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Posts Tagged ‘art’

If you’re familiar with Boston, then you know there’s a bridge called the BU bridge.  It spans the Charles River.  On one side is Boston and the other Cambridge.  One summer I crossed that bridge on foot, and then instead of continuing into a city center, I made my way down an embankment to see what lay at the base of the bridge.  Well, I found all sorts of unexpected things including an immense flock of white geese and a Whitman-esque artist garbed in a straw hat and with a pipe in his mouth sitting in the dirt sketching them.  Out of respect to the artist and a bit of fear of the geese, I steered clear of them and searched other areas near literal railroad tracks.  There I found two items I will never forget:  a beautiful golden chair chained to a tree, and a samurai warrior emblazoned on stone.

 

Given the transient nature of graffiti, I doubt the image is still there, but I remember standing admiring the skill of the man or woman who had created such a powerful image.  And then I wondered if it was the same person who used the golden chair as a throne.  Anyway …  To be honest I’d forgotten about this adventure until a recent conversation with the author behind the blog, The Evolving Critic.  He’s written a fascinating post about his adventures in Boston capturing the words and images to be found on the walls of the city.  As he notes, whether or not its art is up for debate, but it is certainly a debate worth having.  Read more here.

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It was back in December that I last posted a Words+Images update.  It focused on  end of year inspirations.   Now with spring on the horizon, I thought it time to share new updates.  Let’s see … 😉

Preparing for Somerville Open Studios

Somerville Open Studios 2011 is rapidly approaching and so I am trying to get myself in gear.  I’ve been sorting through images, selecting a set that will be turned into notecards and others that will be matted and framed.  For the first time, I will also have postcards available for sale.  The images will be representative of the changing seasons.  Seasons is the theme of my collaboration with artist Zoe Langosy.

Leading up to show there are many wonderful opportunities to exhibit including the upcoming SOS2010 Volunteer Show.

Sharing Stories

My business cards say “writer/photographer.” A better title would be “storyteller.”  That is what I do whether with words or with images.  With the passing of my Aunt Thelma recently, those fires within have been stoked to listen closely to those around me and to tell their stories well.

Memories

Who Killed Cock Robin?

Family Ties

Finding Perspective

There’s all sorts of things I could say about finding perspective this year.  With my camera, at least, let’s just say I found perspective by getting up close and personal with house plants and cut flowers.

One snowy day, I found a lemon …

And when the sun came out, I spied this bird sitting high in a tree.

I think that’s about it.  More to share in the spring … which is only 8 days away!

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The first time I traveled to NY and met my young cousin Tim, I learned two things.  First, that he’d taken a photograph that I had sent to my aunt of me riding a water buffalo (hey, it was for work!) to his school as part of show and tell.  Second, I learned that he had an insatiable infatuation for the subways and roadways of his hometown.  Moreover, he had a remarkable talent for capturing what he saw on paper.  And as the years have progressed, so has his talent and imagination.

Though he is too young to know the reference and from the wrong city, his early antics of skipping school to ride the rails all day brought to mind the legendary figure of Charlie, forever trapped in Boston’s subway system.

Until I learned how to read a subway map, Tim was my guide in the big city.  And even as he was pointing me in the right direction, he’d usually be called upon to help other lost souls as well.

 

Many years later, as far as I know, he no longer speaks of becoming an architect or urban planner.  His focus now is public policy and government.  No matter what career path he chooses after college, I am glad to see he is still carrying around his pens and notebooks.

 

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One night, feeling restless, I went for a walk.  Along a quiet stretch of road I found a bench where I sat for a while, head bowed with thoughts. Finally, I looked up into the night sky and that is where I beheld something I’d never seen before — the full moon surrounded by a rainbow.

Soft rich reds and blues framed a large golden orb.  My spirit lifted at such an unexpected sight.  I wanted to share the experience so I whipped out my very first cell phone and called a new friend in my life, Steve. It was late.  I certainly woke him up but he was polite and simply said, “Hello.  Is something wrong?”

I replied, “No, not at all. There’s a rainbow around the moon.”  I described the cool lunar light, the rich colors saturating the clouds, the magical picture painted against the sky.  “How wonderful is that?”

I expected him to be as awed as I, and perhaps he was, but Steve as I was still learning at the time is a scientist who studies light. There was no exclamation of awe.  He made a thoughtful “hmmmm” sound and then proceeded to explain the mechanics behind the rainbow’s appearance using clear, straightforward textbook language about angles and wavelengths and light distribution.   Finally, as he grew aware of the sounds I was making, he asked, “Why are you laughing?”

“Well,” I said, “All I was trying to convey to you was the beauty of a rare sight.”  With perplexity quite clear in his tone, he replied, “But so was I.”

 

 

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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.

In the Butterfly House

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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!

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Images from a study for a mural of Saint Dominic.

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I picked up this beautiful coffee table book at the Boston Book Festival this past weekend.  I got it for a steal, at about $3, though the normal bookstore price is about $45.  If you can’t find a copy, see if your library can get it for you.  Stunning artwork in brilliant colors.  I’m still making my way through it.  It’s easy to get lost in a single page!

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