Saturday, November 22, 2008

Mîgwetchiwiiwewin


As Thanksgiving approached, I realized I had really no Fall painting with which to decorate my house.

And we have so much to be thankful for, in spite of our small problems. Even the problems are at least interesting. We will have a new hearing at Wayne County Circuit Court; it is currently scheduled for December 19. This will be our appeal of the guilty judgment against us in our Municipal Court over my outdoor paintings.

On Monday I will be interviewed by the Detroit Free Press about the issue. I'll let you know when this article comes out.

So for my Fall painting, I chose a Native American theme again. I had just been to the local annual pow-wow. It was very sparsely attended, due to the economy and the distances from which many Indians must travel, weighed against the amount they think they might earn as vendors there. While it was a little bit sad not to see the same people we see year after year, it was still good to see some of the faithful and the most dedicated dancers with their gorgeous costumes.

I used an old Edward Curtis photo as my pose and some of my own photos from the pow-wow to fill in the costume details. The zigzag wooden forms which frame the sides of the painting are stair supports (called "stringers") from Home Depot, painted turquoise blue with Native-inspired medallions. I am in the process of varnishing this painting and it will appear in front of my house by Wednesday. Just in time for Thanksgiving. And my guests.

Acrylic on wood. Image size, approx. 66 x 122 cm.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Little Queen


Shyly, she gazed at the strangers from behind the sumptuous silk curtain. The smell of roasting coffee filled the air. Her mother would soon bring out steaming cups to welcome us...

Gently tear away the curtain. All of Africa is in the gaze; in that aroma. Gazelles frolic across the Serengeti and a leopard rests in a acacia tree near a river...

...And a small girl is queen in her mother's kitchen.

This is the first painting I have developed from my series of coffee paintings (see below.) I finally got a chance to use a piece of papyrus I had been saving - the sole reason being that it had a fly stuck in it. That fly has traveled all the way from Egypt! And now it rests in my painting.

The gilded coffee beans remind me of scarabs, or large, worked pieces of African gold.

Acrylic on paper with silk, coffee, coffee beans, papyrus, glass beads, 22k gold leaf and one dead fly.

25 x 32 cm.

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Yes We Did!

"...democracy, liberty, opportunity, and unyielding hope."

Monday, November 3, 2008