Showing posts with label mountain laurel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mountain laurel. Show all posts

Sunday, July 10, 2011

The Salamander is the Dream of Water


In the warm and breezy afternoon, I took myself into the studio to work with 
spirals. Thinking this drawing was like lichen clinging to stone, a short something 
came to me. 




I found myself writing it in the margins of my sketchbook all day... I wonder why 
somedays words must come out of me, while other days I'm content with images 
and patterns and the quiet whisperings of the forest. 




I've been thinking about the necessity of walking a spiral path. In an email to 
a recently graduated student, I found myself writing about how important it is 
for artists to walk in circles. Most of the extraordinary people I know seem to 
walk crooked, spiraling paths of immense power and mystery. I suppose life IS 
a crooked path - and I wonder if much of the stress we have comes from thinking 
we can make the path straight, know the trajectory, and follow along from 
intention to goal at the end of the line. 


Learning to walk in the mystery is brave and essential for the creative process. 
I dance with the mystery while making paintings, starting from nothing and trusting 
I will know where to go. I think having learned to trust the creative flow has 
given me courage to walk through fear. Like walking through the dark forest in 
a faery tale, there are springs I must drink from, an old woman I must meet, 
and a ring I must bring to the king if I am to succeed in my quest. 


Peeking back at a watercolor book from several years ago, I found paintings 
that surely were seeds for my recent forest paintings. Seeing these suggests 
ways of working now, too. HA! Another spiral path, this one a spiral layering 
of time.  



On a recent outing I saw this ring. I imagine you're not surprised that it came 
home with me...



June in the forest was magnificent this year. The Mountain Laurel exploded 
into bloom and my walks were filled from ground to sky with white blossoms. 


Days of rain brought magical mushrooms. 



This one demanded contemplation, considering where 
it popped up. 


Giant ferns and wild irises together in the pond. 


 In the garden, some things are emerging, 


while others have gone to seed. 


There is much beauty when I lean in close and look under and through. 




Lunchtime tea in the garden. Pasha was the only invited guest. 



This grass captivated my attention all day. 
Delicate blooms undulated with the wind, 
a beautiful, graceful dance.


After tea, a catnap was in order. 
I wonder if I need to weed around Pasha's bench? 
The ferns seem to be claiming it for themselves. 


I did bring a fern inside to grace the windowsill, 
but not Pasha's nap-bench fern. 


I love this dreaming woman....


A luna moth stayed by the house all day one day, 
tucked in a fern where I placed him away from danger. 
He died the following morning. I do hope he found a female 
during the seven days of his life so RavenWood will have many of 
these magical moths next spring. 

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Thinking About Beauty


Summer solstice was a warm, sunny day. A small group gathered here for a fire to 
celebrate the longest day and witness it fade into night. The frogs and bird songs 
were particularly beautiful, seeming always to punctuate moments when deep truths  
were spoken and prayers given to the fire with handfuls of fragrant herbs. I thought 
about having my camera with me, but being present in the moment always takes 
precedence over recording our ritual. The following day brought back the heavy
rains, feeling more like autumn than summer. My sister and niece came for an 
overnight and we tucked into the house for cozy reading and tea. We did have one 
outside adventure to the gorge - a very wet walk along the cliffs. An unsteady 
moment while taking the photo above captures the day much better than any 
of the others I think!


I felt the power of the rushing, swollen r
iver as it poured through the narrow passage and the air smelled fresh and alive with the movement. A run of many days of rain, then a few of sunshine has taken hold, keeping the gardens well watered and not yet drowning. Amidst the mists and dripping sounds, the mountain laurel has burst into bloom throughout the forest. 
 
A surprise to find a turned leaf already. The color captivated me 
and the little eye near the top got me wondering....




Being quite sensitive to the mold spores that have blossomed in this wet, 
I had a slow day of rest and listening and found myself thinking a lot about 
beauty. I'm often shocked when a colleague at the university makes a statement 
about a piece of student work " It lacks depth - its just too pretty". I understand 
what is meant, but what shocks me is that often this criticism is given to work 
that is intuitive and mysterious and to my eyes, beautiful. It seems that in 
the university, beauty is not okay anymore, and hasn't been for a long time. 
I find myself out on a limb, fighting for the work of a student who has delved into 
an authentic dance with beauty, and it seems only a few others recognize the 
dance. 


I think being an artist is about pollinating the world with beauty, 
and what comes of walking in the world with the senses wide open is 
astonishment