Thursday, June 19, 2008

Magazine Madness

I love magazines. I'm the one who rips out pages (sorry, the ones with the ending of that story...) from the ones in the doctor's office. Design is everywhere!! My current favorite is Ready Made, but also on the nightstand:

The New Yorker (not for the pictures, but occasionally...!)
Glass
American Style
Oprah (you'd be surprises)
Modern Home
The Crafts Report
Southern Living
Ornament
Tallahassee Magazine
Baltimore
Quilting Arts
The Washingtonian
Coastal Living

Even the ads have great images. When I am open to inspiration, I find it everywhere. It's a good thing I have a lot of file space!

Monday, June 16, 2008

Does Art Pay?

This weekend, John and I worked the booth at the Tallahassee Pride Festival. Nice: running into old friends (15 years ago...) that now have kids!! and remembering that Tallahassee has a liberal side. Not-so-nice: Clearing $107 for a day's work, in the blazing sun and then pouring rain.

So...does art pay? It wasn't an "art" festival - so maybe folks weren't prepared to buy. (I have to say, it's the first time I've ever shared space with church groups!) Lots of positive comments, lots of interest, not so many sales.

Then it takes me the rest of the weekend to recover. Hours of standing on pavement, hours of preparation, pinch-hitting for the products that didn't arrive (where IS that velcro shipment??), etc.

Next: E-bay store?

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

a little distraction...

A few weeks ago, actually ever since I quit my day job, I've been feeding a stray. Hubby named "him" "George" ("why George?" "he just looks like a George...") and so it went. George doesn't get too close, and he doesn't like it if I get too close, either.

And then there was the incident.

I looked out the window one morning, sans glasses, to see George struggling with some dark shape. Was he fighting? Having sex? Great, stray cat sex on my deck. So I got my glasses. It was a kitten! A little black kitten, in George's mouth. When I stepped onto the deck, George dropped the baby and pushed him towards me. This, from a cat that won't give me the time of day! So I scooped up baby cat and made a nest for him inside. He was hurt - big wounds all over his neck plus missing patches of fur, an ulcer on his lip, and he was running a fever. So, unnamed kitten and I went to the vet the next day & got antibiotics, which he took like a trooper.

It doesn't take long for a kitten like this - a gift of grace - to find a place in my heart. Here he is by my keyboard, playing with a flea comb and "helping" me type. He weighs 3 pounds and 4 ounces - my other cats are 20# and 15#. His name is Pino (short for Pinot Noir) - solid black, gold eyes. Against dark furniture, he disappears when he closes his eyes.

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Making Jewelry to Make a Living...

The first studio I ever apprenticed at made jewelry, and not much else. I learned what those time&motion experts were on about - how to produce a lot, very quickly. But I longed to make art instead...

Now I am back to jewelry, but with a different attitude. Rather than making the same design endlessly I have decided to make "small batch" jewelry - like limited editions. That way, I can play with the concepts I'm currently exploring in larger pieces (these days, the magic of vitrograph stringer and texture), without feeling like I'm making the choice of "either/or."

It feels great. I feel great. Working at home is probably the best decision I have ever made.

And now I get to go with hubby on trips. Last week, we were in Orlando and stayed at the most amazing hotel - the Bohemian - downtown. It is a Kessler property, and it was like staying in a museum in the best possible way. There is a gallery, and the halls are filled with art. It made me want to hop on & off the elevator on every floor just to look. They have a piano bar with original Gustav Klimt drawings (not to mention a Wusthof grand piano). It is truly sensational, and not outrageous. Plus, it's the kind of place where *everyone* who works there is a gem. I was wandering the restaurant in mid-afternoon looking at the art, when the manager led me to a special event room just to show me the art collection there. Oh, and the table! Made of alabaster, I think, and lit from the bottom so that parts of it glowed. The gal who worked in the gallery was as good as any docent. Now, if I could only come up with the $9,000 for the Jean Claude Roy painting of a field of poppies that mesmerized me, life would be perfect.

Friday, April 18, 2008

Small town girl?

We left the greater Washington, D.C. area two years ago (Sept. 06) and moved to the tiny town of Quincy, Florida. The biggest town nearby is Tallahassee, and it barely counts as a city. I think of myself as the same (don't we all?) but when I visited D.C. this week for a conference, I felt like a veritable Beverly Hillbilly. I had dinner with a friend of mine at a panAsian restaurant - I thought I was going to burst into tears over the availability of beef rendang (Indonesian) and chicken satay (Thai). Reading the Washington Post made me delirious. Riding the metro...well, I could go on & on. One thing I MUST mention is KramerBooks, in Dupont Circle. I have been shopping there for 20 years, and it never changes. It is a tiny, hole-in-the-wall kind of place where my faux-leather briefcase/bag inevitably bumps into someone's tattoos, and where my liberal heart feels ever so slightly conservative - in comparison, anyway.

They have a table there, just inside the door (for maximum traffic interruption?) and stacked on the table are, inevitably, books I have loved - and books that I will love. I almost always buy from that table. I will admit that I felt relieved after my 2-year absence to still have read about half the volumes on the table. Quincy might be tiny, but we do still get Amazon books by mail :)
On the plane I mentioned KramerBooks to a 50ish man, who told me with some pride that he had read his VERY FIRST fiction outside of high school while posted to Iraq. He told me that he keeps himself too busy to read.

To me, too busy to read is too busy to dream. To inhabit another world. I cannot imagine not reading.

The oddest thing about the trip was that I didn't bring a camera. I am relentless about my camera, but of course I didn't feel like I was "visiting" anything "new." Leave it to Washington to bring out all the cherry blossoms, and the tulips, and the beautiful coming of spring in Rock Creek Park to make my shutter finger itch. So I can't share any photos. But - I have changed, and not just my clothing. Maybe it's because I quit my "day job" and so am less stressed. But I was calmer, letting the craziness that is DC (traffic, noise, lines, horns honking, Pope-related road closings...) wash over me. I love the energy there (and the blossoms). I love the fact that in Dupont, people with teeny-tiny yards - no bigger than a regular-sized mattress - plant oodles of tulips. I love the fact that I can shop for shoes after 9:00 at night.

But I love being home. My head is full of glass ideas (as is my notebook). Back to the studio~!

Friday, April 4, 2008

Today: first show in Tallahassee

Heck, first show in ... 2 years? 3? The great irony when we moved here in 2006 was that I finally had the studio of my dreams - and no time to use it. I am so happy that's not true any more!

Here are some pix of the work in the show.

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Florida's Mangroves

I've been thinking about mangroves. I grew up on Tampa Bay, and we had mangroves growing right around our dock. They are amazing trees - apparently they're also called "walking" trees because of the way they grow - their roots extend and then basically a new "trunk" grows. The ones I know are only about as big around as my forearm, but that's still pretty impressive. I think my next piece will incorporate my friends the mangroves. (see pic)

Friday, March 28, 2008

A Good Day in the Studio

Some days, it works. Unloaded the kiln this a.m. - a new piece, sunflower quilt, came out fabulous.  A re-fired piece, the raven, will become a component in another quilt, and he looks magestic. And a very sad-looking manatee now is swimming (added water in this firing). I managed to get the kiln company on the phone, so am now trying (again!) to re-wire the oval kiln. Re-fired the coffin with a 3 piece triptych - lovely.

And it's a historic day - all 3 big kilns clicking along. I finally fixed the oval - I hate it when I have to slow down to fix something. The next thing is the blaster - what is it about piping, that you have to deal with every single pipe every single time? 

All in all, a fine day. 4 days until the show, and counting...!

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Freezing?? In Florida??

I admit, when I moved back here from Maryland it wasn't all about sun & fun. Or fun in the sun. You get the picture. But I'm a lot happier sitting in shorts on my back porch on a sunny February afternoon than I am even *thinking* about using my tile saw when it's 32 degrees. Which would be fine, if it weren't for those talented Canadians (yes, Melanie and Les, this is you) who have actual evidence that they use their tile saw in the snow. Not a dusting, either.

I don't know how they do it. I want to curl up *inside* the kiln today and take a long nap. Maybe if I set the controller at 78....?

I hope this isn't just procrastination. There's some cool pieces - um, cooling - in the kiln now. Trying to re-wire the bathtub kiln. Have you ever seen a wiring diagram? They're - um - very diagrammy. And not the least bit useful. Guess who's calling tech support in the morning!

Monday, March 24, 2008

Finally, a glass blog

It's been a great month - resigned from job, told to stay home. Well, for me, that's the studio. And the kilns are humming! The best thing, to me, about being able to be in the studio every day is that it makes my brain work differently - I have an idea, refine it, and produce it. Now, those notebooks full of sketches are pieces of glass. 

I have wanted to make glass mobiles for a long time - years really - and am finally allowing myself to do just that. I have 2 versions out of the kiln, waiting for me to figure out the hanging and wiring. As soon as I figure out how to post a picture, I will. They're not what I'm aiming for, but I am trying very hard not to let the "perfect be the enemy of the good." That's always been a tough one for me - I want everything to be perfect, but there is always a process. I need to honor that process in myself.