A metaphor which applies to this painting on both literal and ironic levels.
Both ships imagined together in this composition, The Amistad and The Charles W. Morgan, have recently sailed out of the Granary Gallery and on to the walls of an island patron.
Which means the image meets the criteria for being offered as a print in the HN Studio Print Gallery.
And that brings me to the reckoning with the rising costs of everything involved in making those prints, from ink (which is the most expensive liquid on the planet… a Jeopardy answer that I guessed at and got right !), to the paper and the packaging tubes, etc. But last week when I sent the Head of the Shipping Department…Herself…on a mission to drop a print order off at UPS she called from the counter to say they wanted almost $70 to ship that tube. An almost $50 increase since the last one we shipped.
After a couple weeks of scratching my head and investigating other options we think we have a reasonable plan to use the USPS and have settled on a flat rate of $25 for shipping. That covers most of the shipping fees that we use to absorb without raising the price of the prints themselves.
Caught up in the wave of the cost of doing business …the ship of free shipping… has sailed.
Meanwhile the brushes are flying in the studio and fired up for a long winter of painting.
We appreciate every one of you who has supported us and the work over the years and are grateful to have you along for the ride.
Thanksgiving…the perfect time to share all the gratitude we feel for the love and support from patrons and friends throughout the year.
Here are a few new little paintings to help celebrate the season of light and love… these are currently on exhibition at Gallery 1261 in Denver for their Small Works Show.
For those of you who are scattered far and wide across this planet here’s a link for you to see all the fine paintings included…Gallery 1261. And I know a few of you who are within visiting distance of those Rocky Mountains and hope you will stop in and say hey for us.
Happy and Merry from the studio…
Sunflower Summer – 12 x 9
This was the year of Winter Sowing. A new and ancient method of seed starting. New for me ancient for the planet.
In late December, on the solstice if you want to celebarte the suns’ journey, recycled milk jugs and deeper potting pots with good drainage holes are filled with about 4? of seed starting soil. Then a packet of seeds is scattered over the top, carefully marked for much later identification… or not so carefully in my case… and sprinkled with water and covered with a plastic lid or in my case a ziplock back with ventilation holes. (Pro tip: A soldering iron saved time, and strain on my hands, in the making of all those holes.)
And then the fun part… put those jugs outside and walk away.
Mother Nature does the rest.
The beauty and the wonder of my new studio is that it was plunked right smack in the middle of my garden.
So, of course, Maggie and I inspected all those pots each day on our walks. I was a bit skeptical but not Maggie. Joyous trust is her superpower.
We had, per usual, exceeded our enthusiasm and of the initial 100 pots sown in the winter there was about an 85% success rate.
And among those the sunflowers were simply the best. Encircling the tomato plants lining the Ruth Stout Garden they made this one to remember the Sunflower Summer.
Rocky Mountain High – 9 x 12
This one came to me in a dream and taught me a new knot.
And then I got to trip down memory lane and listen to John Denver again.
I was right back in my Aunt Bonnie’s little MG with the top down and a burlap earthshoe bag full of 8 track tapes at my feet in the passenger seat.
Wind in our hair singing at the top of our lungs it was the closest I have ever come to a Rocky Mountain High.
Trustfall (Study) – 9 x 12
A Study
An idea beginning to take some sort of shape.
The lump in the throat.
A challenge thrown down by the Muses which I gently picked up three months ago now.
This very tiny painting was the first to emerge …three months ago… from the gossamer threads of a nebulous swirl which they The Muses were tossing one to the other like a beachball made of feathers in front of me.
And then in the middle of last night or rather the wee hours of the morning they woke me up and threw a scattershot of volley balls straight at me.
I snuck out of bed grabbed a flashlight and headed over to the studio to quickly capture some sketches.
That page as it turns out is a wild mess. But after a cup of tea and an hour of log editing and the 7.07am sunrise announcement from the Cardinal I went back down to the library and the next page in the sketchbook now reveals a fully formed series of paintings… Trustfall.
I know not to even be the least bit surprised that today is Thanksgiving Day.
She’s behind my chair as I write and finish this last Painter’s Note though it is the other end of the day from this painting and the light is different on her fur
and she’s really tired of me sitting up here in the loft all day.
Maggie’s favorite treat is still sweet peas and this spring I planted them close enough for her to help herself.
She still loves her sticks and keeps a stockpile by the studio front door to share with special guests.
She’s fearless in the face of woodchucks and tolerant of chipmunks.
If you read the notes from the painting, Seeing It Through, you will understand where much of this still life came from.
Set in my library, sadly not on the USS Jamestown, you may recognize that inkwell, and though I use the pen not the quill I have tried to write with it.
The little oil lamp lives on a library shelf…patiently waiting and the signal flags are never in the same place when I search for them in the new studio.
The eyeglasses and this journal itself were handed to me by C. Morse himself.
As was typical for the time period when paper didn’t grow on trees someone in the last two hundred years used the first half of this old whaling journal for a scrapbook carefully gluing religious tracts and society news clippings all the heck over entire pages.
But the last few pages were free of this detritus and in the most exquisite script, which I didn’t even try to render, the captain or probably boatswain recorded the comings and goings of the last days of a several years’ long whaling adventure of the ship Java out of New Bedford.
Even today the log entries of a commercial fishing vessel differ from that of a naval vessel. The 1861 log I am editing mostly lists weather, reckoning data, who got thrown into irons and the occasional details of the odd court martial.
The Java’s log book reads more like a journal and we learn of the cases of scurvy and birds that follow the ship.
And on at least one page, revealed under the corner of the pasted clippings, were those drawings of whales. It was common to illustrate the ones they captured, perhaps by way of some kind of inventory and documentation.
This was the final entry written as they had Cuttyhunk in sight which means they were sailing past the Aquinnah lighthouse as he put down the pen …homeward bound.
There are two huge windows to the left of my easel in the new studio and outside just two steps from them is the Ruth Stout garden.
Last winter I tried an experiment of putting some bird feeders just inside the garden fence actually “inviting” them to come inside.
That experiment has meant countless hours of enjoyment watching and studying them with the added benefit of their thank you of helping to control the bugs who also like my vegetables.
A few months ago this little critter moved in to the compost pile.
He was adorable to watch darting between the pickets of the fence and up and down the railroad tie edging to the new garden bed I planted around the outside.
So one day…
Yes the Muses
They bid me to go find a teacup and fill it with seed and set it up on the edging just to see…
I was hoping to snap some close ups of the birds migrating through that spring but the only taker was Munk. The look on his face after the carefully considered approach…BONANZA !
It took him hours and hundreds of round trips with handfuls of seed back and forth to the den before he just dumped the whole thing over and sat there filling his cheeks.
How cute I thought.
And it was until a couple of days later when I went out to check on the newly planted beans and discovered he had thought to add some salad to balance out the carbs.
As I write this the garden is struggling to survive a season of drought but the replanted beans are beginning to climb and Munk has been keeping a low profile.
I have had this painting title in my sketchbooks for years.
Came close to getting it up on the easel a few times and the Muses were excited but I let myself be swayed by nay sayers.
My studio is in Pennsylvania and there were some folks here who thought nobody else in the world would know about the regional tradition of pickling eggs with red beets.
This is the first year that my new kitchen garden beds have been full of dirt and enough compost to plant some crops and the first seeds in the ground were red beets.
They did famously and when the first batch was ready to be harvested I got a fresh panel up on the easel ready to go.
I chose to leave out the sugar and sweet onion and spices from this composition but for those following along with the “Recipe Series” I layer slices of onions, cooked beets, hard boiled eggs and spices then mix, with the beet juice left behind after cooking them…a cup of sugar, a cup of vinegar and basically empty the spice cabinet into it then pour to fill the mason jars.
The longer the eggs are in the jar the deeper purple they get and the sweet savory flavor they absorb makes for a nice and colorful addition to a salad or a lunch packed for the beach.
My advice…
Listen to your Muses not the naysayers and paint what you want.
The day after the Derby ended there was a moment in the very late afternoon in the very late fall when I was buzzing the bite.
I parked at the beach to wait for my chowder to cool and I noticed the birds fighting the frigid wind had stopped for their own reasons.
I smiled to see the youngster heading out to the rocky pier sun dancing on the tip of his fishing pole and then noticed that all of the fishermen were kids.
You could tell because they were running and jumping and helping each other secure their lures and their hats.
I opened the bag of oyster crackers pulled down my hat thought about how good it felt to run.