Image by Keith
Archive for the ‘Inspiration’ Category
Rose Clouds in Virginia
Posted in Guest Contributor, Inspiration, Nature Notes, tagged clouds, rose colored, Virginia on October 8, 2010| 2 Comments »
New Article: In the Butterfly House
Posted in Contributing Writer, Inspiration, Nature Notes, Publication Updates, tagged art, butterflies, Creativity Portal, drawing, illustration, imagination, Photography, whimsy on October 7, 2010| Leave a Comment »

Butterfly Photo by Lorraine
Do butterflies live in houses? They do in the mind of a young friend of mine. And that’s the focus of an article I wrote posted today on Creativity Portal.com, about the unexpected places one finds inspiration.
Fall Update
Posted in Contributing Writer, Inspiration, Nature Notes, On the Road, Publication Updates, tagged autumn, Blackwater Creek, butterflies, Contributing Writer, horses, insects, lady bugs, leaves, musing, Photography, rock climbing, Seneca Rocks, stink bugs, travel, Virginia, West Virginia on October 5, 2010| 5 Comments »

Watching me from a nearby oak tree is a large male cardinal with bright black eyes. My camera is across the room. He will surely be gone before I can grab it and race back to the window. What to do? Just remain still and enjoy my unexpected encounter with a red-feathered friend. Unexpected. There is no better word to describe my life at present. Since my last update, there have been lots of unexpected experiences. Some have been as simple as spotting the cardinal at my window, or the above leaf as I walked to the grocery store. Others instances have been more complex. Their creative impact and outcomes remain to be seen. Meanwhile, here are some brief highlights of experiences from the past month, with a focus on recent travels. Enjoy! 😉
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Virginia

In September I traveled with Steve to Virginia and West Virginia. Virginia is my home state. While there, I visited one of my favorite nature trails along the Blackwater Creek. See the little fish at the bottom of the picture? Other sights along the trail:


And in a neaby national park …



West Virginia
In Virginia, I showed Steve my old haunts. In West Virginia, we journeyed to one of his, Seneca Rocks. There I had several unexpected and memorable experiences, first attempting to climb a mountain, and then riding a horse. When I wasn’t afraid of tumbling, off the mountain or the horse, I managed to snap a few photos. 😉

On the Horizon
Well, one of the most unexpected opportunities is an upcoming trip to Japan. I don’t expect to encounter any horses, but Steve is determined to introduce me to octopus in all its varied culinary forms. We’ll see about that one!
Also, I’m pleased to share that I will be making a guest blog appearance November 1st on The Evolving Critic, A Metro Boston Blog for Art, Architectural, Urban Planning and Community Explorations. I’ll be sharing words and images about one of my favorite Boston sites, the Charles River Esplanade.
That’s the quick scoop from me. Wherever you are in the world today, I hope you are healthy, happy and feeling inspired!
A Late Blossom
Posted in Inspiration, Nature Notes, tagged blossom, flower, petals, Photography, pink on October 5, 2010| Leave a Comment »
Climbing the Rock
Posted in Inspiration, Nature Notes, On the Road, tagged outdoor adventure, Photography, rock climbing, Seneca Rocks, shared experiences, West Virginia on October 4, 2010| 1 Comment »

As mentioned in previous posts, my travels this past month took me to Seneca Rocks, West Virginia. Steve and I have determined that when he first climbed Seneca Rocks I was probably sitting in a high chair smearing pink frosting on my face. I would have been celebrating my first birthday while he was celebrating the freedom of being a freshman at college on an outing with the Explorers Club. Over the years he would return many times to the mountain, sharing the experience of climbing with friends and family. He wanted to share the same experience with me.

I’d rock climbed in the past. Once at a gym where there was a climbing wall. Once in the wilds of New Hampshire with a bunch of middle schoolers participating in a summer writing program. All wonderful experiences. Were they enough to prepare me for Seneca?

Steve's Classic Gear

Steve Mapping "Easy" Route

Me All Dressed Up
So what happened?
We climbed. On occasion I swore under my breath. We finally reached a plateau where we could take a short break. Around us, others climbed.
At some point, gently, Steve reminded me that we had our own climb to finish. I tried focusing on what was before me and above, but at some point I made the mistake of looking behind me. And then looking down. And down and down and down. I will never forget the sight of both an eagle and a butterfly soaring above the clouds. We were all above the clouds it seemed. I looked at Steve and said, “I’m done.” I must have had “that look” on my face because he simply congratulated me on the distance I had traveled and then we sat for a bit in the quiet.

We just sat and shared the space, together, though I am sure our heads were in very different places. Eventually, we rose. The climb down was not so bad. All in all, it was a good day.
Sunday Musings: Horse Sense
Posted in Inspiration, Nature Notes, On the Road, tagged Black Beauty, books, horses, My Friend Flicka, National Velvet, Photography, Seneca Rocks, The Black Stallion, Walter Farley on October 3, 2010| 1 Comment »

This beautiful, gentle-eyed beast is Shadow. Recently, he carried me up Seneca Rocks, a famous West Virginia mountain, and brought me down safely. But he wasn’t happy about it. Since I was a child I have loved horses, but it was a love based purely on literary and cinematic exposure. My favorite books were The Black Stallion series by Walter Farley. My favorite movies included Black Beauty, My Friend Flicka and National Velvet. It just so happened as an adult I found myself riding a water buffalo in Arkansas and an elephant in Thailand, but Shadow was to be my first horse.
By horse standards, he was a teenager, his owner said. And so it was with the recalcitrance of a teenager being forced to clean his room before supper that Shadow ferried me along the rock-strewn path up Seneca Rocks. I swear he wanted to ditch me a couple of time, but he was well-trained. Once back at the base of the mountain, we parted happily, he with a swish of his tail, and me with a much greater respect for horse attitude, not to mention the width of their barrel backs.

Inspiring Me Lately: Georgia O’Keefe
Posted in Inspiration, tagged abstraction, art, artistic inspiration, colors, correspondence, Georgia O'Keefe, letters, painting, painting with words on September 30, 2010| Leave a Comment »
Not hot. Humid. Very humid. That was the state of the weather around Boston today. The sky was filled with layers of gray-blue clouds. Everything beneath seemed desaturated of color. And what did I think as I wandered the city on my way into work: how would Georgia O’Keefe paint this landscape? What colors would she select from her kit to capture this surreal view?
O’Keefe has been influencing my view of the world ever since I stumbled upon the book, Abstraction, at the Somerville Public Library. Created as part of the Whitney Museum’s recent art exhibit, the book highlights O’Keefe’s early abstract work, and includes transcripts of her letters written during the period. The letters were only recently unsealed, twenty years after the painter’s death. O’Keefe’s paintings have always inspired me and these early works are no different. Her use of color, the lines and angles, how the light shifts and shadows are created … I became lost in each image on the page.



The images, while beautiful, did not surprise me. It was the letters. Most if not all, I believe, are correspondence between her and her future husband, Alfred Stieglitz. In them, a very young and vulnerable O’Keefe paints with words her views of the world. Of the sky at dawn, she writes, “… the sky was perfectly cloudless — a deep pink like a hot kiss where it met the ocean.” And of jade artifacts at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, “… colors like you find in the mosses and lichens and soil of the woods — or even in the things washed up by the sea …”
Learn more about O’Keefe’s abstract art and her letters via the Whitney Museum’s exhibit website. It’s well worth the effort!
Small Beauties
Posted in Inspiration, Nature Notes, tagged bee, Charles River, color, dragonfly, fly, insects, nature, Photography, small creatures on September 29, 2010| 1 Comment »
I have to admit that before I picked up a camera, I did not fully appreciate the beauty of a fly and many other small creatures.


Butterflies Everywhere
Posted in Inspiration, Nature Notes, tagged butterflies, insects, orange butterflies, Photography, travel, Virginia on September 28, 2010| Leave a Comment »
Recently I traveled from Massachusetts down to Virginia with a side excursion into West Virginia. More to share about that journey in a later post, but for now, I’d like to share this picture.

Butterflies seemed everywhere, in every color and size, especially Monarchs which appeared as big as birds in the sky. This creature is certainly not a Monarch. If you know what it is, please let me know!
A Feather Found in the Woods
Posted in Inspiration, Nature Notes, tagged feather, Photography, white, woods on September 27, 2010| Leave a Comment »




