Posts Tagged ‘artist’

The other night, as I was drifting off to sleep, inspiration suddenly hit me.  And I was wide awake thinking and planning and madly tapping ideas into my iPhone while hubby snoozed on beside me. (good thing he’s a heavy-sleeper!)

I want to paint my “plain-Jane-faux-wood-slab” interior doors. But instead of just painting them a solid color (like the traditional white doors of modern day homes), I want to paint designs or nature inspired murals.

Naturally, I have been scouring Pinterest for more inspiration. Have a peek:

 

 

The washed-out blue with the intricate designs on this door is beautiful!

 

 

 

Love, love, love the daisy! {duh!}

 

 

Source: google.nl via Pinterest

 

And this is a pretty amazing mural of a tree house.

 

I love tree-inspired art…I’m thinking golden Aspens would look pretty amazing on my entryway closet door!

Or what about tall, seeded grasses…cattails?!

The possibilities are endless! {If only time was too!}

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my  curly web

{filagree is fun to draw!}

With Autumn quickly approaching now (my young Oak tree in the backyard turned yellow overnight!) – I find myself inspired more and more by the whimsy of fall and Halloween.

This is a small illustration I did based off of a stamp I saw at the art supply store a few weeks back. I snapped a picture with my phone to remind me of my inspiration. I use my phone’s camera All. The. Time. for those little inspiring images that I find while out and about. Otherwise, I think my sketchbook would remain blank!

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faraway
{far away}

This photo, taken near Cottonwood Pass {Colorado} on August 5, 2012, captures “far away” perfectly.
At over 14,000 feet above sea level, you can’t get much higher without needing oxygen! Even a native Rocky Mountain girl like myself still gets a mild headache and a little dizzy hiking those peaks which nearly puncture the heavens!

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Are you wondering how I managed to get this perspective? Simple…I just laid down on my belly right in the middle of the trail! Some fellow hikers coming down the trail were puzzled I’m sure…even my kids thought that maybe Mommy needed a nap! Alas, the artist is always so misunderstood! ;)

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clouds
{something fun + clouds}

One of the best things about where I live is that nearly every single day we are given magnificent sunsets to feast upon!  I took this shot with my hubby’s iPhone 4 and all I did to “enhance” it was add my web address.

I know, right?!  Jealous?

Clouds are fun photo subjects because depending on the lighting and the other background elements you never really know what you are going to end up with.

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I typically don’t post on the weekends, but I am having way too much fun with these August photos!  I’ve always taken lots of pictures, but never really given much thought to them.  What are your favorite photo subjects – beyond the kiddos, of course!

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owl
{something I made}

I’m getting back in touch with my inner artist. And, you know what? Creating is incredibly healing.

This is a mixed media canvas that I sketched for my daughter. My fave things to draw with are Sharpies and colored pencils…but I’ve never tried that on canvas until now. To get the darker, richer color (like the night sky) I broke out my old acrylics.

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What have you made lately? Artsy craftsy stuff or otherwise? I’m really into making my own stuff lately – food, cleaning supplies, even some natural skincare products!

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We are all bored out of our minds.

So – we look for more every single day.

The balance of nature has been offset for so long – our survival instincts to find food, shelter and water – have no where to go except the aisles of our abundant grocery stores.  And houses of all shapes and sizes fill the land as far as the eye can see.  Sure, we have to have money to provide all of this, but earning a paycheck does little to fulfill our innate need for survival.

{Source: homesteadingsurvivalism.myshopify.com on Pinterest}

There is little reward felt at the end of the day for a job well done because the job(s) most of us do have such intangible results.  Instead of filling our days with hunting and gathering – surviving – we fill our days with computer screens, virtual meetings and fuzzy, beige-y gray partitions.

Even those of us who don’t work in the traditional sense (housewives, like me!) – while sometimes it may feel like we are traipsing through the muck and mire of a vast frontier, in actuality, we have homes filled with running water and electricity keeping our food cold, our clothes clean and our bellies full (at least most of us do  - I do realize that people do without these things even here in the US).

When basic survival isn’t at hand, it seems to be in human nature to constantly look for ways to fill our desires and to constantly look for more desires to fill.

Don’t get me wrong, I am just as spoiled and comfortableand quite possibly bored – as the rest of you!  I love sipping my iced coffee in my air conditioned living room as I tap away at the keys on this laptop.  In fact, I love it!

It’s not like I think civilization should reverse itself to fulfill our bored survival instincts.  But I do think it’s interesting to watch these instincts of ours try to busy themselves and take note of what they produce.

{Source: masikawa.tumblr.com on Pinterest}

Human survival instincts may just well be the foundation for the great creative minds out there!

Art - in all its glorious forms – could very well be the expression of our human survival instincts.

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Where do you think Art & Creativity are formed?  Are some people just born that way, or is a factor of survival?  The tortured artist is a cultural stereotype…do you think there is some truth to it?  Do you really need to endure and survive something extraordinary in order to be an artist? Or does “ordinary, modern human existence” qualify as surviving something extraordinary? I’d love to hear your thoughts!  Oh, and Happy August to all!!  

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Gratitude is the buzz word these days.  Be thankful for all that you have, send positive energy out into the Universe and it will be reciprocated tenfold.

Yes, I believe in Gratitude.

But, first and foremost, I believe in Love.

Source: youngmarriedchic.com on Pinterest

Awhile back, I stumbled upon this blog post about writing a daily love list.

It struck a chord with me, and I’ve been writing love lists in my private journal for weeks now.

-  I love writing.

-  I love sharing my writing.  

Those were the first two things I decided to list the very first time I did the exercise.  At the time, I was feeling silly and self-absorbed for even considering that my blog would be reader-worthy.  But then, I realized, who really cares?  I blog because I feel the need to share these pieces of myself with the world.  

Like so many other writer-types out there, I am an introvert.  So if you were to meet up with me in person, I would likely be quiet and reserved, especially if I didn’t know you very well.  This is my space in the world to share those thoughts and feelings, musings, etc. that I would likely keep bumping into in my mind for years to come, never finding a voice to free them.

This love list thing – I dare you to try it sometime!   Sit down with your journal, or a laptop, or even a napkin – and write a list of 10 things that you love (about yourself, your life, the world around you!).  I guarantee the more you do it, the more you’ll love it!

Love is where we come from and where we are going.

In the wise words of The Beatles’, “Love is all you need.

I believe in Love.

I hope you believe in Love too.

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What do you love most about what makes you, You?  Have you ever made a love list or a gratitude list?  Is love really all you need (besides the basics of food, shelter, etc.)?  

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At the tender age of seven, I took it upon myself to write my very first book.  I illustrated it, and covered it with construction paper, printing out the title and all three of my names (yes, even back then!).  I still have it.  And, lately I’ve considered framing it in a shadow box to hang up as a reminder of who am I.

I am a writer.  Words bubble up from my soul.  I watch, observe and imagine more than most people (except for my fellow writer’s).  Stories appear everywhere, characters playing through my mind, introducing themselves, asking to be tucked away to wait for their stories to unfold.

I wrote and read my way through high school.  And one would think that someone like me would have been a Literature major, but no.  I went to a very competitive engineering and science school.  Mostly because my friends and family questioned what I would do with a Literature major, besides teach (which I knew I didn’t want to do).

In college, I wrote technical papers aplenty and found a niche that continued into my career.  Technical people typically do not write well.  So between my natural ability with words and my desire to actually sit down and document technical processes, well, I was in high demand.

Then, about seven or eight years ago, I started feeling out of sorts.  A book called “The Artist’s Way“, by Julia Cameron, came into my life in a round about way.  That book reacquainted me with my creative self.  And, over time, my life began to change in small and sometimes dramatic ways.

There was a particular poem that Julia Cameron wrote that I printed out and hung in my office.  Only a handful of coworkers actually took the time to read it, and out of those people, only one person commented.  He asked if I had written it.  I chuckled something like “I wish”.  He looked me straight in the eyes and told me, “Stop wishing that you were a writer, and just start writing.”

That comment sparked a conversation that lasted over an hour.  This man, a co-worker that I had only spoken to briefly here and there about work, became my messenger, my guide.  What he said to me was so off-the-cuff and honest, it pierced right through my daily-life filters and sunk in, deep.  Here I am, many years later, still feeling the spot in my soul where his words landed.

I don’t know where I’m headed in this journey of words –  my words, my stories, my truth.  I’m not sure I am supposed to know where I’m going (are any of us?!).  So I will continue to write and read and follow along this winding path of words.

I would like to share the poem that started this journey for me – it so perfectly puts into words what I feel about being a writer.

Words For It, by Julia Cameron

I wish I could take language
And fold it like cool, moist rags.
I would lay words on your forehead.
I would wrap words on your wrists.
“There, there,” my words would say –
Or something better.
I would ask them to murmur,
“Hush” and “Shh, shhh, it’s all right.”
I would ask them to hold you all night.
I wish I could take language
And daub and soothe and cool
Where fever blisters and burns,
Where fever turns yourself and you.
I wish I could take language
And heal the words that were the wounds
You have no names for.

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Have you ever had one of those “a-ha” moments?  Doesn’t this poem just speak volumes about what it is to be a writer?  Do you have a favorite poem, or book, or piece of art that serves as your inspiration?   Did you major in Literature in college?  When did you write your first book (as a child, teen?)

s_a_a

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When it comes to writing, I take myself way too seriously.

Maybe you’re that same kind of writer?

The one who wants to be relevant, sound smart, deep, even waxing philosophical perhaps?

Yup, that’s me.

I am inside my head way too much.
I am a thinker.
Is that just par for the course when you’re navigating life using a writer’s brain…a writer’s soul?

But sometimes I just think way too much. I just need to write it out, whatever it may be.

And what do  I do in the many minutes, hours, days and weeks that I spend not writing?

Well, I spend a lot of time doing.

Doing mom things, doing wife things, doing other creative things besides writing.

I love creating so much that I considered starting up one of those artsy-momma type blogs. That’s one of those “someday” things though (like when they invent an extra hour – or five! – for our days). In the meantime, I create for myself and my family through photography, drawing (Sharpies & colored pencils make me giddy!), sewing, cooking and gardening. (Yes! I have way too many hobbies, but how can you pick just one?!)  Is there such a thing as a compulsive creator?

Anyways…I’m sure I’ll share some of those creations here from time to time.

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So what about you? What do you do in your “non-writing” time? Do you have any creative hobbies? Do those creative hobbies inspire your writing life?

s_a_a

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bees

Salem's Bee

My dreams were filled with bees a few nights ago. Not in a scary, swarm-like fashion, but in a beautiful, almost magical sense.

Twenty or so bees swarmed around me, at first, I was worried, swatting at them. The people around me looked at me as though I were crazy. That’s when I realized they were only visible to me. Some landed on me, and a few of the other people around me, they inserted their stingers into our skin, pumping golden fluid (honey-like?) into our bodies. There was no pain, no sensation at all. The others that the bees had landed on and “stung”, they didn’t even register a response. I wasn’t sure what the bees were there for, what they were injecting into me (& the others), but I did get the sense that it was important, and very good, and that I was very special to be able to witness it.

This bee dream clung to my thoughts throughout the day. Pressing me to investigate, to do something with it. So, I listened to my inner child and I drew bees. Above, I scanned this drawing, applied a simple Photoshop filter and cropped it down a bit (in attempt to add interest, but I think I still prefer the original).

I also Googled it (of course!) and found that bees are a very significant and powerful symbol. Some cultures believe bees are the link between the realms of life and death, intuition and the metaphysical. Others portray them as a strong symbol of community and communication, or as the symbol of the feminine representing fertility.

In all my years of dream interpretation I have always read, been told, and come to know that the best interpretation is the one from your gut. Afterall, it is your dream, and your subconscious is trying to convey a message.

I’ve always had a strong intuitive nature, and after my near death experience a couple years ago, that gift has noticeably increased. These more profound-type dreams enter my sleep much more often. This is the first dream I have had (that I remember, at least) about bees, and I think that the bees were there to remind and reassure me about my own intuitive gifts – that perhaps I really can “see” things that others can not.

s_a_a

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