Transformed Terrain (part 1)

I  relocated to Wilmington DE from the VA/DC area in 2018. My first exhibit (2019) in Wilmington, Transformed Terrain, was inspired by connections between an altered natural terrain and the people who change it directly or indirectly, from close by or from a distance, on purpose or unwittingly. Further inspiration comes from artist Rene Magritte…

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Fog and Fire

Fire and Fog It’s January 4, 2020. A deep fog envelopes our house and garden this early morning. Outdoor sounds are muffled. Tiny tree branches blur against a wet sky that closes in like a blanket. It’s the way the artist in me feels when one train of thought ends and another seems so vague…

Discovering Portraits

As cooler weather comes our way I am trying to shift off garden design to designing works in the studio.  I often start with something already in progress and go from there into a new series. In January and February I made 20 small “portrait”collages formed from a composite of features.  They are all 5…

Color in the Garden

The bees coming to my yard are attracted to blue flowers: Agastache (hyssop family) and Leadwort (plumbago) and the chaste plant (Vitus agnus castus). Only the chaste plant has a strong scent which is kind of nice. The bees are flying right by red cardinal flowers, yellow/orange coreopsis, Echinacea (red, orange and lavender) and hot…

Out of Chaos

Collecting materials, tools, and ideas is the first step. Whether an artist’s studio is neat as a pin or heaped full of brushes, tools, clay or wood, disorder characterizes the creative process. A chaotic jumble of ideas spill out of the brain and become organized in drawn or painted forms. Tubes of color sort themselves out,…