Showing posts with label joan Didion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label joan Didion. Show all posts

Friday, May 12, 2017

Loosey Goosey Good


I have decided to post and ponder my process with everyone.  I think too often we want to only show our 'best', 'completed', 'finished' selves...and hey, who is EVER really there!!!?  So I am going to post my process and see if anyone out there can give me any help, feedback, etc.  Surely I have problems "such as are common to man".

So today I am looking at the sketches that I do to 'get to know' subjects before I attempt to paint them.  Man, I can do the loosest, "spirit of the subject" drawing when I am scrawling in my journal with my cheap Bic pen (love those cheap Bic pens!!), and then I try to retain that spirit when I paint...and it's "tighten up city" for me.  I love love love just staying in the "shape" realm...triangles, squares, rectangles...and I feel that all of that looseness really gets at the 'sense' of the thing.

Monday, January 19, 2015

Quotidian # 21 Joan and John

Today I tried painting the titles loosely into the painting.  There are Joan Didion's 'Blue Nights' and 'The Year of Magical Thinking' stacked on top of my grand-daughter's favorite book, 'The Fault in Our Stars'by John Green.  I love reading books that people tell me that they loved...because I not only get a good recommendation, but I get to know that person better.  Anyway, it was fun trying to portray the printed material on the books without getting too literal.

Sunday, January 18, 2015

Quotidian #20 Joan Didion

This 8" x 8" oil on museum board is another depiction of my favorite things.  The top two books are beloved Joan Didions.  Her prose is so luminous, that I go back to it again and again.  On top of that, these books are bound in beautiful colors that I enjoy looking at on my bookshelf!

Thursday, November 17, 2011

People With No Names - The Undocumented #93

This is 30" x 30" oil on stretched canvas.  I am reading the new Joan Didion book, "Blue Nights".  In one chapter she discusses the fact that her one, adopted, "beautiful baby girl" is perhaps privileged.  She recounts that her "beautiful baby girl" had 60 dresses.  (She counted them).  Didion changed the baby's dress four times "on the afternoon the State of California social worker made her mandated visit to observe the 'candidate for adoption' in the home environment."  Her house-cleaner, laundress (of the 60 dresses), and nanny, Aurcelia, had been prepped ahead of time NOT to speak to the social worker,  and to busy herself watering the garden.  Didion writes, "The thought of an unstructured encounter between Arcelia and a State of California social worker had presented spectral concerns from the outset...what if the social worker were to notice Arcelia spoke only Spanish?  What if the social worker were to happen into the question of Arcelia's papers?  What would the social worker put in her report if she devined that I was entrusting the perfect baby to an undocumented alien?"  Didion goes on in the next chapter to acknowledge that her "beautiful baby girl" DID, perhaps, have a privileged life;  but "Ordinary childhoods in Los Angeles very often involve someone speaking Spanish".  Okay,  I have thought a lot about the ways in which undocumented people harvest our produce, process our meat, and do myriad menial chores both inside and out of our homes.  But until now,   it had not occured to me that these 'unseen' laborers also contribute greatly to the cultural life of this nation!  How many artists have been able to continue their work because an undocumented person "picked up all the slack" so that their employers could continue to work?  I, for one, was struck with thanksgiving for 'Arcelia' in Joan Didion's life.  Because of this undocumented helpmate,  Joan Didion was able to continue to write her luminous prose!!!