, I’ll fill in the crack with more plaster and then gesso the entire piece again.  At that point, I’ll start painting.

On the upper left is another piece I’m working on.  Same process.  The plaster
on this one is a bit thicker, so it’s taking longer to dry.  I’ll probably be able to
add more plaster tomorrow or Sunday.  Rushing the drying doesn’t work very well.

Visual diary of a project

I’m working on several pieces for the Hello Art Holiday show at Union Station in Kansas City, December 2.  This is the beginning of a visual diary of the project.  I’ll be posting photos of the progress of the piece.

This is the blank of hardboard, with layout lines,
I’ll be working on.

This is the bottom of the piece.  It is elevated
about 1 1/2″ by three wooden balls.

Here, I’ve added pieces of shaped tree limbs
(semi-xyloglyphs) along the layout lines.

Here’s another view of the location of the
semi-xyloglyphs.

Final view of the layout.  The next step is adding
a base coat of paint on the front and back.

On reading a poem by Billy Collins

It might be about the perambulations of his dog
Or of his thoughts (not the dog’s)
About a particular style of jazz

Perhaps it deals with the big questions:
Love, death or the way trees
Appear to be waving goodbye
Or even hello

In any case
His logic carries me along
Until he pulls the old switcheroo

And the dog wanders off
To play clarinet with Woody Herman
And the New Thundering Herd

Unless

Frank’s getting a kick out of you
Not from you, of course
Not Frank
Who would even think to kick
Frank
And Ella thinks you are nobody
Unless (Frank, is there any other somebody
Like Frank)…

Product photography

I’ve been doing some “product” photos for the St.Mary’s Medical Center Foundation’s Butterfly Ball on-line auction and it’s always a challenge to get them just right.  The auction program can only accommodate square photos, so arranging the items to show them in their best aspect means lots of experimenting with placement and lighting.  Take a look at some of pieces I’ve done on my “365” page and go to the auction site to bid on some great items.

Waiting

I bought myself a new camera lens for my birthday.  I ordered it from a reputable camera dealer that I have done business with for a few years now, so I was confident that there would be no problems with the purchase.  While shipping was free on this particular order, I had the option of upgrading to a quicker delivery.  I chose two-day UPS for a very nominal fee and sure enough, the lens was delivered right on time.  The time from ordering on-line to delivery was just over 48 hours and that all happened in the midst of the worst blizzard we’ve had in thirty years (fifty if you believe some of the weather folks who like to be as dramatic as possible)!

Nowadays, one can even track a package on-line to see its almost-hourly progress from warehouse to front door.  It’s fun to see how a package gets from point A to point B.  I ordered a battery grip for my camera a while back from Amazon.  The package originated at Amazon’s warehouse in Coffeeville, KS, 169 miles south of where I live.  It was then sent Tulsa, OK, 74 miles south of Coffeeville for processing.  From Tulsa, it made its way to Oklahoma City, 104 miles farther south.  It then was flown to Lenexa, KS where it was put on a truck and delivered to my door.  While it started out only 169 miles away, it traveled 257 miles to get to my house!  But it did it on time, so I’m not complaining.

This whole process started me remembering what it was like in the “good old days” when my mother would order something for me from the Montgomery Ward catalog.  Now, I have to say that my decision-making process hasn’t change a whole lot in fifty years.  It usually takes me weeks, if not months, to make up my mind to actually buy something I want.  I know that sometimes it seems like a snap decision, but it’s like the story of the artist who was asked by the King to paint a picture for him.  After they had talked for a while, the artist agreed to paint the picture and the King agreed to pay the artist 1000 sovereigns.  A week later, the King  stopped by to see the progress on the picture.  The artist hadn’t painted a stroke; the King was a little peeved, but he left and said he’d be back later.  As it happened, the King started a war with a neighbor and didn’t get around to visiting the artist for a year, but one day, he stopped by the artist’s studio to pick up his picture.  This time he was really peeved to find that the artist still hadn’t begun the painting.  The artist realized that he was in danger of losing his head, so he picked up his paint brush and got furiously to work.  In fifteen minutes, he was finished with a magnificent picture of the King heroically riding into battle on his brilliant white horse.  The King was flabbergasted.  “You expect me to pay you 1000 sovereigns for a picture you only took fifteen minutes to paint?”  The artist, summoning all his courage and ego, replied, “Well, it only took me fifteen minutes to paint, but I’ve been thinking about it for over a year!”

Now, back when I was a kid, buying something from the catalog was a big, big deal.  We usually got three catalogs a year:  spring, fall and Christmas.  The spring and fall catalogs were huge, with hundreds of pages of useless stuff like clothes and shoes and appliances, but there was always a big section with toys and sporting equipment.  The Christmas catalog was mainly for kids and it was just full of exotic things you couldn’t get in the local dime store.  So the process went like this:  for weeks before Christmas, let’s say, you’d pour over the catalog, trying to pick out just the thing that was sure to make your life complete.  I learned after a couple of years, that this process had multiple iterations.  First, you’d pick out about a dozen things you really couldn’t live without; then you found out that you could have maybe one of those things.  The next thing you picked was always too expensive, so you’d settle on something that was acceptable, but not really your first choice.

The next step was for your mother or father to fill out the order form, write a check, put it in an envelope and mail it off.  Then the waiting began.  Some mysterious process began at this point in some far-off galaxy where the order would be received.  These days, order-filling is mainly done by computers, but way back in the fifties, some real person had to take the order form and go to the warehouse, find the rack where your item was located, take it back to shipping and send it on its way.  All of this might take days to accomplish depending on how fast the order-filler walked and how big the warehouse was!  In addition, the check had to clear the bank, so that might take another week or more.  The wait for a package to arrive was interminable.  You would rush home from school every day, expecting your newest life-changing baseball glove or model airplane to be sitting on the kitchen table and be inconsolably disappointed when it wasn’t there.  Eventually, though the baseball glove or model airplane would show up and it would be a joyous day.  Except when the package was crushed, as it often was, and your treasure had to be sent back to Montgomery Wards for a replacement; then the whole thing would start all over again!

These days, the anticipation can be compressed into just a couple of days, or even overnight, if you are really anxious to get that new camera lens.

Now, where is that baseball glove I ordered?

A little behind in my work

I don’t remember jokes.  For some reason, neither the set-ups nor the punchlines stick in my mind for any length of time.  A friend of mine, who has since moved on to that big comedy club in the sky (I’m assuming that’s where he went, though that’s not a given), used to be able to rattle off joke after joke.  I was always in awe of his ability to find just the right combination of funny stories for any occasion.

One of the few jokes I do remember, for some reason, involves the butcher who backed into his meat-grinder and got a little behind in his work.  That’s the way I’ve been feeling for the last few days; my contribution to my “photo-a-day” project has lagged.  Oh, I’ve been shooting; I just haven’t been posting.  Well, today, there are three new photos taken over the last couple of days.

  • I got a shot of Abby, our Old English Sheepdog, in an unusually calm pose.
  • The sun was streaming through the window and caught our Christmas poinsettia in a colorful pose.
  • Last night, about midnight, we had nine deer in our front yard foraging for acorns.  I processed and processed one of the photos to give the scene (of one of the deer feeding alone) a mysterious feel.

All the photos are under the tab 365 at the top.