I stepped out of the studio this year and back into the classroom. I traded in the quiet and solitude for a cacophony of kid chaos and enthusiasm. Their unending chattiness was matched only by their creativity, persistance and deep care for the world they were growing up in. These sixth graders took life on in all of their push pull pre adolescent glory. This was a “hit the ground running” year full of new learning, relationship building and always wondering what new challenge was ahead. In 2017 I wrote an article about my previous years in the classroom and how I left every year behind recognizing that my students always gave more to me than I could have ever given to them. This year was no different. I learned that I still love teaching and by far the best part is working directly with students, helping us both find the very best parts of ourselves in the journey together. This year turned out to be one none of us will ever forget. When I think of my student’s it is all I need to have hope in our future.
Notes from Blue Mountain
Waking up early each morning, I often heard the last loon's call and its mate's response off in the distance, marking the end of their day as I was just beginning mine. It was always a fitting start in this near magical place in the middle of the Adirondacks called Blue Mountain Center. The setting, surrounded by forests, mountains and lakes, provided the perfect place for writers, artists, filmmakers, musicians and actors to unplug, reflect, rejuvenate and to work. The thread binding the 15 of us was reflected in our work which was rooted in social justice in some form or fashion. We added our names to the long and storied list of others who had gone before us since Blue Mountain Center opened in 1982. This was a very special place.
I came to begin the last series of three around the issue of healing sexual trauma. This series, The Body as Talisman follows She's Come Undone (2018) and Terrible Beauty. (2016) I worked daily in my own private, very large studio with the woods right outside my door. I moved all my things in (which I had shipped) on my second day like I was going to be there for years. I spent the first week thinking, writing and doing drawing studies in preparation for the work. The rest of the time was spent doing both printmaking and painting with 11 new 14"x 17" pieces and two 3'x 6' scrolls. It was heaven, having the luxury of time, space and quiet to work.
Although I was so grateful for the full days in the studio I had another equally important intention to aid closure to my particular journey to healing. I challenged myself to do things I had never done or had stopped doing since the time of the sexual assault when I was 10. It was time to let go of all the smallish residual fears which had followed me since that day. I had a list and I went for it. I went bike riding every day, hiked in the woods alone several times, swam in open water daily and went canoeing. So, although my time at Blue Mountain Center provided an incredible opportunity to work on my art and to meet the most amazing people, it also left an indelible mark on my soul and for that I am forever grateful.
View from my studio, woods to the lake
Presentation night at the halfway point of the month long session.
Presentation in the main house. It included poetry readings and showing images from Terrible Beauty and She’s Come Undone.
I offered a monotype workshop for the other residents one afternoon.
Lots of laughing this month.
Redeeming the Woods
The Body as Talisman
Through the years, I lost count of the times my mother told the story of their first year in the house I grew up in. It was the first house built in the neighborhood. I imagined a thick forested area interrupted by two strips of barren land bulldozed into the shape of 24 neatly arranged plots. According to the story they lived in the neighborhood alone for several months surrounded by forest and wildlife. She delighted in recalling the menagerie of animals who made their home in their backyard during hunting season. Four years later, after I was born the neighborhood had filled in and looked like many of the neighborhoods that dotted my hometown and the rest of the mid west, a one story ranch with a long driveway and a garage. The front and backyard combined to form an acre of manicured heaven. But right beyond the yard was the woods. Someone had bought the land behind our street of neatly horizontal plots which ran the length of the entire neighborhood. Apart from their single family home about 1/4 mile away they left the woods as it was, thick, dark and wild.
I had strict instructions to never go into the woods alone and so it retained some mystery as I was growing up. There was somewhat of a small clearing between 3 trees on the edge by our house that I used to sneak out to, working out various scenarios of imaginative play. It was the 60’s and children had a great deal of freedom to roam the neighborhood and beyond. I spent my summers on my bike all day with a daily routine of going uptown, hitting the parks and the pharmacy's penny candy aisle. At least once a week, I checked the appliance store for oversized boxes that my father would pick up on his way home from work so that I could build houses with them. Typically, I was out in the morning, home for lunch and back on my bike until dinner time. Again, it was the 60's.
The day of note started just as any other. I had a full day doing my rounds and was excited about a refrigerator box that had just become available that day. Almost home, I rounded the corner on my street. A group of boys stood blocking the sidewalk about 4 houses down. I assumed they would move and let me pass. I slowed down, but did not stop. They did not let me pass. Instead, one grabbed my handle bars and another pulled me off my bike, dragged me along a side yard between two houses, through the weeds and into the woods. On that day the hot and humid woods became the setting for a sexual assault which haunted me for years, marking the loss of innocence. It was the day the world became a dangerous place.
On that day, my fondness for the woods changed dramatically and by association, all forests became a living metaphor for my anxiety and fear. Over these years I have worked through my complicated relationship with the forest. I have spent many weekends hiking in the Pacific Northwest. I relish the wonder of the woods; the faint musty odor of the dark soil, cascading beds of the greenest ferns, repetitive fungi spread out like a beautiful fan and a single trail breaking the plane between grasses and weeds. Looking up at a kaleidoscope of green and blue above. Although I have made friends with the forest, it was a conditional friendship. I have never been able to walk in the woods alone since the day of the sexual assault. As much as I loved the forest it still was not a safe place. I nurtured that belief that all these years it was unthinkable to ever enter the woods alone. It seemed fitting that it was time to put that long and tightly held belief to rest.
I was grateful to be awarded a residency at Blue Mountain Center in the middle of the pristine lands of the Adirondack State Park in New York. This special place is known for its soft edged emerald mountains, clear and clean lakes, thick, lush forests and an ever changing sky which reflects its own majesty to the water below.
Much like the slight sense of courage it takes to overcome the hesitation of jumping into to the cold waters of a freshwater lake I put my hiking boots on and went for a hike into the woods at daybreak on the day after I arrived. I set out alone, my anxiety cloaked in doubts about my ability to find the trail, worrying the grade might be too much for a recent ankle injury, will the black flies torment me. (They did.) Looking back behind me every so often to make sure no one was following me, all the while tamping down those thoughts of that day, Swatting at the flies while swatting the repetitive thought of what if something horrible happened today. My internal work was much like the hike, rainy, sweaty, uncomfortable and steep. Taking it one step at a time I developed a slow and plodding rhythm with a mind that never quite settled down. The trail was called Lookout Point Trail and my intention was to reach the top that day, however, between the bugs and my monkey mind I had enough and decided to turn around half way up. Perhaps a metaphor for the healing needed, often in pieces, spurts, not a continuous smooth arc as we would sometimes wish. I did, however, walk out of the woods with a feeling of satisfied exhilaration for having started this journey. I was finally putting the ghosts of the past to bed. Two days later, I went back to the trail and was pleasantly surprised to find less bugs and less intruding thoughts, a truly more pleasant experience and after more sweating, plodding and encouraging self talk I made it to the top. The view was well worth the walk through the woods.
She's Come Undone
When I was 12 years old I didn't tell anyone because I thought it was my fault and because I didn't think anyone would believe me. Of course, there was no one who could corroborate my story. Years later, I got the message loud and clear. Today, 64 years later, I got the message loud and clear. Today, nobody would believe me, or if they did, they wouldn't care.
83 year old woman (October 6, 2018 )
During the Senate's Supreme Court's confirmation hearings I started reading through my Twitter feed as #believeher started trending. The above quote was the one that stopped me in my tracks. In 2016, before #metoo I completed a series of paintings and conceptual pieces, Terrible Beauty, based on my own childhood experience of sexual assault. Like countless survivors, 30 years passed until I told anyone. As I went through the other comments on Twitter I came across another that hit me equally as hard. A young women railed against those who came forward so many years later, not understanding why something that happened so long ago had any impact on them now. Her final advice, Just get over it and move on. I am guessing that this young woman has not have the same experience and given that one in five women in this country have been raped and one in three have experienced some form of contact sexual violence the odds are pretty great that she may have survivors in silence in her life.
As I took in all that transpired over the last few weeks I kept coming back to the hard reality that women have not been believed and in many cases have dealt with the destructive and life changing aftermath of sexual assault alone and in their own way. In my mind, the work I did for Terrible Beauty was not only hugely cathartic, but in the end was more about the effects of those years of silence as much as the event itself. The painting Fear was My Imaginary Friend, summed it up best for me, An undercurrent of fear was always present, its tentacles reaching all parts of me, affecting every decision and idea about myself. I thought about the 83 year old women on Twitter and wondered what her silence and the festering of this most intimate of wounds would have cost her throughout her lifetime.
In my studio, I had just hung a 60"x60" blank canvas, gessoed and prepped for a new painting. The plan was to paint several figures since I have just recently returned to painting with oils after a 4 year journey with mixed media. I intended that this canvas would be completely experimental to "move the paint around" and to not get fussy about the outcome. Instead, I couldn't seem to help myself as I imagined this 83 year old woman. Her narrative emerged; the girl, the woman and the witness, leaving it for the viewer to fill in the blanks. Its titled, She's Come Undone. In the end, I am hopeful that we as a country will one day look back at this painful moment in history and recognize it as the moment of pivot for things to start changing, a time when women will be believed.
BEHIND THE CURTAIN
One of the many reasons I love summer is that I take a break from my regular studio hours and try to get out in the community. Since my teaching days I have always believed that the making of art should be accessible to everyone. There is so much fear around the idea of creating art that could be a holdover from a bad interaction with an insensitive teacher or just a lack of experience working with materials. In the past, I have provided materials for both children or adults to work on their own projects in an experimental, stress free environment.
Last week, I tried something different as I worked on a painting over the course of two days in the lobby of the Shoreline City Hall. My current series of abstract work consists of many both additive and subtractive layers on top of a traditional landscape painting. It is unrecognizable in the end, however, bits show through to remind the viewer that something old is beneath the new. I had the public help in the removal of certain layers in an effort to create the experience of collaboration between artist and viewer. What surprised me was the initial hesitation to actually touch a painting. From there it was diving in with an enthusiastic engagement with the process and turned out to be a great experience for the viewer and the artist.
SHIFT: New World Coming
"But there's a world beyond what we can see and touch, and that world lives by its own laws. What may be impossible in this very ordinary world is very possible there, and sometimes the boundaries between the two disappear, and then who can say what is possible and impossible."
David Eddings
While I have made the idea of generational transition a focus of my art, we have all been marking the exit and entrance of a generation or two or three. It only took having my own children to come to the quick realization that it only takes two generations to pass before the memory of family members fade. As much as I appreciate and honor the contributions of past generations, I realize that legacy can be a two edged sword as I've been reflecting on my own generations influence on current culture. History is the final arbiter of a generation's impact for good or ill and I am afraid history may judge us harshly.
I think of my children and grandchildren and the young people I have taught over the last 20 years. Except for lessons learned, the past will not offer solutions for the problems that these young ones will face. It is perhaps time for the previous generations see themselves in a new role, to step aside, to change the long held power structures and to provide all means of support to those who seek to solve the myriad of social and environmental problems. The current breakneck pace of change can only lead to something new. These paintings, contain a visible traditional underpainting mostly covered by painterly layers reflecting one generation's willingness to relinquish the role of power to next generation. The energetic fluid ink marks reflect change and something new to take its place. A reflection of the transition from one paradigm to the next. As for the younger and future generations this is their world that is coming and up to their imaginings to create a fair, just and compassionate society. The wisdom of the older generation will be in knowing that its their turn to listen and to stand beside.
ART for the PEOPLE
I am so convinced of the power of art. Throughout history art has served as a barometer, on the forefront of the changing tides of history. However, I am thinking about art's effect on the individual rather than the collective. In my experience as a teacher in places as desparate as the Alaskan bush, East Los Angeles, Honolulu to suburban Washington I have witnessed the magic of art. It can inspire a willingness to take a risk, to question and to reflect. The making of it can confound, but keep pulling you towards a solution. In children, I have seen their experience with art build their confidence and apply it to other subject areas. I have watched adults let go of an expected outcome and experience the pure satisfaction of watching something new emerge.
Whenever I get the chance I like to take art to the public. Most will say, I can't do art. Can I just watch. Of course, I say, knowing that within a few minutes they will be working on their own piece and loving the experience of creating. I have always said that everyone is an artist in some form or fashion and it is so fun to watch people discover something in themselves that they did not know was there.
On July fellow artist, Deanna Baldi and I brought our rollers, plates, papers and paints for printmaking at Cross Pollinate, part of the Georgetown Art and Garden Walk. Thanks to Double Nasty (Amanda and James) directors of Cross Pollinate, Jenny who hosted us in her beautiful garden and to the great folks of Georgetown.
Is There a Mother in the House?
Chicago was how it often is in early spring, cold, windy and wet, equal parts rain and snow. I lived in the city for three years in my 20's and was reminded of that moment you brace yourself when a strong wind hits the entirety of your body, making it seem as if it wasn't really that cold a moment ago, but now the cold goes right through, down to the bones. I didn't mind it then, but I must admit it is a bit shocking after spending so many years in the Pacific Northwest.
One piece of a wonderful trip to attend the exhibition, Is There a Mother in the House at Woman Made Gallery in Chicago. This particular exhibition resonates with my earlier series, Primordial Imprint. I showed two pieces at the exhibition which was joined by work from thirty other women artists from around the country. The cold and windy storm did not seem to affect the attendance at the opening and it was wonderful to meet other artists and talk with those in attendance about my work. As an artist, a certain isolation comes with the territory, so these events are important to receive feedback and see other perspectives about your own work. It was a lovely, lovely night and I appreciate all Woman Made Gallery staff did to make it such a successful evening. This is the third time I have shown here and it is one of my favorite non profit galleries.
I cannot go to Chicago without going to the Art Institute of Chicago. When I lived there I literally spent every Sunday afternoon sitting in front of paintings sketching and writing. This was well before I even thought of making art a career. Years before I had started the habit of working in a sketchbook daily. This place became my retreat and oasis. On this day, I returned to one of my favorite paintings, Parisian Rainy Day by Gustave Caillebotte. I probably have more drawings in different media than any other master copy I have done. I have returned to it many times over the years. Its simplicity and mood still draws me in. I think that is what any artist seeks in their own work; to inspire people to look and linger awhile, to take a moment to touch upon that undefined moment of resonance. I always walk away inspired with a trip to this museum, now back to the studio.
Images: She Was Her Mother's Daughter and In Her Mother's Shadow
Who taught Whom?
Having spent over 20 years in the classroom teaching elementary and middle school students my view of the world is always colored by my experience with people in their formative years. I am always hopeful. A teacher is in a completely unique position to spend the bulk of one year in the life of a child, a predictable and sustaining presence. In light of a teacher's influence, it is a great and solemn responsibility. I think most teachers just want to do their best for each student and make a positive contribution to their academic, social and emotional growth and development. I always said, "I never met a kid I didn't like." I meant it and I looked for the small things which made every child special, something that was not readily seen unless you spend 7 hours a day 5 days a week with someone. No matter who the student was, I always found it.
As an artist who has often incorporated candid photos into my work I have appreciated looking at life though the lens of a single moment. When going through the artifacts of a teaching career; letters and notes, yearbooks and photographs I revisited and remembered these moments, these students. In looking back, I noted that these moments not only revealed something about the day, but the students as well. It may be a feeling of ambivalence, a show of strength, a touch of vulnerability, a glimpse into their imagination. Looking back, it was magical. I can't think of a series that I have more fun painting. My students continue to give back to me more than I could ever give to them. I am the lucky one.
Images may be viewed here.
Lessons Learned, opens on May 8th at the City of Shoreline gallery on the 2nd floor. The opening reception will be held from 6:30 - 8:30 on May 8th. The exhibition will run through July. Hours are 9 - 5 Monday - Friday.
An Unexpected find
On a recent trip to Amsterdam I was finally able to visit the Kroller-Muller Museum, which is known for having the second largest collection of Van Goghs, including 90 paintings and 180 drawings. It's a couple of hours south of Amsterdam and not easily traveled to by bus or train, but well worth the trip. Of course, the Van Goghs were wonderful. I especially enjoyed seeing his early drawings and paintings, however, there was a hidden gem found in an artist I had never heard of. Bart Van der Leck was discovered early in his career by Helene Kroller-Muller who amassed the largest private collection of Van Goghs. She was impressed and convinced that Van der Leck's work would someday be as important as Van Gogh's. She became his patron, paying him a yearly stipend to paint and create other design pieces and had the right of first refusal on his work for several years. At first glance, this arrangement would seem to be an artist's dream, however, things are not always what they appear. Van der Leck met iconic painter, Piet Mondrian and the two of them were very much involved in the expansion of their work in a different direction. He and Mondriaan are considered the founding artists of the Dutch art and design movement, De Stijl. The abstracted lines in primary colors continue to influence design to this day.
This journey towards abstraction displeased Helene and she ended the relationship, however, she had amassed hundreds of his pieces and they reside in their own wing in the museum. What fascinated me were the tracings throughout the exhibition of his process and development from realism to abstraction. His story didn't end there. We usually associate the red, blue and yellow geometric line paintings with Mondriaan alone. It was a lovely surprise to hear the other half of the story. Van der Leck may not have been as famous as Van Gogh however his contribution to the field is memorable.
Journey to Abstraction for Bart Van der Leck
The GemeenteMuseum Den Haag recently featured the two artists together in the exhibition, Inventing A New Art. (This site is in English.)
Coming Full Circle
I continue to explore the idea of shift and in preparation for a residency working with middle school students I have returned to the notion of generational transition. My early work reflected my observation of the generation of parents and grandparents. As my own children have reached their early 20's the hard realization that my generation is not leaving them a sustainable world has set in. They and the generations that follow will need incredible problem solving skills, creativity and compassion to tackle their future. The cyclical nature of generation transition continues as it has throughout all time and hopefully our gift will be wisdom to know when t move aside and act as a supporting role to the generation behind. The painting below, Animate Existence speaks to the junction between planet and mortals embedded in the subtle narrative of the comings and goings of young and old.
Change is the Ever Constant
Life has shown me that change is a companion to get used to and to make peace with. While change can bring uncertainty it can also open up unexpected horizons. Much has changed since I first began my art career, leaving my teaching career and discarding my education in computer animation for painting. After the first couple of years of paying the bills, painting still life and landscapes I soon realized my voice felt disconnected from this early work. The advice of my high school English teacher still resonated with me. "Write about what you know." I realized that the scaffolding for my art was built from my life experiences. Although, life provided plenty of fodder, guarding my privacy was a bit of a hump to get over. As I found myself squeezed during the years of raising children and caring for the older generation I realized that these were very common experiences that are shared by many. My artist's voice sought expression not just for myself, but had the hope that the work would resonate with others as well. Each series unfolded from there, leading to the most vulnerable work, Terrible Beauty, an attempt to put the past's ghosts to rest.
In the meantime, life presented a challenge, forging an enduring and indelible connection between life and art. Life forever changed as a result of an extended illness, two surgeries and extensive rehab. There were moments when Art literally tethered me to this life and although I had to change everything about the way I created art, I have never looked back. For those of you who have followed my work over the long run it has been a noticeable transformation and the current work may seem far removed from that early work, however, I look at it as a most amazing journey, not only the journey of my art, but of my life. I am left with only gratitude for life, the lovely spots and the difficult ones as well. The world is changing, both collectively and individually and I look forward to turning my lens to the wider world. More change to come for all of us. Peace to all.