This last piece is a toner transfer of a recent drawing, originally Aquarelle graphite on water color paper. I lost some of the tones & delicacy of the original drawing, but the transfer came out fairly well. I used Golden GAC 500 over a very smooth board. I lightly sanded the very old dry unknown finish on this scrap board, before applying medium. The sidebars are strips of a delicate pre-printed fine art paper applied with the same medium, then touched up with smudges of fine copper pigment.
Category Archives: Ramblings
Held Safe in Comfort
held in arms
held on lap
such comfort
such safety
enjoy
an illusion
of value
Spirit Boxes
As usual, thinking about what I am doing/making comes after the fact! And usually with input from others.
The sentence from my friend Maureen, used in my current art box, has provided me with a much better name for these creations. In the past I have made assemblies of "artifacts", "shrines", "reliquaries", and "treasure boxes".
Now I have a new name for all of these art pieces: spirit box.
Here is quote from my own description of work made in about ten years ago:

I struggle to find the right words to describe the assemblies I make. Each piece houses a carefully selected collection of items that have a special meaning for me. And in a way that is outside any traditional religion, each work is somehow sacred to me. The terms shrine and reliquary come to mind, however I hope that my creations contain vigor and life, as well as natural and man-made remains.All of the work I was trying to describe, and several other pieces made since, now seem to me best described as "spirit boxes". The works are absolutely creations designed to feed, repair, revive, or soothe the spirit!
A Tea Box for the Spirit
"Tea Box for the Spirit" is a piece I put together with that rather rare magical speed and certainty which is so satisfying. It started with working to organize my studio, and coming across a fabulous green tea gift box I received some years ago. It was a gift from my brother & the tea was lovely!
The "reverent humans" in this piece are resin figures I cast from a soap carving I made during my winter in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico (also some years ago). These have been waiting for me to incorporate into a finished piece of art.
The parts came together over 2 days when a photo of the two figures in the open box inspired a lovely sentence contributed by Maureen Piper: "For Spirit, reverent humans are reviving as best tea."
This box is first aid for my spririt: it incorporates some antique objects found in my mothers things, and it represents all the treasures she held onto over time. The inspiration comes from her, as do the Flora MacDonald needles (for spiritual repair), elastoplast tin (first aid for the spirit), stones & shark tooth. These were Mother's, as was the woven stand with the worn piece of drifwood & stones.
The box contains a hidden photo of Mother, with the words "For Spirit". Today is Mother's birthday, and I miss her.
Of course I have now spent many, many more hours finessing this project to make it safe to open and view properly. It is still very delicate, but can be displayed upright, then opened & viewed flat to see the layers inside.





Preparing to work … I hope!
It has been a huge challenge to get my art studio back into working order since my mother died in July.
I brought home so many things holding so many memories, stacking boxes everywhere, piles of books, blankets, linens, beautiful rocks, woven baskets, delicate ornaments, clothing, framed photos, and paintings by my grandfather.
Only two weeks ago I could barely walk across the room, but slowly, slowly things are getting distributed to family members, friends, thrift stores, or to places for use in my own house. Some things will just be stored out of the way for future consideration.
And some newly acquired furniture is now in place for use: a real desk (with drawers!) has allowed me to surplus a wide filing cabinet, and time & work has reduced the estate paperwork to a manageable quantity that can be merged into my normal storage systems. What a relief it is to have my new desk organized, and to put away that extra table & all that was on top of it.
A fabulous find has been added to my studio: a old Mutoh drafting table! While this is missing all the accessories & required an hour or two of scrubbing, it none the less takes a place of pride with my large format scanner and wide format printer as a choice art tool. This drafting table not only tilts easily with one hand, but is raised & lowered without effort using a foot pedal! Such luxury, as my current very large drafting table requires two people for any adjustment. Now that will be put flat as a worktable, I think.
Here it is arranged to look as if I am actually doing a little art, but not so. I am still struggling to get started! The transition has been exhausting. I do have room to work now, but I am still surrounded by so many reminders of Mother that it is hard to focus on my work. I need to somehow use all of this to make art...
Marketing drawings … I hope!

Products for sale
I just decided to try out the online company Society6, which sells mugs, prints, cushions, and more with the artwork of any artist who registers & posts artwork. Registration & posting is free, Society6 takes a commission on all sales. I am told they use quality materials and reproduction for their products. The site images certainly look nice.
It would be quite pleasing to sell a few mugs, cushions or tote bags with my work printed on them, so I have uploaded a few select images. Check out the cushions here, and there are also mugs and more...


No art here
This post is not so much about art.
It is just a brief explanation of the gap in my postings during the last weeks of July and into August.
My mother died on Thursday, July 24th in Jefferson Healthcare Hospital. She suffered a concussion from a fall, possibly caused by a stroke, and died one week later. This happened just two weeks after an ER visit related due to probable pneumonia. She was nearly 91, and she was ready to go. Her life had become more limited and much less rewarding. She did not want to live with daily care, and she never had to do that. She lived and died (mostly) on her own terms.
Artist’s Statement for COMMUNITY REFLECTIONS at the TKLofts
The exhibit COMMUNITY REFLECTIONS involves some hard truths. Residents of the Tashiro Kaplan lofts are part of a wider urban community; they see and experience the consequences of poverty & pain in the street every day. The harsh reality of homelessness and drug addiction is far more visible in Pioneer Square than it is in my comfortable community, but violence and suffering are here too. How can members of this community experience the danger, feel the fear, see the pain, and remain open to the humanity in everyone? My work is about trying to make sense of this chaos in our world. I am learning to use light and translucency to extend the depth of my work. This may represent the light we need to shine into the shadows of our difficult interactions with other human beings.

Two Birds Revisited



