The Portrait. My Story about Being a Young Art Student. (Recently Selected for Publication by Ruminate).

I felt completely seen and understood when I saw her. The light fell dimly in the room where she was bent down on her knees, her thighs and calves supporting her torso and upper-body. Her legs seemed solid and strong, carrying her weight as she kneeled on what looked like a cold tile floor. Her body was turned to the side. From my perspective I could see every detail clearly: how her muscles and joints were pressing slightly against her skin. The intricate nature of her hands and feet were drawn with clarity and precision, the soft charcoal coaxing the firm roundness of flesh into existence. She was moving, her head coming down to the baseline of the image, moving her weight onto her haunches, then back to the floor again. She was completely bare, hovering over something unseen. The artist had drawn herself with part of her skeleton exposed, her skull rising above, yet still part of her. The movement of her mark-making, the gesture of her trained scribble, was used to create unity between her body and her bones. The movement of that scribble was like wind through a willow tree, or how sand must feel being sifted and pulled from the shore to open water.

 

This drawing was a departure from the images of women I was used to seeing. Airbrushed and Photoshopped, wearing peach colored lip gloss.  Women with impossibly arched backs pushing themselves into a pose, morphing into poster children for a Coke and a smile.  Or in the pornography I found hidden inside my brother’s nightstand.  These images were glossy and contrived.  I became spellbound by their celluloid nature, but also eerily repelled by them in equal measure.  I felt the weight of an ideal that was absurd, impossible to achieve.  This portrait was, by contrast, honest. It contained texture and dimension. Beauty informed by design and ineffable grit. Its splendid composition carried a story of what it felt like to live in a female body--and the contradiction and cultural weight that came along with it.

 

As I stood in front of the portrait, I remembered the first time I felt the need to cover my body. I was eight years old. My grandmother (who often took me to church in the hot summer months) began to take a keen interest in my wardrobe. The length of my skirt or the amount of my shoulder exposed were of particular interest. She would say nothing. It was more her squinted-eye and furrowed-brow that told me she disapproved. When I asked, “Why?” I remember silence. This silence triggered an enormous amount of shame. That shame followed me into my years as a young adult. It had followed me to that a day as a beginning art student.

 

In traditional life drawing, the instruction is done with a model that is completely unclothed. Our class would be drawing that day from live models, but this course was offered from a Christian University that used a tight filter to sift its theology.  As a result, the study of the nude figure was deemed inappropriate. As the model, dressed in her swimsuit, came into the room I picked up my porous charcoal.  The medium scraped then softened, welling into the microscopic crevices of the paper.  I drew her with a primordial longing to know my own original goodness.  

 

Now, the classroom was empty, scattered with abandoned easels and discarded drawing paper. The portrait was hanging in the classroom, having been placed there as part of the university's permanent art collection. I stood next to it, gazing at my silent mentor. It seemed implausible that I could make a drawing with such honesty. But still, somewhere inside myself, I hoped it was possible. I knew that the artist who drew this image had started in this classroom. I saw the evidence of what she had made. I knew that if she could make this sort of work that it was possible for me.  In my mind I drew an imaginary thread from the portrait into the center of my being.  I held on to that thread like it was life itself.

 

When I was eight, I had taken the look my grandmother had given me and embraced it.  The disdain, consciously held by her or not, became etched inside me. Her gaze like a hand drawn image, a portrait of what it meant to be a young girl. My childhood mind understood that I was loved only if I met certain expectations—and I came to believe I was innately flawed.  

 

That day, in the light of the empty classroom next to the portrait, I started the process of drawing and living in a new way.  I became aware of what Mary Oliver meant when she spoke of the “soft animal of your body.”  Her words, calling me toward a reclaiming of a lost birthright.  I began to understand the distortion and untruth of what I had internalized.  I do not want to hand that message, the distortion, on to my daughter. So I continue the process of drawing something new. With the images that I make, but more importantly, with how I look into my daughter’s eyes. I want her to know that her body is miraculous, that every part of her is a gift.  She a combination of dust, mind, and spirit.  She is originally good.  I honestly believe it is true.

 

In the pursuit of making art and living a life that makes sense to me, I find evidence of truth and beauty present in the world. There is a Living Presence that meets me through the process of artmaking.  This Mystery is beyond my understanding.  On my better days, I know myself to be completely seen and understood in this love. In my mind I draw an imaginary thread between myself and this Mystery.  I hold on to that thread like life itself.

Where I Fell In Love

It was a small fishing boat, a khaki-colored, weighty vessel we dubbed The Brown Hornet.  A nod to our childhood when Fat Albert was cool, and Bill Cosby was the world’s best father-figure.  It was tiny, not more than twelve feet long, made for rivers and small lakes.  We christened her with a graceful tip from a can of beer over her bow, which was held together with screws, duct tape, and what was left in a tube of industrial strength adhesive. We set out to the inland channels that spilled into the expansive blue of Lake Michigan.

 

It was barely summer. The water was still numbing and cold.  But the day was splendid and warm. We followed one small river into a larger river, than through a large no wake channel that flowed into the big lake. The water was calm—a personification of glass as far as the eye could see, and the Brown Hornet skidded along its surface gracefully.  We stopped to watch the sun go down—the horizon filled with color.  I jumped in, my body shocked by the sudden cold, but I took one moment to ponder, to look at the boat above me, the expansive water around me.  I held this beauty in my heart.

 

It was when we left that we noticed the leak.  In our moment of calm watching the sunset, the v-shaped hull had steadily taken on water.  The boat had an outboard motor, and the hand held throttle was open as far as it could go, but the boat could not get on plain. I realized the water was inside the boat. It was past my ankles, and rising.  We were close to going under.

 

With night coming and a boat almost submerged. With miles between us and our car with no plan B, I fell in love.  I fell in love with the messy, vibrant, wonder. With the thrilling need to be together.  To watch the sunset by any means necessary, even if it meant going down with the ship.  I fell in love regardless, in the most beautiful place on earth, with the one person who was worth giving up the certainty of my solitary life for the mystery of two being one.

Listen to the story told on The Story Gathering Podcast here:  http://storygatherings.com/podcast/

 

 

Wild

My mentors taught me, when it came to painting, to aim for intelligence with layers of crazy. A cocktail of childhood with a driver’s license, blasting a mix tape of Beethoven’s Fifth tempered with a strong work ethic. What they were teaching was not how to make paintings, but how to live a good life. I used to think art took place in a studio and eventually showed up in a gallery, or somthing like that.  Now I know it is just how I bring my soul, my full self, and share it in what I do. I have come, through lived experience, to understand it is the only way to bring lasting change into this world.

Last night, you could have found me in the studio, hours after the kids where tucked in bed, scraping the paint away-layers of hard work-gone- just like that.  Out of frustration. Out of failure. But falling in love with what was revealed. What happened when I just went in deep to the experience was Joy. You see, it’s not a quest for perfect. I don’t even care if you like it. I just want to know-can you feel alive and be astonished? Can you let it be wild?

 

One Effortless Way to Be More Creative in Seven Days

When I first decided to join in The 100 Day Project, the online community committed to creating and sharing work, the first fear that came up was the lack of time.  Kids, work, errands, the long list of things to do...I just wasn't sure if it could be done.  When you want to make something original, sooner or later you will run into Resistance.  Resistance as defined by Steven Pressfield in his classic book The War of Art, is the universal force that acts against human creativity.

Resistance showed up for me as a fear of lack of time.

After awhile, I remembered something I had written in my journal. When my daughter was three months old I decided to cut back my full time work schedule to part time.  I figured that I would always have my career. By staying part time I would avoid large gaps in my employment history.  But once my time was spent...it was gone.

The truth is the only thing we really have is time.  Until we don't anymore.

I knew I needed help.  It came in a very unexpected way.  It came in the form of an Excel spreadsheet.  

For seven days, I set my phone to go off every two hours, after the timer I would record my activity.  The results changed everything.

With this data I saw patterns.  I saw ways that I could batch tasks together.  Times when I could take one hour a week to run errands after I dropped the kids off at school or after work instead of two or three hours.  I began to understand that every time I shifted gears between activities, I lost productivity.  So I became committed to organizing my time more effectively.

The fact that I was recording my daily activities made me more aware and present in my day.

With this new information, I knew that no matter what, I could find 20 minutes each day to participate in The 100 Day Project.  I also gave myself an out:  If after 20 minutes I felt done for the day, that would be fine.  If I wanted to continue after 20 minutes, even better.  This kept me accountable, but also made my brain feel like it had a choice.  This prevented me from feeling overwhelmed.

How will I feel after 20 days?  After 60?  After 80?  I'm not sure.  You'll have to tune in and find out.  I can say, after almost a week in, the word that comes to mind is:  Empowered.

If you would like a copy of my Time Spreadsheet, click Here, and I'll send you one.  If you would like to follow along with my 100 Day Project on Instagram, click Here.

 

Safe Space Painting Project

I wanted to make a series of abstract paintings for an exhibition this fall, but the figure kept coming into the composition. You may not be able to really see the figure yet, it's partially cropped out, and not clearly articulated.   This image began to emerge after hours of painting and wiping everything away, and starting over.  Again and again.

After I got past my own trying, this movement came, and I knew it was the beginning--it just felt right.  It's incomplete now, in the raw, unfinished.  But it's real.  I plan on keeping things unrefined for now, but we'll see where the process goes.

Here is a start of a series inspired by my daughter.  Who says that the only place she feels safe is at home with mom.  I've wanted to create a space for a seven year old who is smart and sensitive, who somehow has figured out why she and her classmates have lock down drills at school, and understands things I wish she didn't have too.

I don't have answers for all of her questions.  Just an endless amount of love, and encouragement to persist with a messy grittiness.  I tell her over and over that she is innately good, and loved just the way she is.  That the whole damn thing is one bittersweet gift.  Except I don't say damn, she's only seven, after all.

Now that I've stated working on this series, I realized that there is an ache in all of us for this.  Hemingway wrote about it in "A Clean Well Lighted Place."  Dillon sings about "Shelter from the Storm."  Many artists have tried to articulate what shelter looks like.  Or what the absence, or lack of shelter feels like.

So here is the beginning of the Safe Space Painting Project.

When Enough Became Enough

 

When I was completing my Master’s Degree in Fine Art, I studied abroad in Italy.  What I learned there changed everything.  I had come with the idea that I would encounter an ancient culture, and by ancient I mean a culture that was less advanced than what I knew.  I found just the opposite. As I was walking through the remains of the city of Pompeii, I realized that we have not done things better than in Renaissance Italy.  Partially because of the intelligence, the design, and the innovation.  But mostly because of the hand-made craftsmanship that is everywhere.  The handles on cutlery found in a Pompeiian home are painstakingly well crafted.  The quality of the marble floors and intricate detail of the mosaic walls, the expanse of the architecture, it all holds up and surpasses anything that would be made today.  In a postindustrial, information saturated age, the cost of such craftsmanship is irreplaceable.  We couldn’t afford it.

 

 When St. Paul writes in Ephesians 2:10 that, “…We are God’s handiwork…”  I consider his words in the context of the culture Paul was writing in, a culture similar to what I observed in Pompeii. I am not talking about Religion or a Christianity that is overly Westernized or simplified.  I am searching for what it means to be fully alive and human.  The Greek word Paul used for handiwork is “poiema.”  It is where we get the English word for poem.  Some researchers would go so far as to say that Paul is describing humankind as God’s Artwork.  In Paul’s day, artwork wasn’t in some quiet museum waiting to be observed, it was all around. A part of everyday experience.  Everything was handmade, and considering what I observed in Pompeii, handmade extremely well. Paul was a craftsperson, financing his travel through work as a tent maker.  I imagine craft would have meant a great deal to him. Considering where Paul lived and traveled, he would have been exposed to Etruscan frescoes depicting beautiful landscapes and Roman Architecture with grand and expansive columns and ornate reliefs. I wonder if Paul was thinking about a particular work of art when he wrote this passage, and if so, what kind of significance did it have to him? I do know that he asks me to remember my identity is a beautiful, one of a kind, hand-made thing.  Maybe he knew something about creativity and craftsmanship that we have forgotten today.  Maybe this is how we are designed, to make and invent things.  Innately, just because…

 

I used to think my value as an artist came from what I did, but now I know that the real flesh and blood matters are found in my artist’s heart.  The heart I was born with.  I used to put the mantel of financial success on my work. Or how popular my work became.  Or praise I got for its uniqueness.  Because if I am honest I have a real fear that…when it’s all said and done that I will have missed it. That my life will pass and that I won’t make a significant contribution, that I screwed it up—my one chance—and now I will dissolve like a vapor into the unknown and nobody will notice or care.  There is this primal longing within me to matter.  I try to get a handle on this fear by performing.

 

We live in a culture that affirms the idea that people who work hard enough, who are smart enough, invest their money well and don’t buy expensive jeans, that keep that twenty something appearance well into middle age, or who get all A’s, who exercise when they are supposed to, and who have a diet of only greens and lean protein. That they are the ones.  They are the ones worth it.  They are the ones keeping all the rules just right.  Those who reject this social norm we label dilatants, slackers…they are shamefully insignificant. It’s probably why we don’t value our elderly like we should, or our mentally challenged, or even our children.  Because when you get down to it, we find a person’s real value resides in the status of what they do.

 

But we are poems.  We are artwork.  It sounds too good to be true. It sounds like a lie that dreamers believe who don’t live in the real world where results matter.  But what I have observed is this: Those who are truly doing creative work, who have the kind of lives that everybody else wants, they know this.  They let this belief reside in their bones.  They don’t do work chasing anything, they do work because they already have it to give.  They have changed the dynamic of life from one of a transaction i.e. you do this to get that, to one that starts and ends with joy.  It is life changing.  It is changing me.  It changes the space from which I make my work, whether it is work that supports my family financially or not.  I no longer work for money, I work for money that supports a life well lived.  Money is a means, not a master. It creates more opportunities to be grateful on all kinds of levels.  And when I get a chance, I break bread and wine with others, and maybe cry and then laugh, and then cry some more.  Because poems we are.  Every one of us.

 

If you like the ideas I have shared and would like to take this information to the next level, sign up to my News Letter to receive a free digital download on Creativity and Finding Your Individual Voice, here. 

Where I Fell In Love

It was a small fishing boat, a khaki-colored, weighty vessel we dubbed The Brown Hornet.  A nod to our childhood when Fat Albert was cool, and Bill Cosby was the world’s best father-figure.  It was tiny, not more than twelve feet long, made for rivers and small lakes.  We christened her with a graceful tip from a can of beer over her bow, which was held together with screws, duct tape, and what was left in a tube of industrial strength adhesive. We set out to the inland channels that spilled into the expansive blue of Lake Michigan.

 

It was barely summer. The water was still numbing and cold.  But the day was splendid and warm. We followed one small river into a larger river, than through a large no wake channel that flowed into the big lake. The water was calm—a personification of glass as far as the eye could see, and the Brown Hornet skidded along its surface gracefully.  We stopped to watch the sun go down—the horizon filled with color.  I jumped in, my body shocked by the sudden cold, but I took one moment to ponder, to look at the boat above me, the expansive water around me.  I held this beauty in my heart.

 

It was when we left that we noticed the leak.  In our moment of calm watching the sunset, the v-shaped hull had steadily taken on water.  The boat had an outboard motor, and the hand held throttle was open as far as it could go, but the boat could not get on plain. I realized the water was inside the boat. It was past my ankles, and rising.  We were close to going under.

 

With night coming and a boat almost submerged. With miles between us and our car with no plan B, I fell in love.  I fell in love with the messy, vibrant, wonder. With the thrilling need to be together.  To watch the sunset by any means necessary, even if it meant going down with the ship.  I fell in love regardless, in the most beautiful place on earth, with the one person who was worth giving up the certainty of my solitary life for the mystery of two being one.

Listen to the story told on The Story Gathering Podcast here:  http://storygatherings.com/podcast/

 

 

Story to Spill: Three Hacks to Experience Art in Your Daily Life

 

Picasso famously stated that, “Every child is an artist.  The problem is how to remain an artist once we grow up.”  It’s true, I believe.   I’ve never met a child who sat in front of a box of Legos worrying about what they were going to make, or sat with of a bunch of crayons or markers wondering what in the world they might do with them.  In contrast, more often than not, a common response I observe when people find out I am an artist is this, “Wow, that’s great.  I couldn’t even draw a stick figure.”

For some of us art become a problem to figure out, some kind of elite challenge only for qualified experts, or a certain kind of people.  A select few of creative, talented, skinny-jeaned and trendy-glasses wearing people.

But here is the deal:  The arts are a conduit to tell a story about what it is like to be a human being.  That’s it.  If you are a human being, this stuff called the arts is for you. There are parameters to be sure, of design principles and critical discourse, and they are important.   But this thing, this deeply inventive notion that we can engage with, is for everyone.  It is perhaps the most democratic of agencies we possess.

Here is what I think happened for some of us:  Think back to your elementary school experience.  There were probably a handful of your classmates that did well in art class, and even fewer who were celebrated or recognized for their talent.  The reality is, unless an adult, most likely an art teacher, recognized and pointed out your creative potential when you were young, you likely stepped through your early development believing that you were not creative.  This can leave a gap in understanding of the arts, and a longing to reconnect with the part of ourselves that engages with creativity. 

Here are some suggestions that may help from being an observer of the arts to actively engaging in them:

1.      Trust Your Curiosity.  You opened this article to learn more.  I believe that creative experiences are tangible in everyday, ordinary life.   While in the midst of running errands, going to work, and other standard necessities of day to day, a sensitivity can be cultivated to engage with and experience wonder.  In fact, it is often during times of mindful idleness, experienced in ordinary tasks, that our minds can wonder and daydream.  This is an important component of engaging with creativity.    One of my favorite poems is by Gregory Orr, the inspiration for which came to him while he was washing dishes.  Let wonder engage with you by following your curiosity in the midst of routine tasks.

2.     Accept That Beauty is an Everyday, Common Occurrence in this World.  With so much of technology culture and news cycles relying on negative stories to generate ratings and “clicks” it is easy, I would argue likely, to be overwhelmed with the heaviness of the news content in our modern society.  Art reminds us, and makes us more sensitive to, the beauty that surrounds us every day.  I’m not saying to live life with blinders on, just live with a more balanced and nuanced perspective.

3.     Realize that You Have Been Changed by Art Already, and Make Room for More of That Experience.  I bet you can think of at least one song, photograph, movie, or play that connected with you.  Maybe the idea that life is a rich and varied experience that is meant to be enjoyed was somehow communicated.  Or perhaps it was the loss of something wonderful that needed expression.  Whatever it was, you encountered something that made you feel more alive.  There is room for increased amounts of that kind of experience.

The good news is, you will not have to go far to find art in your community, so choose an event and go.  Which leads me to a shameless plug alert:  First Friday Gallery Hops are coming this November 4th.   If you live close to the Grand Rapids Area, I would love to see you at this event.  First Fridays happen every month on the Avenue for the Arts on South Division.  There you will find artwork by local artists, handmade goods, and food and drink specials at local eating establishments.   

For the upcoming First Friday, I have been involved in coordinating an exhibition at Spiral Gallery, located on 44 Division Avenue, which will be showcasing the work of Kendall College of Art and Design of FSU (KCAD) Painting Alumni.  The exhibition will feature the work of five artists, all graduates of KCAD’s Master of Fine Art Program in Painting.  The work of these artists is distinctly different and varied.  Some working within the boundaries of realism, others working with more expressive techniques and subject matter, while others are using unique and diverse materials in their work.  This variety of processes makes this exhibition an opportunity to engage with the varied medium of painting in new and unexpected ways.  The opening is from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.  I would love it if you stopped by and said hello.  I would be interested to meet you, see your perspective, and continue this conversation.

Artists Included in KCAD Painting Alumni Invitational:  Katie Moore, Nancy Oaks-Hall, Dustin Rogers, Beth Siewert Purdy, and Michael Breakiron.  

To follow Spiral Gallery on Facebook and view the Invite for the KCAD Painting Alumni Invitational:

https://www.facebook.com/SpiralGalleryGR/

For more information on Avenue for the Arts First Friday Gallery Hops:

http://avenueforthearts.com/first-friday-gallery-hops/

To Read the Poem:  After the Guest, by Gregory Orr:

https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poetrymagazine/browse?contentId=34400