Showing posts with label woe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label woe. Show all posts

9.25.2015

New Gallery Show - "Ghost Practice"

For the month of October, I will be exhibiting a whole batch of new work at CORE Gallery. I'm nearly ready to install it all this weekend for the opening next Thursday. 

This year, unlike other years, I've been silent. Silent on my process. Silent on what I'm working through - because I was still working through it. 

The outcome has been a massive amount of small works. Five mini-series that as a whole, I ended up titling "Ghost Practice." 

After the dust had settled of a monumental heartbreak earlier this year, I started picking up the pieces of my life moving forward. I began contemplating those paths not taken. Those should-have, could-have, might-have-beens. What if we had gotten that house? That car? Would things be different if... what-if?

I was struck deeply by a section in Cheryl Strayed’s book, “Tiny Beautiful Things” that explored the idea of ghost ships - the life path that you didn’t take:

“I’ll never know, and neither will you, of the life you don’t choose. We’ll only know that whatever that sister life was, it was important and beautiful and not ours. It was the ghost ship that didn’t carry us. There’s nothing to do but salute it from the shore.”

Intuitive painting on wood led me to reveal personal symbols - scissors ready to cut and thread uncut.

 
A staircase at a residency I didn’t apply for. 



A doorway to a permanent, independent home I didn’t pursue. 


The pause in my life as the semi-colon. 
















There are watercolor houses composed of abstract shapes whose doodles got me through the rough patch of regretful insomnia. 


The house sculptures that I had planned earlier in the year became inverted; I wanted to protect and tuck all their color and joy into the inside. Warrior arrows made of beach-combed driftwood stand guard outside. 


And then there are the portraits; hooded figures from dreams and faces of friends far away alongside characters from the escapism I retreated into.













In practicing the art of letting go, these works conspire to dissect my threads with scissors, my inner landscape with stairs, and my truth from the lies I tell myself. Here I stand, waving from the shore.

9.25.2007

Lightbox Tuning

Yesterday I created the light box. Everyone passing by the kitchen undoubtedly would ask, "What are you doing??" with quizzical looks as the cardboard box I was massacring. I would answer "I'm making a photo light box" and the quizzical look would remain as they went "hmmm..." and walked away.

Tonight I tried out said light box and well... it needs some tuning. I think the vellum paper I used for the sides may have been a bit too thick.
I was following this tutorial recommended to me by Scarywhitegirl. The tutorial was quite wonderful. The operator following the tutorial may need to be questioned however...


The whole idea was to be able to better photograph all of my wood burned pendants. Either I need to trade out the paper, bring in 10 more lights, upgrade my camera or do all three because I'm still not satisfied with the way these little guys are photographing.

Trust me - this looked way cooler in person.

Someday my pendants will be on Etsy! Someday!