Granary Gallery Show

It’s UP !!!

The walls of the Granary Gallery are full of new paintings
and you can see them for your very own selves
from your very own living room, back porch or poolside lounge…

Click on this link to take a virtual tour … GRANARY 2022

The remarkable Granary Staff is available to answer any questions you may have about the new work and can be reached at 508-693-0455. The Granary is open daily 10-5 and Sunday 11-4.

This current group show features new paintings and sculptures by Don Wilkes, Tamalin Baumgarten, Ken Vincent, and yours truly…I know you will enjoy checking out all of our creations.

But if you can’t visit the gallery in person… I encourage you to try that virtual tour. There are many other artists represented there and it’s a fun little divertissement to wander about the place from the comfort of your …wherever.

Many thanks to all of you for the kind and generous “likes” and words of encouragement and support as I’ve rolled out this years’ show. Your reaching out means more than ever as we can’t be on the Vineyard and at the Granary for the opening this year.
You have made this artist smile…a lot.

I’ll keep you posted on the goings on with the show and stay tuned to this blog for progress reports on the NEW STUDIO build !!! Living in a construction site is interesting to say the least but the young furry whippersnapper amongst us is absolutely loving it.

Maggie says so long from her supervisory post on the porch…

I’ll just say…goodbye for now.

Rock Solid

Rock Solid – 48 x 34

I’m writing this from the old studio back porch
Been sitting here all morning
Watching big machines moving heaven and earth
Well mostly earth
And big stones
They move in sync with slow motion arcs
A graceful and very loud dance.

I’ve also been thinking my way into writing this,
the last of the painters notes for this year’s GG show.
In my head for days now
The focus keeps shifting
And I keep putting it aside
Recognizing that I’m not settled enough yet
So I step back and out of my own way.

This morning’s air is clearing and blessedly cooler once again
And maybe that’s all that I needed to see
That this painting began as an homage to that wall.

It’s Jane’s wall, but she’d be the first to tell you
that the great stone walls of Chilmark
belong to the island, the islanders, and the town not the landowners.

This one runs through the backyards up on crick hill in Menemsha
But long long ago
When that land was farmland
It was built to make use of the tilled up boulders
And to fence in
or out
the pasture.

Jane remembers walking through that gate opening as a girl
So I took out the shrubbery that lives there now
And gave her back the passage.
She believes it to be the tallest original stone wall on the island
And I believe Jane.

So last October when we came to visit
And she and Herself were solving all the problems of the world
I stepped out on Jane’s deck to explore
And the Muses had lit the place up.
The wall was raked with that brilliant autumn island light
And it was as if seeing it for the first time.

The sun streaming through the crystal clear air was similar to this morning’s back porch light
And maybe that’s why I’ve finally found my way back in.

Yes the painting is about the wall
It started there
And never was about anything else
But today
As I sit watching the work being done
to build the foundation of my new studio
I see that it is also about the people who built that wall.

Solid is absolutely one way to describe the islanders.
A disposition bred out of the challenges of living on a rock in the middle of the ocean
Moving heaven and their own patches of earth
To raise themselves and their families into generations of community.

I guess that’s what humans have always done
And Vineyarders would be the first to tell you they’re nothing special
But the ones I know
Are pretty special to me
And that’s about all I was really ever trying to say with this painting.

The Coming and The Going

Now it’s time to zoom out…
Remember that dear little blue painted hinge ?

The Coming and the Going – 36 x 24

The Coming and the Going

That has come to signify this era for so many.
Writ large or writ local
some of the shiftings have been tectonic
while others mere whispers of change.

The Painter’s Notes for Unhinged

(Which you can read by clicking on the image above)

…well that journal entry sets the scene for… The Going

This painting gives you the harbor’s perspective
of this particularly seismic change in the town of Menemsha.

In Menemsha all manner of vessels and humans
are constantly in the pursuit of both…

Coming into port
Going out to sea
This gentle village is always in motion.

On this day last October there was a fair bit of going
as Larsen’s Fish Market was being demolished
to make way for a new version of that special old salt.

If you take the time to compare with Unhinged
you will see that in this composition
zoom in closely…
that dear blue painted hinge still holds fast
and there is just this one last corner of wall
left standing.

As in all artistic endeavors
the artist is free to edit.
I have gently done so here
removing most of the heavy machinery
and repainting the green dumpster.

For years now I’ve been looking for a way
to bring that great big landing net into a painting
ever since I found it washed ashore on Stonewall beach.
It was hopelessly beyond use for a fisherman
but I loved the brokenness and it has been reminding me
as it leans against my old studio stairs
of the power of the sea.

So it was sorta fun that here
in proportion to the old and now broken fishing shack
it could stand tall and represent.

Over the decades
of studying those rhythms
of steady comings and goings
I have learned
that while there can be stillness…

those spaces in between

…there is always some manner of change
on the horizon.

Coming to the end of a year of sometimes brutal
and always jarring shifts in our world
there is wonderful and joyous change on our horizon.

This week the concrete is to be poured
securing a literal foundation
for my new studio.

That great big light at the end of the long tunnel
coupled with the shipping off of this year’s worth of paintings
for next week’s Granary Gallery show
has afforded me one of those precious
moments of in between.

My spirits are lifting
and the peace is familiar
and kind.

At rest finally
with both
the going
and the coming.

Unhinged

We are going to zoom in
before we zoom out.

Unhinged – 24 x 20

I heard the wrecking machine before I saw it.
Creak creak creak then…Crunch.
The small crowd of onlookers took a collective three steps back.

Suspended high above the little fishing village of Menemsha
was the front wall of Larsen’s Fish Market.

Swinging high over the heads of the townsfolk
were shredded bits of cedar shingle and broken off lumber.
The crane creaked as it deposited the bits of building into a giant gaping roll-off.

The rumors of reconstruction were making the rounds on the island
but witnessing the demolition up close and personal like that was powerful.

Larsen’s is an institution.
The steady and reliable provision
of fresh off the boat
catch of the day seafood
is surpassed only by the warmth and kindness
of the always smiling family who runs it.

That day in October
I followed my long time routine
when scouting the island for painting ideas.
Parking down at the beach
I walked back up the dock
with sketchbook in my back pocket
and camera slung over my shoulder.

The main show was out front
so it was out back that I went.

The dock was empty
except for Betsy and her husband.
She’s the proprietor
and you’ve met her before
or at least her largess
in the painting Betsy’s Gift.

But again,
I heard before I saw.

Bang bang bang…crunch.

The two of them had heavy handtools
and were whacking the shit out of the back door.

I approached quietly
lens zoomed at the ready
as the Muses have taught me.

The two of them started laughing
Betsy turned and saw me
saying, “This stubborn old hinge is not letting go.”

Over our heads the big machine out front was lifting roof timbers
and complete sections of walls
flying them across the sky and into the dumpster
then rhythmically thumping them into smaller bits.

Chunk after chunk
they were getting closer
to this last wall
and the back door.

Now a sledge hammer was brought in.
Whack whack whack…creak.

By god they got that thing off
but it was the door that broke loose first.
The hinge held fast.

I know something of its strength
and a whole lot about its fortitude.

I’ve swung through that screen door a thousand times.
Out from the melee of islanders and tourists
ordering steamers and clams
through the steam of the tiny kitchen
over the freshly hosed down concrete floor
picking up where the swing of the last customer
banged that door shut
and pushing it out  once again
then walking onto the dock
in the brightening light
of that familiar harbor.

They had wanted to save the door
a powerful talisman indeed.

I wanted to mark its passage as well.

The hat is the very first one I ever bought.
Like the hinge
it signifies
and holds me fast
to that island.

Drawn Butter

Right at the stop sign and just over the little tidal bridge and our first stop is…

Drawn Butter – 30 x 24

This is Poole’s
Ok Not any more
But it was back then
And it’s hard to teach this old dog new tricks

The captain of this ship was Everett Poole.
He left the helm a while back
and left the planet a few short months ago.

He wore many hats over his 91 years in Chilmark
but I remember him in a red hat
on the stool
in this corner of his shop
pipe wisping away
with that hammer in his hand.

The reference photos I used were from a few years ago.
Donald took over for his dad Everett for a while there
and now Stanley owns it.
Someone could probably date those old pics just by reckoning the price of the lobsters.
And lordy that butter was a bit salty.

But remembering all those last minute trips
to pick up the catch of the day
and the cups of warm chowder
we picked up along the way to the brisk autumn beach…

priceless.

The Paint Box

We are half way now dear readers and patrons. For the second half of this year’s Granary show let’s actually get ourselves up to that island of Martha’s Vineyard. Roll that car off of the ferry and make a quick stop at Net Result for some sushi to go. We are heading up island.

We are going to spend the rest of the show strolling along Basin Road heading down to the beach with some hidden views and familiar interiors and we will be there just in time to catch a moment in history as the old makes way for the new.

Let’s head down the hill and see what’s up first…

The Paint Box – 30 xx 20

This came from one of those serendipitous shifts in the atmosphere
that only happen when you are not looking.

I’m quite certain there will be some of you
reading these Painter’s Notes
after viewing The Paint Box
who will say…huh
I never noticed that house either.

Coming down the hill
into the little village of Menemsha
even if you obey the 15 mph speed limit
by the time you start the curve to the left
and the final descent to the stop sign
your mind is on one of two things
lobster
or chowder.

Well for me it’s three
because I’m getting ready to look to my left
to see if Jane’s light is on.

OK if you are a fisherman
you might be wondering about the wave heights
it won’t matter but you might be wondering.

And if you were Herself
you’d already have your hand on the swimming bag
and would be thinking about fried clams.

But you get the idea
that the focus on that last tenth of a mile
is on what lies beyond
not what sits to either side.

Last October,
after decades of Octobers
we were driving up out of the basin
and turning left at the stop sign
to go up the hill…
and BAM
there was a shaft of light
that shot right onto the corner of this house
which I had never seen before.

Knowing what I now know
about how quickly the light can come and go on this island
I turned right around.

Came back up the hill
threw the car as far off the road as I could
and walked up to investigate.

Click click click with the camera to record the moment
then some intense visual sketching for reference
and just like that the light was gone.

Came back home and reviewed the days scouting.

And there on the camera screen
was what I was too busy on site to see…
the dear little painted doorstep sign…
The Paint Box

Gotta love ’em
My Muses

New Potatoes

This is one of the rare paintings I’ve done
which qualifies for two categories.
It’s both a candidate for the Recipe Series and for the Garden Graces Series.

There have been several incarnations of initial sketches for this one over the years.
The final composition actually was spot on as a blend of them all.

My hope was to be able to grow the leeks as well as the potatoes
and strut with garden cred pride.
Alas, the Allium Leaf Miner flew into my yard a few years ago
and declared war on anything I tried to grow in the allium family.

Garlic, onions, leeks…poof.

With an organic approach there was not much in my arsenal that worked to eradicate them until …
the netting.
I’m talking serious dedicated covering.

Since garlic is planted in the fall
I leave it alone until February
then secure the netting over the entire bed.
This year’s attempt handled the snow and hail
and held up all the way to the scape harvest in May.

I had two large beds planted in garlic
and I’m that chuffed to report that 100% of those bulbs
are now seasoning in the greenhouse.

With that success behind me I am ready to tackle leeks…
next year
when all the construction is finished
and the puppy who loves to dig is under control
and I can devote time to careful planting and tending.

The Ruth Stout garden is transitioning into basically a giant potato bed.
They love the rich soil that the repeated dressing of hay mulch is building.
This year’s drought arrested their development some
but I was pleased to see that there were enough new potatoes
to make the traditional summer batch of Vichyssoise.

The easter egg hunt feel of harvesting potatoes
by  simply pulling back the blanket of hay
is so satisfying
that I am on my second batch of soup
and August has just begun.

The pitcher was a funny twist the Muses threw at me.
Back when I was imaging one of the first incarnations of this composition
I wanted to represent the cream somehow
and saw one of those cow vessels and thought it would be perfect.

So late one night I surfed through Ebay and found this one
and clicked right away.
Probably paid top dollar and then some because I am an impatient auction bidder.

When it arrived
it was much bigger than I thought.
I was going for some demure cream pitcher size
but, as I say,
the Muses had other plans.
I was going to fool them and shrink it down
with some sharp pencils
and artistic license.

But when it came time to arrange the still life on my kitchen table
with the new apprentice offering suggestions
for where to place each of those spuds…
(I removed the puppy teeth marks in the actual painting)

…well
I actually did like the statement that the large format cow was making.
They seem to have gotten the balance just right
again.

PS-
Maggie wants me to tell you
that she helped tie the chives in a bundle.
(show off)

PPS –
AND… I’m suppose to tell you that the little felt heart was her contribution.
I actually was wandering the studio
looking for something that might,
if ever so loosely,
represent the chicken broth.

In the process of that Herself brought me the tiny heart
and asked what it was from.
This was the second one we found so I knew.

Maggie got a little puppy puzzle house complete with baby chicks at easter.
Yes, I know, and I’ve gotten plenty of slack for it
but it has become her favorite game…so there.

Here is a photo of the last of the fully intact chicks
and you’ll see where that precious little heart came from.

Our precious little Muse in training.

Reach for the Stars

Those nights were restless after the flood.
Unable to climb the rickety stairs in the studio
I was sleeping on a tiny lumpy daybed
in a corner crammed with some of the things we had rescued
and after long stress filled days
it was a welcome and safe harbor.

In the quiet dark I wrote long winded passages to my friend Beth
unburdening some of the days’ burdens
and her gift of listening was its own blessed harbor of safety.

Somewhere deep into those nights
as I lay awake looking out the picture window
the sky had cleared and the world had grown dark enough
that I realized I could see the stars
from my bed.

Back in the cave like dark of the log cabin
I had once surprised Herself
by painting glow in the dark stars on our bedroom ceiling
it was the closest we got to the real thing
and those stars are probably still glowing at night over there.

Here now, on that starry studio night,
I was overwhelmed with magic
C.S. Lewis’s …Surprised by Joy …kind of magic
a profound and fierce wave of it.

I can’t remember if I sat up right then
or if it was later at dawn
but I wrote to Beth
and wrote
and wrote.

It was the exact moment when everything shifted
again
but this time toward the light
and the idea for a new studio came to me in one complete flash.

Sketchbooks are never far from my hands
and I dug out the sweet jewel of a ruler
which has heretofore been only a prop
but one of my most treasured objects
with its delicate markings
and sleek leather case
softened by HN Lockhart’s
hours of work…
I wrote “Reach for the Stars” on the paper…
and let the Muses take the wheel.

Now I’ve painted my share of houses
inside and out and on my easel
with both big and tiny brushes
and I know my way around building things
but it soon became clear I’m not an architect

but Beth knows a guy
her Michael.

When it came time for my sketches
to meet with his expertise
I ceremonially handed Michael that ruler
and said…”design me a studio around this”.

He did.

And today
as I write
there are big machines
moving mountains of dirt and stone
pipes being laid
walls going up
and that new studio is being built.

I’ve made a point over the years
of telling my most authentic truth
through my artwork.

Breadcrumbs along the way.

This painting is one such marker.

That is the original sketch
the very ruler
with my hands in motion.

When I sat down at the easel to bring it to life
it was April and the lilacs were in full bloom.

Today August has begun and,
while there have been many other hands moving to get us to this day,
I want to give special thanks here to Beth and Michael
who were there at the beginning
listening
to my story about the stars.

Her New Morning View

Her New Morning View – 18 x 20

Next month we will celebrate Mother Nature’s great flooding shove.

Celebrate ?

Well heck yeah.
We are still here…
together
our tiny family
just a bit wigglier and furrier
making the best of
turning the old studio
into our new living space
and now the summer is in full swing
and we are sitting on the back porch
in our old lady rocking chairs
watching big machines
move heaven…
and lots and lots of earth
in the service of
building us a new studio
with extra space
and light…
lots and lots of light.

This painting was the first one up on the easel
after we had shifted the old studio around enough for me to begin again.
It was early last winter
and we were discovering the pleasure
of eating breakfast together in the sunrise studio kitchen before I got to work.
Herself was enjoying watching how the early rays of light
stream across the snowy yard and wake up that magnificent stone barn.
And we were beginning
to move on
from survival mode
to the counting of our blessings.

Good Fortune

Well now…

Here we are with half a year flown by…
The solstice has come and gone
The daisies are in their second bloom
Herself is up swimming at her lake
Maggie is happily chomping on a new bone
A batch of new paintings lean in between piles of boxes and bags
And the Granary Gallery Show is almost here !

It has been a wild and crazy ride since last year’s flood.
As Billy Collins would say…A freaky blast…which is my new favorite way of looking at the world.

With the help of some dear friends and short controlled bursts of “freakishly” hard work
we have new paintings and exciting prospects on the horizon.

Last month, in a moment of particular exhaustion
after a day of navigating roadblocks
and jumping through hoops that kept rolling on through
I opened that dinner’s proverbial fortune cookie
and read this…

Whoever put that into the tiny folded cookie
could never have known how prescient the sentiment was
or how much we needed to hear it at that very moment.

So I taped it up on the easel
in order to keep the focus
in the midst of the chaos
on
the CHILL.

Soon, very very soon dear patrons and followers
I will be able to reveal both the new paintings
and that new big project
which is indeed coming our way.

Stay tuned for the Annual Granary Gallery Show Rollout.

The opening is August 14

Until we meet again…
smell a rose for us
take a walk on the beach
throw your dog a bone
and stay safe out there.

H