Apricot sun on route 95

And behind me

Still lavender blue night framed in my rear view mirror

I leave bare branch trees

Dark lines against my treasured city

Ahead wild seagulls whirl and dip

Angels of the refuse

Of our existence

                                                  3/24/2014

Slicing Through Artist Block: for my friend Vanessa

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There are those awful times when I didn’t feel like I’d ever have another idea.  For anything.  Everything I thought of, I’d already done several times over and I just can’t get motivated to do the next – dance with the same set of movements, another still life, or another poem about rain. I believe that you are your actions, rather than your thoughts and therefore, I could no longer count on my old identity as an artist.  (This is a somewhat comforting thought when you are occasionally homicidal toward coworkers or spouse or the really bad driver in front of you, as I am.)

In retrospect, I find that in those barren stretches I do things that eventually erupt into creativity again.  But I don’t realize it at the time.  Many of these times, I often feel the world heavy around me.  Or I’m running in too many directions because of desire to learn as much as possible about the world.  Or I wish to dissolve into fantasy (at which point I read a lot of novels).  I might be putting a lot of energy into work or politicking or socializing, or not have any energy at all.

Then, boom.  Something changes.  It could be as simple as the strep throat I am just getting over.  I  step back, slow down, and watch the world go by.  The ideas drift by like pollen in the spring air. Achoo, ideas start flowing into my thoughts and popping into my journals.  My journals start plumping.  It as if all that time I spent away from paints and song were simply a catalyst.

So here’s a list to step once more on the path of creation.  These are ideas for writing or art, my two main endeavors these days, but they are applicable to any art form.

1. Make your own list of things you’d like to do or learn but haven’t yet. Investigate what it would take to do one or two.  Maybe start one. (My latest favorites are jumping out of an airplane and learning welding.)

2. Work on writer’s prompts or art exercises.  You can find these on the web and in books.  My favorite books for writer’s prompts are Susan Wooldridge “Poem Crazy” and Josip Novakovitch “Fiction Writer’s Workshop.”  For art, I find inspiration reading books about symbolism in history and across cultures, or leafing through the art books I’ve accumulated.

3. Read books.  Go to museums.   Visit the theatre.  Enjoy friends.

4. Tell yourself you’re going to do something small.  Something that just takes 5 minutes.  A quick sketch or two of your cat.  A few random words about yourself or why you hate your boss.

5. Do something small as regularly as possible.  Maybe vow to make it once a day.  It’s okay if you don’t keep the vow and end up doing this once a week.  Keep going.

6. Turn off the media stream.  Give yourself some quiet time to think.  I like to take walks and just look and listen carefully.

7. Switch creative outlets.  If you’re a writer, try drawing.  If you’re a painter, try singing.  Sometimes trying something we don’t have any expectations of being good at is just what we need.  Beginner’s mind.  After, I find I approach my regular channels with that same beginner’s mind and a different perspective.

8. Do “morning pages,”  writing steadily for 3 pages anything that comes into your head.  Each day. (See rule above about daily work.) Don’t edit, don’t think much.  Try to spill words onto the page as fluidly and steadily as possible.  You can throw out the pages afterward.  I like doing this in the morning captivated by the warmth of a cup of coffee.  But any time in the day can work.

9. Remember the process of making art is the important part.  Whether the product is good or bad doesn’t matter.  The finished work is merely the by-product of the process.  Sometimes I like what I did. About 9 out of 10 times, I toss it in the garbage.

10. Be patient.  Know the muse will find you when you are both ready.  It will happen.

finding the muse: autobiography

My recent post, “Creative Process on Tuesday,” explored creativity in a day.  This autobiographical account examines how creativity swirled like water throughout my life, seeping through the cracks, and occasionally changing its shape by pouring into a different medium.  That said, it is important to note that I had dry spells where I didn’t create much, and times when work and daily living chores were overwhelming and I didn’t sit down to make anything.

As a child and teenager, I experimented with drawing and writing but not in any disciplined way.  I also learned to play classical violin and piano and taught myself guitar.  I found that I couldn’t create music, perhaps because the training was so structured, although this did change as I got older.  In college I rediscovered a love of dance and after graduation I pursued that love by studying modern dance and doing my own choreography.  At that time though, I didn’t have enough confidence in my own abilities.  Also, it was daunting that so many of the dancers had trained since they were little children.  I decided to give up the arts (hah – the muse doesn’t let go readily) and go to graduate school to become a speech-language pathologist. This was the right decision for me.  Relieved of the pressure of making money from art, I merrily continued to pursue the arts while in graduate school, just as a “little exercise” and a bit of journal writing.  During this time I took up belly dancing.  I remember sitting on the floor of my apartment, sewing a burgundy belly dancing costume by hand.  My roommate exclaimed, “I thought all that graduate students did was study!”  But I couldn’t leave the arts so completely.

After enjoying belly dancing for a while, I got bored because of the limited number of movements used in what was essentially a folk art.  So I decided to take up Orissian temple dance.  I found an excellent teacher, Ritha Devi, who taught me in her basement apartment in the east 90s in Manhattan.  It was fortunate she had a basement apartment – the dance involved percussive stamping of the feet.  The first dance I learned was Pushpanjali, a dance of offering to the gods.  Orissian dance was very complex and involved not only fast footsteps but isolation of body parts, as the rib cage, hips and head often moved independently.  In addition, the dance had mudras, or hand gestures that had specific meanings such as grinding sandlewood or the opening of a flower.  (If you are interested, you can go to YouTube and find lovely Orissian temple dancing.)

I continued Orissian dance, as well as my own modern dance choreography.  I got married and got pregnant. I loved being pregnant and on my due date, my husband videotaped my carefully choreographed dance about pregnancy.   When my son was 1 1/2 years old we spent 6 months in India learning about the culture and going swimming at the beach in Orissa.  When I came back, I got pregnant again and this time I was too tired to continue dancing.  After my second son was born, I didn’t have the time to keep in shape for dancing and work on choreography so I gave up dance altogether.

The children were so cute I started drawing them with pencil.  Mostly when they were asleep;  otherwise, they were moving too fast!  Then I started using colored pencils and not only drawing the children, but outdoor landscapes.  My husband, who is an abstract painter, suggested I try watercolors.   I found the fluid way that watercolors demanded some things be left to chance  very appealing.  Also, watercolors have great versatility particularly when used from tubes.  And they were portable.  I could take them to the park or camping.  We started doing a lot of camping and I painted outdoors there.  I became fascinated by painting the constantly moving water, whether river, lake or ocean.

Nine years after the birth of my second son I left my husband.  I got a motorcycle and a friend gave me her father’s box of oil paints. Oil paints were delightful.  It was like playing in mud.  They could be put on thickly.  They could be layered.  And I could experiment more easily with where lines and colors went since I could paint in layers that covered previous thoughts. By this time my painting subjects were still lifes, landscapes and people.  I carried my paints in the motorcycle’s saddlebags.  I often portrayed my dreams.  I continued to use my children as subjects.  I also drew and painted my boyfriends.  I would paint on scrap bits of wood I found in the streets, since construction was always happening somewhere in my neighborhood.  I also used found metal as frames and would pick up scraps of trash that seemed interesting – colored glass, a tube, a curl of wire.  As always, I kept journals that contained a variety of spontaneous thought, poems, short stories and sketches.

My father had taught me the importance of humor. Around the time I was still married, I started making little cartoon books such as “Camping with Children,”  “Suburban Life” (for very urban friends that were moving), and “The Seven Year Itch.”  I would also draw cartoons about funny events or conversation.

As a speech-language pathologist, I had to develop ways to encourage children who did not naturally love language to learn to enjoy verbal communication.  Believing strongly that creativity is healing, I thought up many projects that would involve both hands and mind.  Among them were creating and decorating and flying kites,  writing poetry from lists of words we made up while using our senses on walks outside the school, and what I called “the puppet project.”  The puppet project was a two month project at the end of the school year.  The kids created their own puppets from paper bags and construction paper, gave the puppets names and personalities, wrote their own plays, and then performed the plays for the kindergarten children.  This was immensely successful and each year the children would ask if we would do it again.

During my time in New York City, I generally lived in artist communities.   I didn’t always participate in the life of the community since I was shy about publicly displaying my work.  However, I derived a great deal of pleasure and inspiration from meeting other artists and performers. I regularly went to museums, as I had done since I was a child holding the hand of my grandmother.   I went to my friends’ plays and art openings.  I casually wandered into the art galleries that were sprouting up like dandelions.  It was good to have affirmation that doing this seemingly useless, and entirely uneconomic (with some exceptions, of course) activity  was important.  And there was the sheer energy that was impossible not to bring home and form into my own work.

When I look back, I realize that the one constant is that I always kept a journal.  I use it to write ideas, sketches, poems, stories, and outpourings of feelings that I never wanted to tell anyone.  I write in it when I feel like it, usually dating the entries.  But there are no rules.  Sometimes I will use it several times a day and at other times, days can go by without an entry.  It is my companion and keeper of secrets and repository of many ideas yet to be fulfilled.

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My grandmother, Nonne, and me

The Creative Process on Tuesday

Tuesdays are my off-from-work day.  I love them because most people (including my husband) are at work and I get to slack off all by myself.  So I putz around the house, clean a bit, read a bit, and then make it to the pottery studio for a few hours.  Then home again, where I eat a decently cooked meal for once. Perhaps I read some more or … whatever.  It it my day of no-plan.  Next I’m likely to fuss at my small garden and do other creative projects which are at hand.  Today, it is framing a beautiful picture of Ganesha and writing this blog entry.  Somehow the solitude and time to wander around the neighborhood or just wander through my small home is highly conducive to creativity.  The gentle act of moving and observing everything outside, or wandering inside and randomly picking up a poetry book, or pulling out construction paper and scissors generates spontaneous ideas.  Years ago, a friend told me that even if I didn’t have time to execute all my ideas, I could write them down and maybe get back to them later.  It was excellent advice.  Not only does it stop me from despairing that I will never get to any of my ideas, but it empties my head so that I can concentrate on the one idea I wish to act on now.  Which happens to be…writing this blog.  Right now.  In short, what I need most to be creative is lots of time.  It is not necessarily time directly related to creating.  There must be some time to let the ideas naturally germinate and grow, away from the pressure to be or do something.  It is time to absorb other people’s ideas, which naturally leads to my own creative process.  Some ideas of projects for today (only one or two of which I will get to) are:

finish sewing alterations of clothing

executing several pottery designs that I’ve been mulling over since Sunday, when I went to the Walters Museum’s Japanese pottery show

some sketching ideas I’ve been thinking about, such as another self portrait (haven’t done one in a while) or I might just sketch the cat

I’ve also been thinking about doing some really large painting projects to just play with large brush strokes

cutting out  colored construction paper to tape onto the front door as a precursor to painting an abstract design on it

starting another short story from the several ideas written in my notebook

trying to sound out one of the Child Ballads I’ve recently heard on the guitar

Ahh, or I could just stare out the window at the crab apple tree blossoms that are just opening, turning from bright pink buds to 5-petaled white flowers.  Or I could paint them….

Tuesdays are really good.

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(stoneware plate created in 2013 and painted last Tuesday)

Exteriors and Interiors: Part 2

IMG_2329Imrana Sayed and Wick O’Brien have made their beautiful house by building and decorating in and onto an existing house in Staten Island.   They bought their house many years ago but over time have changed it.  Wick is a skilled builder.  He redid the kitchen, tore off the roof, built stairs, and made the attic into a master bedroom with attached bath.  Imrana is skilled at sewing. She regularly sews clothes or makes toys (like stuffed bears) for children.  She sewed slip covers for couches and chairs as well as creating all the curtains. I think the couch they are sitting in is about to get a remake!  Imrana also did a lot of the less skilled work that required patience and persistence, like stripping layers of paint from the original wood and refinishing it. Then, she decorated the house with found objects and friends’ artwork.  I have experienced their hospitality in the house more times than I can count and it’s always like coming home.

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Dining room. Painting by Mike Hamilton.  For more beautiful paintings go to his website mikehamiltonpaintings.com  Disclosure: He’s the father of my children, too.  Makes beautiful kids and paintings!

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Below is the dining room wall opposite Mike’s painting.  The cross in the corner was actually a wooden mould for metal pipes.

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A corner of the living room.  My painting of a lamplit street in Williamsburg, Brooklyn was done at night in winter, under a street light and wearing many layers of clothing.

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I saw this whimsical, carved and painted fence when I was bicycling around the Hampden neighborhood of Baltimore.  Although this is on the outside of the house, I consider gardens and fences to be part of the house so I included it in this part of the conversation.

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Betsy Bennett is an actor, comedian, writerIMG_2485 and also my sister-in-law.  She decorated her apartment in an idiosyncratic way, with family heirlooms plus objects and artwork she found at thrift stores and flea markets.  I found it delightful to stay at her home when I went to visit.  In every nook there was a surprise!

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For a taste of Betsy’s most recent comedy, “Assisted Living: The Musical” go to http://www.comptonandbennett.com

 

Although I love traveling,  I am always happy to come home.

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Exteriors and Interiors: Part 1

In the past months, I’ve been contemplating creativity in many forms and randomly taking photographs along the way.  A chance to review all those photos gave me the realization that I photographed outdoor murals, architecture, and the wild beauty of Falls Road in Baltimore, plus the interiors of two homes I admired.  Hence, this blog entry and the next will be about the deliberate impact of artists, architects and builders on both exterior and interior space.

This entry will feature some of Baltimore’s murals and roads in public spaces.  The next will be about domestic design and projects.  Perhaps it will inspire you toward some creative project of your own – they are certainly making me think of new ideas.

These sights are on the way to Baltimore Aikido, around or along Falls Road.

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The mural below has a bicycle shop below it.

 

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I am always intrigued by bridges and the way they interact with the surrounding area.  This is a favorite tunnel created by a bridge over the Falls River and Road.

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In a city, overlapping roads and railways are inevitable and the controlled chaos they create is beautiful and made more so by nature sneaking through the concrete.

 

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My favorite mural is by Freddy Sam.  It is so big I took two photos to show the whole thing.  Freddy Sam’s website, freddysam.com, is well worth checking out. He is an experienced muralist from South Africa and has created murals in many parts of the world.

 

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Morning Elation

Morning Poem 1

Beneath the neon red Domino Sugar

I turn my feet slightly north toward

the glowing white Under Armour sign

sugar and underwear

in this practical city

of improbable dreams.

 

 

 

Morning Poem 2

bruised purple clouds

above pale yellow horizon

the snow lays lightly

the stout flying geese

call each to each

 

Morning Poem 3

And the sleek fat crow

oh, master of trickery and craft

along the curve of the road

hopped across my trail

 

Morning Poem 4

 

Sugar snow still

on verdant

grass ready

(as we all are) for summer

bare plane tree oaks

sprinkled with ivory crystals

and I with my warm coffee

mug in hand

have finally learned

the names of things

and something of their nature.

painting, sketching and the muse

IMG_2222Thus far I’ve talked about the variety of creativity.  I was first opened to creative thought by drawing and dancing as a kid.  I remember climbing my favorite tree, a crab apple tree in the front yard, and discovering perspective by sketching the house across the suburban street.  As I grew through adolescence and young adulthood, I kept journals that contained everything I was thinking in words and drawings, prose and poetry.  I still keep these journals, although now they don’t have as much in them since I often write prose on the computer.  Poetry, which comes to me at random times, is still in the journals and also on all sorts of random scraps of paper.  The muse is chaos and does not come only when bidden.

And after a long hiatus, I am finally drawing and painting again.  It feels like the world has gotten bigger and beauty is everywhere. My favorite prayer is a Navaho one:

I see beauty in front of me.

I see beauty behind me.

I see beauty to the right of me.

I see beauty to the left of me.

I see beauty above me.

I see beauty below me.

In that spirit, I hope you will enjoy these samples of my art.

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Painted at Sparrow’s Point in Baltimore.

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A sketch done of my son when we were on vacation at the beach in Rehobeth, Delaware.

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This watercolor is of a wetlands near Kennedy airport in New York City. I attached it to re-bar that I found while wandering in the city.  At the time, I didn’t know what it was but it looked like the perfect frame for a small painting.

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One of my earliest oil paintings was done on wood I found.  I love painting on wood and it is easy to find scraps that are being thrown out from construction sites.

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A favorite corner of my home with two small paintings.  The larger painting is of my sister Kim, sitting on a bench at Clark Gardens on Long Island.  The smaller piece is oil on canvas stretched over hanger wire.  The photos are of my mom and great-grandmother.  There is a lovely porcelain cup given to me by Sensei Kiyota.  The figurines are of Shiva and Laksmi.  I picked up Laksmi when I was in India.  My husband coincidentally had Shiva well before we met.  Now they are together.

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Both the above and below paintings were done when I lived and worked in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.  It was still a rough neighborhood but was a growing artists’ community at that time.

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Above is my guardian angel.  She was painted after I had a horrific bicycling accident and my foot was run over by the tire of a street sweeper.  My foot looked just like it does in the painting before the doctor stitched it up, although it was (thank goodness) still attached.  After the accident my lawyer, Clay Evall, came to the house.  Clay told me later that when he saw the huge truck tire in my apartment (which I had used to practice bokken), he knew I’d somehow get better.

New York City

This weekend I drove straight from work in suburban Maryland to New York City.  I spent most of my life in NY and it still feels like coming home when I spend time there.  And as usual, NY had many lessons in creativity and process.

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(“New York, just like I pictured it….”, Stevie Wonder)

The first stop was my friends, Imrana and Wick.  They have a lovely house on Staten Island and by the time I got there, I was exhausted and hungry.  Imrana instantly brought out food and served me dinner.  Her cooking is an exquisite blend of nouvelle cuisine, health food style.  Much of the food comes from a food co-op or she grows herself.  I relaxed in that very familiar house and felt comforted.  Then we sat in the living room and I patted Luna,her elderly dog, while we talked.  I slept better than I have in weeks.

I woke up shortly after sunrise.  The house was quiet, the quiet of sleeping humans.  I showered and got myself some hot water, my favorite drink.  Then I wandered around the house smiling at the comfort I felt in familiar surroundings and marveling as always at Imrana’s and Wick’s artistry in creating a home.  Wick is a builder by trade (and a musician by choice) and he rebuilt much of the house.  Imrana sanded wood and painted the walls.  She sewed couch and chair covers, curtains, pillows and various other oddments, including cylindrical bolsters to quite effectively block the drafts coming in from the outside in the old house. The kitchen is lovely.  Just the right size to be cozy, but bit enough to have two people cooking and one other person (me) sitting on a stool.  Wick put in lovely wood cabinets, some with glass fronts, a stone counter top. There is a huge 6 burner gas stove.  The windows look out onto trees and an expanse of their neighbor’s lawn (It is, after all, in a city, so of course there are other houses relatively nearby.)IMG_2325 IMG_2330 IMG_2344

Gradually the household woke up.  We did yoga together and took the dog for a walk in lovely Snug Harbor.  When we came back Zara and William, daughter and beau, were awake and starting to forage for food in the kitchen.

I said my goodbyes and rode into “the city” as Manhattan is often called.  I then spent 4 glorious hours studying tantojujitsu with Salahuddin Muh’min Mohammed, a knowledgeable practioner from Philedelphia who was brought in by Eizan Ryu jujitsu, my old dojo. (both S.M.Mohammed and Eizan Ryu can be found on Facebook and YouTube) I saw friends.  I threw friends down boom.  They threw me down boom. I made new friends and we threw each other down boom. Life was very good.

By the end of the seminar, my son Jack had arrived and was watching the class.  We rode together to Briarwood, Queens to meet my older son, Ian.  Reunited, we walked to a local Indian restaurant.  Two musicians were playing, a tabla-ist and an organist (the small organs that are operated by playing the keys with one hand and moving the bellows with the other hand).  The music was lovely and I particularly love tabla with its complex rhythms.  We chatted and ate, as the waitress, with motherly intent, extorted my sons to eat more.  It was a delightful experience.  We plotted the overthrow of the current Democratic congresswoman.

Have I mentioned my son is running for Congress? (see Ian Hamilton for Congress, either his website, Facebook, or Twitter)

The next morning Jack and I strolled out for coffee and a brief, but satisfying skateboard lesson.  I do want to learn skateboard, particularly after seeing a great YouTube video of skateboard tricks on New York rooftops (kids, don’t try this at home).

Jack and I kissed goodbye as he went off to practice tai chi in Chinatown.  Ian woke up and we drank more coffee.  We strategized on mobilizing his neighbors and getting out votes.  We ate Jamaican meat patties and Egyptian pita sandwiches.  Ian taught me some salsa.

Finally, it was time to kiss Ian goodbye and head back south to Baltimore, husband and cat.  At a rest stop on the New Jersey Turnpike, I met Heather Johnson on her Triumph Tiger motorcycle.  I admired her motorcycle since I rode motorcycles for about 14 years and was thinking of getting another one.  Heather was heading to Mexico and blogging too. Check out her blog – it’s lots of fun.  She’s a visual artist who works in whatever is handy, embroidery to photographs and lots in between.  The blog is “in search of the frightening and beautiful.”IMG_20140223_155111777_HDR

My New York trip seemed like a compressed lesson in the many forms of the muse, the many ways that creativity seeps, spurts, erupts in us.  From Imrana’s and Wick’s singular house to Muhammed’s exhortion to “be creative,” to find what feels best in martial arts.  From salsa and skateboard and tai chi to political solutions and machinations.  From the stately art deco Empire State Building to the adventure of a woman, a motorcycle and a road to Mexico. From here……………………………………………………………………………to there.

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Sleep

We sleep

Arranged in bed

From east to west

Door to window

Me

You

And cat

A comma at the end of our bed.

 

Finally, got a few nights of good sleep and feel less scattered energy and ready to play at writing and other planned projects, like hemming my pants, which is necessary and oddly soothing.  Sewing always reminds me of my mother, who taught me to use the sewing machine at a young age, although she was afraid to teach me cooking because of the hot stove.  Sewing also reminds me of Nonne, my grandmother, who taught me how to sew buttons back on.  We sat at the card table in the dining room, right next to the window overlooking the onion-domed Eastern Orthodox Church.  I miss them both, although it almost seems silly since Nonne, born in 1890, would be 123 years old today.

Lately, I am thinking about the people I have lost.  A good friend just died.  She was only ten years older than me, young still.  Annemarie Kreybig Manning was a fabulous artist, a natural painter, whereas I only succeed at my craft through hard work.  Of course she worked hard too.  Annemarie was an inspiration, with her large canvases.  I still have a sketch she gave me of trees blown by wind.  I can hear the wind.