Wednesday, November 15, 2006
Another 12″ x 12″ close up of the mystery berries.
UPDATE: A friend who grew up around here asked her Dad and based on her description of their shape, color, and arrangement, he thinks they are poke berries and not to be eaten. A quick search on google reveals that he is correct, but that there [...]
Tuesday, November 14, 2006
I found these berries on a hillside a few weeks ago and loved their red stalks. I have no idea what they are or even if they’re edible, but one was missing from this bunch.
Monday, November 13, 2006
When Kate was here last week, interviewing me for the Carrol County News, she asked for the title of this painting and then the reason it was named that. I laughed and she said she had to ask. I had to answer, but I felt a little silly about the reason. It’s a line from [...]
Sunday, November 12, 2006
Here’s the 12″ x 12″ painting that is the partner of the bugged out painting in yesterday’s post. It’s a beautiful baby blue scooter. It must belong to someone who works in or owns an equally charming shop in town next to this little spot where it rests. I love it and it seems a [...]
Saturday, November 11, 2006
I am continuing with my series of 12″ x 12″ paintings done in pairs. Can you guess what this one is? It’s not a bug, as most all have guessed. I’ll post its partner painting tomorrow and it will reveal a larger view.
Thursday, November 9, 2006
After having my interview with the newspaper on Wednesday, I realized that I needed to hurry up and finish the site update I had been working on. So after a couple all-nighters and lots of work on my photos, I am thrilled to have it completed. I wanted to make the site cleaner and went [...]
I was fortunate to receive some great press coverage in advance of my show at Eureka Thyme this month. The Morning News in Rogers, AR gave me a fantastic color photo that stretched across four columns on the front of the arts page. I was thrilled! Two other papers printed large b/w photos with their [...]
Thursday, November 2, 2006
Check out this post resonance by Aaron Landman in his new blog. It shows the formation of wave patterns in what looks like salt or sand formed from a sound wave of increasing frequency. Amazing to watch, if hard to listen to.