Friday, January 25, 2019

You can’t be what you can’t see

“I agree with activist Marian Wright Edelman, ‘you can’t be what you can’t see’ so it’s extremely important for women to be seen being artists as well as supporting each other in the process.” Here I am in the studio today, with a new shipment of canvases. 





Be seen being an artist.
Be seen working. 
Be seen taking up space. 
Be seen in your power. 
Be seen being brave. 
Be seen being assertive. 
Be seen making a mess of things. 
Be seen making something beautiful, wretched, or scary. 
Be seen contradicting yourself. 
Be seen screaming. 
Be seen trying something new and failing. 
Be seen crying and vulnerable. 
Be seen being ugly. 
Be seen being your most beautiful human self. 
Be seen loving the planet. 
Be seen loving strangers. 
Be seen loving animals.
Be seen meditating. 
Be seen doing yoga. 
Be seen dancing wildly.
Be seen getting it wrong.
Be seen getting it right.
Be seen caring about yourself. 
Be seen loving all those who come into contact with you. 
Be seen cheering someone on. 
Be seen making a difference. 
Be seen laughing like mad. 
Be seen making your own personal history. 
Be seen on the edge of your comfort zone. 
Be seen being strong. 
Be seen being weak. 
Be seen making a mistake. 
Be seen trying again.
Be seen changing your mind.
Be seen reclaiming your time. 
Be seen reclaiming your space.
Be seen asking for what you want. 
Be seen asking for what you need. 
Be seen being sure of your opinions. 
Be seen embracing all your quirks. 

Be seen with your brushes, canvases, and paint splattered shoes. 
Be seen with your tools of the trade whatever they may be.
Be seen with your economy of line and your wild intuition. 

Do not get small, do not fade away, do not give up... we need you here. In you, I see myself and together we are stronger. 

Thank you. 

Friday, January 18, 2019

Small works and a visit from the past







This week has been spent in the studio mostly laying the foundations for nine small works. You know I like to alternate between large and small as I build a series. Currently, we have five larger works on the go as well. The studio is warming up, slowly but surely, from the holiday break.

I am continuing to "refill the well" by watching art documentaries again this week (you can see the ones I watched last week, here). So far, these are this week's selections.

 Anselm Keifer- Remembering the Future. Brilliant documentary. I love Keifer and have had the thrill to stand before his great work but knowing more about the man, his process, and to see his studio spaces really brings it all home.

Marina Abramovic - The Artist Is Present, I admire Abramovic and understand her work much more after having seen this tender and moving documentary. 

Picasso's Last Stand. A fascinating look at the artist at the end of his career. 

Robert Rauschenberg - Pop Art Pioneer. I've been a fan of Rauschenberg for ages and this was a lovely way to spend some time with the artist and his work. His sense of humour and life force is contagious. 

Again, all of these are currently available on YouTube. Is there an art documentary you think I need to watch or one that has recently inspired you? Leave it in the comments for me. Thanks! I remember in art school, my mentor Ron Graff would tell us to just spend time in our studios, reading, looking at art, flipping through magazines- whatever- that time spent in the studio was good, so if you are feeling stuck, why not watch a documentary in your studio space, whether it's the kitchen table or a spare bedroom, think about art in there while you are not making it and watch what happens.

I have also started mentoring a couple of artists this past week. It has been wonderful to share in their work, their struggles, and to hear of their brilliant ways of seeing the world through their art. I am grateful to be able to do this work. I am still working on my mentoring website, so stay tuned, but if you think you want to work with me send me an email or leave me a comment to learn more. I look forward to hearing from you!

This week for the Tuesday Studio Video Visit, I did something a little different. This week, I filmed myself reading one of my first Studio Blog posts from 2007. It was an emotional experience for me to read my words as I let it sink in just how much has changed in my life and art. Here it is again in case you missed it. You can always find these videos each week on my Facebook Art Page. 


I think that's all I have for you this week. Every day we paint is a victory but we also have to take the time to keep learning and growing. We have to see the beauty and feel the sun on our faces and spend time in nature. We have to take care of our hearts and minds. 

With gratitude from my heart to yours, thanks for reading.

Friday, January 11, 2019

New work and inspiration round up!




Thanks to everyone who read my year-end review blog and took the time to comment. I really appreciate everyone's coments and support. I will announce the winner of the small painting at the end of this post. 

This week has been spent mostly in the studio exploring the beginnings of what I think is a new series, currently there are five paintings on the go and that feels great. Some folks have commented that they are a bit different, a bit dark, or wild. I know where these paintings come from and don't worry they are firmly in my lineage of work. Some elements are from over twenty years ago and some elements are from last month and of course there is expansion and new growth. They are raw power. 

I have been listening to music such as L7, 7 Year Bitch, Bikini Kill, Julie Ruin and the like while working. Loaded brushes are flying and there is a wee bit more black than white this time around. The circular shapes sometimes representing conversations on the ether, relationships, or spirit energy, have returned - obscured, charred, and dark. We watch them rise. 

Besides working in the studio and walking for miles, I have had the good fortune of taking in some excellent exhibitions in Edinburgh. 

Andy Warhol and Eduardo Paolozzi | I want to be a machine.  This was a great exhibition, local favourite and Leither, Paolozzi, pairs well (and holds his own) with Warhol.  It was a much more comprehensive exhibition than I was expecting. Click on the title to watch short videos and to read more about the show from the National Gallery of Scotland's website. 

NOW | Monster Chetwynd, Henry Coombes, Moyna Flannigan, Betye Saar, Wael Shawky. This was a fine exhibition, the work of Moyna Flannigan was the stand out for me. Monster Chetwynd's work is of an impressive scale and does leave a mark as well. 

Turner in January. This exhibition is on every January, and it almost feels like you are a bad citizen if you miss it. I love Turner's work of course, but this is not the work I love, but it is his work and I go see it every year. 

Pin-Ups | Toulouse-Lautrec and the Art of Celebrity. This was my favourite exhibition of all the offerings I have seen this week (this week!!). Like Modigliani (as I have mentioned in previous posts), Lautrec feels like a bit of a family member. I grew up with his prints around the house, as one older brother was a big fan. This exhibition was comprehensive and well curated. The scale of the work truly caught me off guard, the faded colours and yellowed paper made my heart sing. The quality of his line was divine to see in the flesh and at scale. I loved it so much I really didn't want to leave. 

It was a wonderful week of making and seeing art. A great way to start the new year. I have also watched quite a few painting documentaries as well. Here's a round up of those films (all of which can be found on youtube). 

Robert Motherwell and the New York School, "Storming the Citadel." This documentary is superb. I take comfort in the words and wisdom of one of my favourites. 


The Rules Of Abstraction With Matthew Collings. Another winner of a film and far reaching into the history as well as the spiritual aspects of early abstraction.

Philip Guston, Odd Man Out. I have always admired Guston's work, especially his earlier stuff but now I respect him in a different way and love how he flew in the face of abstraction and risked it all. Great documentary. 

Jean Michel Basquiat Documentary. I am not sure what the actual title of this film as it was put on youtube from the BBC. I have seen several documentaries about Basquiat as I have been a fan for ages, but I had never seen this one. I really like this perspective of his carreer and hearing from different folks that walked through his short life. It was good to hear from his sisters. If you are a fan or want to be, or if you are interested in 80's New York Art/Music scene then this is a documentary for you. 

I hope these films inspire, educate, and encourage you in your own artistic path. Let's make 2019 the year we never stop learning, exploring and trying new things. Let's make it the year we find our power and enrich ourselves through this abundant culture. This is available for almost all of us (at least those with an internet connection and the desire- I understand many people are living in culture deserts - I grew up in one). Only one of the exhibitions I saw this week cost money and all these documentaries are on available online. What are you watching, seeing, reading? What (free and accessible) culture is in your backyard that you have been ignoring or taking for granted? Is there somewhere you feel you don't belong? Are you sure you don't? Go and find out! Remember that art, that beauty, it really is for you. And if someone tells you it isn't, keep looking and make your own!

With gratitude in my heart to yours, until next week, keep fighting. 

PS. The winner of the small painting is artist, Elaine Phipps!!! Congrats, Elaine! Message me your address and I will get this wee painting right out to you. You can check out Elaine Phipps work here.  Thanks again to everyone for your wonderful and thoughtful comments. Keep reading my blog and I'll have another give away in a few more months.

Friday, January 4, 2019

2018: Year End Review


For those of you that have been following this blog for a number of years, I used to end each December with a year-end review. It was a long and unwieldy post and I always say you deserve a gold star if you read it all. It's really for me.

A snapshot of the past year, the process of writing this blog works with my "gathering the evidence" ethos. Sometimes we all need reminding of the good and of the progress we have made in order to celebrate or even to just acknowledge that we are working towards something and moving forward. In a society that doesn't always understand or support artists and only measures success in terms of money earned, I think this practice is even more important. I think I skipped last year's review but this year, I really need the reminder. Perhaps this practice is something you could benefit from as well. This year has flown by at record speed.

January: Stewart and I wrapped up a Christmas holiday trip to see my family and friends in Arkansas. It was a wonderful and happy visit and I fell in love with my homeland in a different way than I had before, accepting that the city I was born in had virtually disappeared but for in pockets, and that the rural land of the hills spoke more of home to me now. I was inspired to take some of the stillness and atmosphere back home to Edinburgh with me and put it into a body of work. I kept creating my Tuesday Studio Video Visits while I was back home, this last one from before we left to come back to Edinburgh, sums up how I was feeling and what I hoped to bring back with me into my work and heart.



By the 19th of January, I was back in the studio and slowly getting ready to create a rather large body of paintings. First, I worked on paper, creating three 16x20" abstract paper pieces, two of them found homes. One of them was my first sale of 2018.

I wrote, "There is something approachable about paper, it's not too precious yet it's surface offers many rewards. I set myself some modest goals, mostly just to return to my space regularly and to my routine. This wasn't about pressure or stress. Thanks to my low-key intentions, work dripped from my fingers each day." When I ran out of that paper, I switched to some small brown paper sacks from the Chinese market. I loved the quality of the paper and how the paint looked on the warm brown. The paper sack series was born. 

I wrote: "I am feeling productive as I expand my work. I am also trying to be a bit more intentional and organized, taking note of what I am doing here and there and sharing my progress along the way. As I expand my work I also hope to expand my art community."

After the paper sacks, I was ready to go bolder and I was inspired by the the grey blue wintering mountains and valleys of home. Suddenly my paintings got quite large, and the beginnings of my series, Echoes and Memory began to emerge.

I wrote: "Paint big, dream big, live big, and take up space. Take up space and make it beautiful. Take up space and make it bolder. Take up space with pure nothingness. Take up space with the edge of a charcoal smudge. Let the white envelope you and the blackness tell the secrets locked in your heart." And so I did. 

February: The work exploded and the new series was coming out of me at record speed. I would say almost the first half of my series was completed in February. I was exhausted, excited and very inspired. I painted my favourite painting from the series (and perhaps of all time), All that I am, during this month. Three pieces from the new series are accepted in the Spring, Thy Name is Colour exhibition at The Velvet Easel Gallery in Portobello, Edinburgh. One of the new large pieces goes to the &Gallery on Dundas street. The year is off to an amazing start. I write: "It is moments like these where every question and doubt, every frustration or worry, quiets and I know once again I am on the right path. This path I have been walking down for over twenty years. In fits and starts, my dedication to painting never truly wanes. I am grateful for all the lessons I have been taught and continue to learn through art." During this month I also had a productive meeting with Union Gallery and had more of my newer works put on the site. I remember at the time that it felt good to have work in a flurry of brick and mortar galleries here in Edinburgh and back home in Arkansas. I felt like I was returning to something I had lost since the financial crash of 2008 (when many galleries closed) and since I had moved to Edinburgh in 2014. I also talked to management at the Drill Hall about orgnasing more events and open studios and we started to hatch a plan. It was this month that I decided to take a break from drinking and I am still on that break and feeling all the better for it.

March: "Spring, Thy Name is Colour" opened at The Velvet Easel Gallery in Portobello. Four more new paintings in the series started to pour out of me and I remember spending a portion of my 46th birthday in my studio before Stewart and I went out to celebrate. 

I wrote : "The sun came out today and it felt like a miracle. I forgot how good it feels. While out walking and enjoying the sun, I met a fox and he told me to tell you to pay attention to how unexpectedly beautiful the world can be. He then jumped up a wall, making easy work of it. You and I might have looked at that wall and thought we were trapped but he didn't even think of it as an obstacle. He asked me to have you think about that too." The fox story and the sunshine has nothing to do with art but everything to do with life and I needed the reminder and I thought you might too. Two more paintings were completed this month. 

I wrote: "Again I am flirting with harder shapes and angles combined with an ethereal atmosphere with an icy yet earthy palette. In these pieces, I enjoy playing with the consistency of the paint as well. As the series progresses, I continue to expand on the concept of "what is enough" to tell and teach me when to stop with these works. Less is more." 

This month I also decide that I want to return to mentoring artists again and very gently offer my services in a few lines on my blog. I ended up working with several wonderful painters during 2018. Thank you Rosalind, Isabel, Kris and Catriona for taking me up on my offer and for making beautiful work. It was an honour to work with you all. There will be more on this very soon as we move into 2019. I worked on four more pieces in the series, resolving three of them during the month. I was also asked to be part of a summer exhibition at the Union Gallery. I remember feeling thrilled at the opportunity to showcase some of my new works in this beautiful gallery space. This month I was also notified that my painting "Acceptance" sold from The Velvet Easel exhibition. I was so excited! It was the first piece from the new series to find a home! 

April: Working on the new series continued with another large-scale work being completed. I was contacted for an upcoming interview in the blog of a national (UK) art supply retailer (This turns out to be Jackson's art supply piece but I was being coy at the time - more on that in a bit). I attended the initial planning meeting for our upcoming Open Studios at the Out of the Blue Drill Hall which was scheduled for June. I finished another large 80x80cm canvas in the series and created three small works (20x20cm/8x8") in the series as well. Towards the end of April, it was all about the documentation of the series. Thank you, Stewart Bremner. Not only does Stewart support me so that I can continue to be a painter but he also varnishes, documents, and deals with the digital aspects of my work. So many of us think we have to do it all and know it all, but that is simply impossible. I am grateful for all his help during this busy and exciting year. For those of you who don't already know, Stewart is a painter and a graphic designer and runs his own successful small business, IndyPrints (check it out). During this month I started twenty-three small works. I wrote: "There is some sort of hunger or reaching for something or waiting for something to happen and I can feel the tension of it. I'll just observe it for now. Perhaps it is some sort of longing. Spring is about to burst open and I want to be out there in the midst of it and not miss anything."

May: I continue on making small layered works on canvas, Communication techniques of the easily silenced which are the small works included in the Echoes and Memory series. I write, "I have been thinking more about what I love about the south, the wildness of it, the heavy air and the electric charge that comes with the change in the weather. I would say that all of my work since I have returned to Scotland from visiting Arkansas in December and January has been an atmospheric homage to where I am from." 

Layers of paint and paper continued to be added to my latest canvases from my "Communication techniques of the easily silenced" series of small works. I also finished another wee square work on canvas (20x20cm/8x8") and worked on two large 80x80cm canvases, getting one of them close to completion. After working on the large series and smaller works I switched back to using throw away materials, painting on cardboard to loosen up. At the end of the month there was exciting news as HBO bought three of my limited edition prints from The Distillation Process to use in their award winning series, True Detective!

June: I had a studio visit from Alision Auldjo about an upcoming exhibition that would end up featuring 5 of my works. I also turned all my attention to preparing for our Open Studio event that we had been working toward and planning, it was quite successful. This is what I wrote about the open studio event. "Open studios went very well. It was a lovely event that reminded me of everything I love about being an artist and being part of a community. Besides painting, it's the conversations and communication that I really enjoy. It is always a thrill to witness folks take the time to breathe and let go as they view the work. A wonderful exchange of space, energy, art, and thought happens in these moments. I can sense it when it happens and it fills me with joy. I feel seen and understood, this is a rare gift. I am not being the cool or aloof artist, I am open to questions and the sharing of my process with fellow artists, patrons, and the non-buyer alike." After open studios, I continued to sell some of my small works from the series online. Also during this month an article, Megan Chapman, A Strange Alchemy was published about my latest work and my dedication to abstraction. I reflect on the priviledge of being a painter in this post. During this month, I am very pleased to have my work (2 pieces) in The Velvet Easel upcoming exhibition, "Defying Sameness." The exhibition opens on 7th of July and stays up through the 28th of October.

During this month I am getting ready for the "Summer Garden Party" exhibition coming up at The Union Gallery I am thrilled to have five pieces featured in the show.

July: July = Art. "Defying Sameness" at The Velvet Easel Gallery in Portobello. "Summer Garden Party" at Union Gallery in the West End. "Makers Marque" Open Studio at The Out of the Blue Drill Hall in Leith. It was a wonderful month. Later in the month there were ramblings of a manifesto for art, and thinking of new ways to bring my art to the world and community. I even went to so far as to proclaim "I want to be a budget Peggy Guggenheim." I have ideas of subverting the gallery system, creating a collective and putting on exhibitions in non traditional spaces. At this time I return to my books series with the idea of created new books for the 20 year anniversary of my BFA terminal exhibition books coming in June 2019. I enjoy returning to the yellowed pages. In other news, one of the galleries that had carried my work on a trial basis since December contacted me to ask me to collect my three paintings.

As luck would have it, the same day other opportunities opened up - alternative space possibilities were discussed (for curating the collective exhibitions), as well as a solo exhibition opportunity and an upcoming highly visible one-night-only exhibition were all mentioned over a 10-minute impromptu meeting. The next day, Jackson's Art Supplies, an international art supply shop, based in London, published an interview with me on their inspirational blog on their website. It is quite an honour and I am grateful for the opportunity. The interview was happily splashed all around social media.  At the same time, The Out of the Blue Drill Hall in Leith, chose me as their featured artist of the week. So many good things were happening with my work, despite the set back of having to collect my work from the one gallery, however at the end of July we got some bad news, we needed to move out of our flat. This added tremendous stress to everything.

August : I tried to keep working through the stress and turned to some new works on handmade indian paper. However, suddenly all my time and energy turned to the cause of looking for a new place to live. Everything else seemed quite small in comparison. Regardless a 4 piece series, The Dark Anchor, a new series of works on paper, is born. At this stressful time, I work with a coach Jenny Pope. Jenny was getting in her hours for her training and offering a rate I can afford, I work with her about my art and trying to make peace with my calling. I have many questions and as we continue to view and look for places to live the answers do not come easily.By the end of August, I am really struggling, and I write an open and vulnerable blog about it. However of course I return to work. I write: "This week found me back in the studio passionately working and it felt good. I returned to my paper series that originally started off as "the dark anchor" but now seems to be evolving into something larger and perhaps less dark. I am looking forward to framing these, I think these might fit in the expanded Echoes and Memory series once complete." Also this month, I announce that I am having a solo pop-up exhibition on Friday, September 21st from 7-9pm at The Out of the Blue Drill Hall! I am honoured to present my work in conjunction with Maggie's Centre Culture Crawl, a fundraising event happening in 12 cities across the UK to support people affected by cancer. This month I also start working on my first four piece commission for an interior design and art consultant, Paper and White. All the while the flat hunt continues, with various appointments and viewings.

September: At the start of September we are still stressed while looking for a new flat to rent (we have about 6 weeks before we have to be out). My studio rent went up £20 a month and another gallery in Edinburgh contacted me to pick up all my work. Yet, still I rise. I turn it around to try look at the positives.

"I know we will find a place to live because we just have to. My studio rent went up but I believe it now includes high-speed internet in my studio and the gallery gave me back all my work butnow I am able to present even more of my latest body of work at my solo pop-up exhibition, Between Memory and Story on September 21st from 7-9pm for the Maggie's Culture Crawl at the Out of the Blue Drill Hall. I am grateful for my meditation and yoga routine at this time, I feel it is holding me together, I write this post. This month, with Stewart's skills and eye for detail and my vision together we install my solo exhibition, Between Memory and Story.My plan for the installation was to create a meditative tunnel that pulled the viewer through the exhibition and gave space to each piece so they could be seen individually and yet also as a whole. It is light, bright and airy. The Drill Hall is the perfect gallery space for this work. The one night only show is held over for a week. I am grateful. By the end of the month I am exhausted and grieving the loss of a very dear friend. I write, "My brain feels like it is going one thousand miles an hour. A ping-pong match mixture of happiness, excitement (my show and open studios), disbelief (at world news and American politics), grief over the passing of a dear friend and relief for having found somewhere to live (finally!). This is how my brain feels even after my yoga and meditation. Honestly, I think I am totally worn out. The stress of the constant search for a place to live over the last eight weeks was pretty intense and has caught up with me. I am grateful for all the leads, help, support, and just general good vibes we were given in the search. Now I just want to get in the new house and make it ours, a fresh start is needed. I also need to process my grief over my friend. This will probably happen when everything slows down or when I am least expecting it, at least I will be by the sea." I open my studios as part of the Makers Marque on
Sunday 30th September.

October : New Home! I write, "I am not sure how we decided on this place, I think it was imminent homelessness nipping at our heels. We saw it all of ten minutes and it was in a bit of a state, nothing I would usually want to live in but at the same time it had "something" many places did not, a feeling that a potential metamorphosis could take place with a bit of care and vision. We saw it at 10:30 in the morning last Thursday and by 2:30 that day it was reserved for us. It's only 15 minutes away by bus to the part of town I know and love most, and we are technically still in Edinburgh, so I need not worry but trust in the only constant, change.

When we got the keys, I was very excited to walk through it again while the workers were giving it a fresh lick of white paint. I sat on the carpeted floors and looked out the windows. I stood on the concrete of the back patio and rejoiced that I had a place where my feet could touch the earth. I imagined all sorts of scenarios, pots of soup and cups of tea, and a meditation on the wee beach across the road. How will living in this new space and community affect my painting? Only time will tell. Perhaps, we all need to move every four years, to shake off the old ways and start again."

The moving process takes me away from the studio for awhile as we try to get settled in our new place. After a week or two and we get a bit more settled I return to my routine at the studio and to my meditation and yoga after a bit of a break. As with the studio rent, our new cottage by the sea is also more expensive so I decide to have an impromptu studio sale for several weeks. I am grateful that it does well and I sell a number of small works.  During this time I also deliver 4 pieces to be included in the "5 Years" exhibition at The Velvet Easel Gallery. These works are from a series painted in 2017 called "All the ways."

November : Autumn is here. The clocks went back last weekend and now it gets dark around 4:45. I am drinking big pots of tea and wearing jumpers. I managed to not only pack and ship more pieces that were sold during my studio sale online but I also worked on a few drawings and a painting! I decided that I have found myself in a residency of sorts in my own studio. My studio G23 has currently become an incubator. I spend my time in my windowless room, pacing the floor, reading snippets out of art books and watching video clips and interviews from other artists. I am firmly in between series and returning to my art practice. I am showing up and putting in the time, my hand is in active exploration as it crashes through the different mediums. My experiments are peppered with research and the gentle quelling of the questioning voices in my head.

I work pretty full on in the studio Monday through Wednesday and took Thursday and Friday off to keep up with BREXIT news and because I was worn out. I needed a break. In those three days at work, I put paint on the surface of eighteen substrates; a mixture of newsprint, canvas, and some miniature canvas boards. I made pretty good progress on two larger pieces as well. I end up focussing on thirteen colourful mini works called "You said I made a bad decision" based on a song lyric by the band, Ladytron. I make these for the upcoming December open studios. These are mounted in small cream coloured tray frames and prove to be quite popular, I sell all but two. This month I also sell my favourite piece from the Echoes and Memory series, "All that I am." This is hugely exciting for me and I adore the patrons who purchased the piece. The piece represents me at my best and everything I love about painting and being a painter. It was a joy to see it going to such a good home.

December: By the first week of December I probably should be pretty tired but I am excited by the recent sales, paintings and the beauty of living by the sea. I have hope for the future and feel that I am finally establishing myself and my work here after moving here four years ago. It's not time to rest just yet. I write this post. I have two large commissions to complete on a very short timescale. This is probably one of the most challenging and exciting commissions of my career. Everything that can go wrong, does but still I rise and complete the job. I am wrecked afterward but oh so grateful and pleased. I look forward to working on more projects with Paper + White. You can read about the commissions here.

Afterwards, all I wanted to do is spend time with Stewart and our cat Theo in the sea shack and prepare for the holidays. I decorate the house and go sticker crazy, putting removable tile stickers over the exisiting bland rental tiles. The place is looking better every day. The sea is blue and green and wild and I love it.

A wonderful poem, Keeper by Jane Murray Bird was published in The Pickled Body. Jane's poem was inspired by my painting from 2015, Memories of distant places. I love the poem and am very honoured and happy that she has had it published. Jackson's art supplies reshares the interview they did with me back in the summer so I pick up a few new followers here and there across social media platforms and then suddenly it is Christmas and all that entails and then suddenly it is the end of the year and we here we are.

That's 2018.

Writing this blog was a challenge and I know I am mostly doing it for myself. I have to say I have shed more than a few tears while writing it as it gives me clarity on a busy and complex year but it also gives me pause for all the bridges crossed and all the art created. It's something to celebrate. I am still here, still working as an artist after all these years. I still have my doubts and I still have my pitfalls and I still require so much help to get all the things done to be the artist that I am.

Thank YOU.
With love in my heart and with gratitude.
Thank YOU.

And if you read this, you do deserve a gold star. Leave a comment (it can be as simple as "read") to be entered into a random prize draw to win a small painting.