The Bookbinder

This is a composition
really just the hint of an idea
which I’ve had in the working sketchbooks for many years.

I dabbled in bookbinding for awhile
as one does
and so the props were readily at hand.

And the model
or poseur as it were
was also to hand
or at least passing through.

Peter uses our house as a stop
on his workshop teaching routes.

It is always the highlight of my year
when we get a chance to
as Herself likes to quip
spit scratch and tell lies.

I never lie and I’ve never seen Peter spit
but there you are.
We have a blast.

On one of those return trips he arrived very late
after filming episodes of The Woodwright’s Shop with Roy Underhill.
I’ve got no shame dropping his name here
because it’s a wicked cool thing that Peter and I both watched his PBS show
even before we were aspiring woodworkers
and I’m so thrilled that they are now friends and fellow scholars.

But I bring it up here
to place emphasis on the very late
and very tired northbound traveler.

Peter was exhausted.
But he was also planning to book outta here
before the wrens’ started singing the next morning
and I had a little request.

Please, after spending hours and hours in front of a camera
would you please…
sit in front of a camera
and pose for me.

With no time for an elaborate set up
I plunked him in the office at the round cherry table
and brought down my binding frame.

Couple of practices with the gesture
and click, I had my reference.

I pushed my luck and had him do a twofer
and model for a second composition idea
which became the core of Master Carver’s Tea.

Since the orchestration for that comp was further along
I put it at the head of the line and the Bookbinder sat…in the books.

Then we went to Ireland.

At the end of our tour we visited the Rock of Cashel.
In the adjoining Hall of Vicars
I found a collection of Irish furniture that resembles the era of 17th century carvings
which Peter specializes in but what I also saw was a possible reference
for the table I have been pondering for yet another painting
which is even deeper in the wings of my sketchbooks.
I took photos for Peter’s archives and for my own.

Now we creep forward to this past winter
when I was eager to sink my chops
into something completely different and challenging.

I dug back and found the initial sketches for the bookbinder
remembered the table and carvings
and thought the Irish antiquities could just be grand.

What you see before you is the culmination
of decades of rumination
and a frisson of serendipity.

I waited all this time
for that wren to wake up
and sing she did.

Granary Gallery 2021

Well it’s time !

My Granary Gallery Show is about to be revealed.
The show opening is Sunday August 15th.

And while Herself and I will be continuing our Pandemic Protocol here in the studio…

The paintings have arrived safely on the island.

The gallery staff has gone out of their way to insure safety and protection for the best possible patron experience.

There will not be a typical show gala reception this year. But they are OPEN for business and so are we.

So here we go…

The first painting to share with you is the very first one I did for the show…I hope you enjoy and stay frosty out there !!!

Vituoso

There is a pause in every year
here in the studio
in between those intense months
of lifting tiny brushes at the easel
after the paintings have flown to their new homes

When I catch up on overlooked chores
and bring the unfinished mystery novel
out to the sky chair
only to end up watching the catbirds
rearranging their whispering garden twigs

or…if it is winter

When I sit with a cup of tea
in the patron lounge chair
and a newly gathered stack
of well worn books
and visit with my old master friends

An interval when
during these pauses
I let the creative energies drift
enjoying and listening to
a different rhythm…

when suddenly
the Muses go SNAP !

I have come to know and trust
as my artiste self “matures”
that it’s only a matter of time
before there will soon be a pile
of offerings before me

Feathers and teacups
shards of color
shiny bits and bobs
a jigsaw puzzle of treasures
which have caught their fancy

Dumped now on the table
to test the mettle
and tease the wanderer back
once again sparking that sizzle
tempting me out of that stasis of revelry

Calling me back to the work
which has come to define
the essence
the very core
of all that is meaningful

of who I am in this world…

An Artist.

Mentors

I rise in the courthouse, as Scout was beckoned to do, for the passing of a great man.

The windows in the studio are open this morning, which is unheard of in August, to a freshening breeze.

Late last night, in a quieted hospital corridor, surrounded by a solidly forged family of supporters, we enveloped two young men as they took what is called the Walk of Life.

A powerful and deeply moving ceremony where that little box we check on our driver’s license becomes very very real.

One life is traded for many.

I seem to throw the word around a lot but I truly have never witnessed such grace.

And it wasn’t in the overwhelming handing over of the gift, the youthful organs to be shared, it was in the brilliant beacon of love that radiated between Matt and his husband on the gurney… Paul.

In crowded ICU waiting rooms and peaceful wooded pathways, we have listened to a bucket full of stories about how that love has enveloped, emboldened and lifted so many others and I’d honestly be crumpled on my knees in the telling of it …if it didn’t require both of them to lift me back up.

But I want to talk here, at least this morning, about Mentors.

Almost all of the people we have been glued to in the last four days we had never met…in person. But we knew them.

Because they were important to Matt and Paul who were important to us.

They were stories and pictures on our phones and of course the wall of covid set all those “we’ve got to get you together” meetings off. We made up for all that lost time in no time. One of the most surreal experiences in my life came yesterday, when after days of trying to keep our voices down and our distances apart in heavily masked hallways we all somehow knew to make our way to the ridge and for the first time I got to meet their smiles.

In his house, with his beloved Bernese Mt Dogs leaning, the vigil was kept.

Paul is an artist. And as we, the collected mourners, moved through the day waiting for the call to come back to the hospital, our rolling conversations explored the connections between us all. They told me Paul had introduced me as one of his Mentors. He and I talked a lot about that. But I think it was the other way around. Or maybe mutual.

What I knew of Paul’s dreams to be a full time artist came alive in the voices of his friends and their stories of how proud they were of his working so hard to achieve that dream. And he did. It hurts too much to think about how few days he got to spend in that new studio but I heard story after story about how fiercely he created in there.

We have all had Mentors in our lives. Wouldn’t have made it this far without them. But being a Mentor, it feels like a huge responsibility. I honestly didn’t feel worthy and was reluctant to embrace the roll with anyone else’s creative soul at stake. Sort of coming at it from the side with my shoulders tucked and head down. But Paul persisted. He, the professor, said Teach Me.

While I was taking baby steps along that journey, Paul was striding far ahead. Listening to his friends these last few days I’ve come to see that his truest creative gifts may have been the kindness, generosity, steady support, tremendous capacity for laughter and the forgiveness he bear-hugged into their lives.

No superlatives here could measure up to the power of his relentless choices to love.

I’m sitting here shaking as I try to fill in for you the layers of evidence I have for that statement and my heart just won’t let them go down to my fingers yet. So trust me, Paul gave his heart out.

And Matt, dear sweet soul, kept that heart safe.

What Paul was eager to learn about art, I needed to learn about love.
Matt and Paul together were a Masterclass. Full stop.

So, on this blessedly fine morning I just want to say thank you to my friend and mentor, for giving me the opportunity to help carry your paintings.

And Paul…

he just insisted that I include this shot of his fine…

damnit Paul.

More Prints Available…

How are you all doing on this fine summer afternoon.
It’s cool here inside the studio, but outside the zinnias are loving them some hot and steamy temps.

I went around and picked a bucket of flowers for Herself to arrange the other day and spotted some swallowtail caterpillars chomping their way through the carrot patch.

It reminded me of this painting, The Reverie…

Which got me thinking about how I’ve been meaning to update the Print section with a few more paintings.
So, taking advantage of the air-conditioned office, I have just added 9 new ones to the page.

They kind of randomly populate the PRINTS page when I load them so I’ll let you see them here for review and for fun.
I’m still battling the learning curve of the new Gutenberg editing program and I can’t…as yet…figure out how to hyperlink each of the images below. But they do all appear on the Prints page so you can find the info there if you’ve a mind.

Stay safe and cool out there and watch for those butterflies.


Hello Strangers…and some new work

Has it really been over two months since we last visited ?
Well how’ve ya been ?
I hope well and that you are still being safe out there.
Please tell me you’ve been vaccinated.
I hope you are enjoying the benefits of some time with old friends and new adventures.

We are taking baby steps as we navigate the brave new world.
Visits outside with the fully jabbed and picking bunches of beautiful flowers growing in the gardens.

INside however the pace has been anything but slow and cautious.
With all three galleries back open and eager for new work the brushes have been flying.
Though we are not, once again due to the pandemic, traveling north to Martha’s Vineyard, the Granary Gallery is going on with the show so the paintings had to make a run for it.

The best part of last year’s painting delivery nightmare was meeting our driver Nathan and this year he once again has came to our rescue and all the paintings for this year’s show are safe and snug in a studio in Western MA awaiting the second leg of their journey when the gallery van will pick them up and tote them to the island. We are jealous that they will feel those ocean breezes but thrilled to have made an enduring friendship with Nathan, his wife Thanh and their new pup Ali.

Here’s a snap of Ali listening to Pat’s stories…and her heart.

And here she is riding shotgun on the painting delivery.

But before we begin the annual rollout of all those Granary pieces I’m pleased to share two NEW paintings which are, as I write, winging their way out to Denver.

Gallery 1261 is having a Small Works show which opens on August 14, and the New Paintings may arrive in time for them to take to the LA Art Fair this summer.

Without further ado I give you…
Onion Moon Rising – 12 x 13

https://heatherneill.com/portfolio/onion-moon-rising/

And…

The first pea never makes it out of the garden – 12 x 14

https://heatherneill.com/portfolio/the-first-pea-never-makes-it-out-of-the-garden/

You seasoned patrons and friends will by now have checked out the new website features and be able to swiftly navigate to the Portfolio section and down to the Painter’s Notes to read the backstory on these little teacup mysteries.

While you do that I’m going to get back to work editing the images of the next batch of paintings which my camera managed to capture before they were framed and packaged for their road trip.

May your summer be full of rose sniffs and your kitchen filled with zucchini.

Love and green tomatoes from the studio, Heather

Welcome to the NEW Website

Here on this beautiful May Day with all the promises of the season of Spring…
The studio is roaring to life along with the lilacs

and the snow peas

and the greenhouse full of seedlings ready to spread their wings.

We Welcome the light and the warmth and we welcome YOU to the New Website.

To help you navigate some of the new features we’ve created a short Video Tour so roll the top down and take her for a spin and enjoy the freshening breezes…

Take a TOUR

The Winter of Website Revamping has finally blossomed and we are ready to SPRING the new site on you !!!

I’d like to begin with a giant THANK YOU to developer Ross Ritchey. He was a young software genius all those years ago when this internet presence began to be a thing and I turned to him in 2008 to help me build out the designs I had for my first website. Today Ross is a polished gem of a programmer and has initiated his own business…

https://assistedinnovations.com/

It has been both a professional and personal pleasure to work with Ross over the last few months to bring this site into the age of newer technology. He is a master at communicating the complex world of programming to the likes of an artist born in the age of Aquarius and I am grateful for his patience and expertise.

Most of the changes have been integrated “under the hood” and are designed to make the site work across all platforms and devices. There was also a fair amount of sweeping out the dust bunnies and my broom is well worn from that job. As we launch it out into the stratosphere we welcome comments and observations should you find any dust I’ve left behind, and suggestions for ways to improve your viewing experience.

A rather special nod of thanks is due to Herself as well. She most patiently listened to my tech woes as I struggled through my computer blowing up at the beginning of this project and all the many many nights of “This is taking longer than I expected” texts flying from studio to log cabin. It truly was “Our” pandemic project and I wouldn’t have made it to the other side without her.

So…without further ado

In order to help you navigate the new site I have made a little video tour.

You are most welcome here…

The Great Potato Planting of ’21

“In the spring, at the end of the day, you should smell like dirt.” Margaret Atwood

And yesterday I did.

We aim for St. Pat’s Day as Potato Planting day. . .
but every day around here is Pat’s day
and today most especially as it is Herself’s BIRTHDAY !!!

And since this is a journal entry about the garden
this photo of the Eggplant Whisperer is most appropriate to celebrate her new found gardening prowess…

Well on their way to a parmesaned casserole near her soon.

Meanwhile in the studio nursery, we had around 50 lbs of seed potatoes chitting out for the last week. They arrived from The Maine Potato Lady the week before, and every available square inch of the studio was lined with boxes and dedicated lamps to aid in their preparation for planting.

Then out to the wheelbarrow they came . . .

Box the First.
Raking back Ruth

Next step was to rake back the matte of hay which had been snug and cozy under a heavy blanket of snow in the Ruth Stout Bed all winter. Exposing the rich organic matter underneath I am beginning to realize the work that our soil bound friends have been doing. . . or is that chewing . . . for the last few years. All that organic matter is building a substrate of nutrient rich medium for the veg and makes for easy planting.

Rake it back.
Toss on the spuds
Round the corner and up the back leg.

Then cover ’em back up with fresh hay.

And that’s job done.

Turning around you can get a peak of the RS annex which was added last fall.

The ground underneath that section, which only 5 months ago was the grass you see to the left in this pic, is still in transition. Covered with cardboard, a few inches of mulched leaves, and then a foot of loose hay. . .the grasses and weeds beneath are a muddy slick and, judging by past experience, will be for some time. So, the plan is for straw bales to provide some growing area this season and then the decomposing bales can be strewn in the fall to add another layer of goodness. By next year this section should be plantable.

The squash tower in the distance straddles those bales and two extra ones on the other side. Last year this method proved successful so we’ll try again.

The skinnier Pea Tower to the left got a boost of some compost added to the two rows on either side. Something for the Peas to ease into before having to contend with the hay.

Today’s rain is sealing the deal and gives the gardeners a chance to rest up.

So here’s to the wonders of the burgeoning Spring. . .

And celebrating the most wonderful Pat Lackey. . .

Happy Birthday My Love,

The Tempest

It is late here in the studio.
Dark and stormy.
Outside
and Inside
our country.

We are in the throes
Ross and I
of rebuilding my website.

My job
is to load all of the paintings
up on to the site.

Every
single
one.

This major review
is forcing me
to take a long
deep dive
into my past.

Both creatively
and historically.

I just came upon this painting
and paused.

Prescient
as in 2017
we were fully engaged
in the tempest.

Not knowing
where the storm
would throw our boat.

As the seas were building.

Tonight
there is a light
on the horizon.

But the monsters
have been unleashed.

Be safe dear ones.
And hold on tight.

These were the words
I chose for the original
Painter’s Notes…

“Give me your tired, your poor,

Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,

The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.

Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,

I lift my lamp beside the golden door !”

From Emma Lazarus…
The New Colossus…
on the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty