Wednesday, March 17, 2010

My Favourite Day!

Happy St. Patrick's Day everyone! 

As usual, the lads were very excited about St. Patrick's Day...you may remember last year the leprechaun paid us a visit and MADE us make his favourite Irish Stew and Soda Bread for lunch before he would disclose the clues to find the treasure (naughty leprechaun, mom was very tired!).

This year we were undecided about how to prepare for the leprechaun.  Should I have stewing beef on hand?  Flour in the pantry?  Should we make leprechaun traps, or a leprechaun house?

In the end, we decided that we wanted to be friendly, so no traps were set.  Instead, we made a little sailboat (for West Coast leprechauns) and put a white flag on it to show we meant no harm.  We left it outside next to the little yew tree. 

You won't believe it, but he came in the middle of the night - took the boat for a little sail, used our coats, had a bath in our tub to warm up after the chilly evening adventure, then left us a treasure of thanks beside the cheddar in the fridge.  He was indeed a friendly West Coast leprechaun.  

Enjoy the photos :O)






Monday, March 15, 2010

Anecdotes

Just wanted to share these anecdotes that made me giggle:

Liam had the toy stethescope, and was listening for Kieran's heartbeat. His eyes got big and he shouted, "I can't hear your heart, Kieran, I think that means you must be dead!" All I could think of was, 'work on your bedside manner, kiddo!'

I took the boys to see Alvin and the Chipmunks today - it was Aidan's first movie - he was so excited he clapped (with GREAT FORCE) through most of it!

Yesterday I took them to the ocean for our 14 Days of Drawing Challenge. The scenery was exquisite - there were 12 sailboats in the bay, driftwood logs piled into a tipi shape, great cloud formations, flowering trees....and what did Liam draw? McDonalds. Mind you, it did have a fire escape... Kieran gave him high praise. When I looked to see what Kieran had drawn....it was an opera singer. Go figure.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

More on painting

I guess I get a little obsessed with things.  I've been working on two more paintings of the Owl and the Pussycat.  This time with a purpose:  baby gifts for a friend and a colleague.

This one I started first and finished last:



What I liked about this painting

  • the piggy wearing a sailor suit (a happy accident - the way I initially painted it, there was a sloppy bit that looked a little like the tie on the sailor's shirt).
  • the islands in the background.  Originally I'd painted a lighthouse at the left, but felt it was too much, especially so close to the owl.
  • The pussycat is drinking tea from a china cup. 
What I did not like:
  • the owl - I could not decide whether he should be a snowy or a great horned owl.  I've been struggling with him the most.  I debated about a pair of spectacles, but refrained. His head was too big initially so I had to rework it.  I know the owl could  be better, but for now - I give up.
This second painting is different in that it is done on stretched canvas as opposed to canvas board.  I've only painted one miniature on stretched canvas, so this was a fairly new venture.


    What I liked about this version:
  • the boat worked out quite well.
  • I didn't have to struggle with the owl.
  • the water has a different shade of blue that I thought worked out well.
  • the clouds were fun to create.

I also loved the depth of the sides allowing me to extend the scenes to the sides:
    That's it for now.  I know the photographs aren't the best, but they serve a purpose anyhow, I suppose.
    The boys are waking - have to go be a mom . . .

Monday, March 1, 2010

Putting the Child First

I'm wondering if anyone has seen a poster about inclusive language with regards to putting the child first (before a disability).  I want to post one in the staffroom at the school Aidan will attend in a year and a half.  The kindergarten teacher recently said to me, "I had a Down's student once, he was very stubborn."  My spidey senses went all haywire, and I want to let the staff know that language is important... :o)

Also, last night I attended my first ever Down Syndrome Society AGM and joined the Board.  I want to help in areas of education and advocacy, and the child-first inclusive-language angle was the first thing I thought of.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Another Kick at the [Paint] Can

When I was little I used to dream of having an art studio in my house. One similar to the sunroom at my Grandmother's where the piano sat, and Grandpa's medical supplies rested in a white cupboard long after he passed away. A quiet space filled with light that inspired the imagination. That dream morphed over the years into a desire for a writing space in a small cottage, a boathouse, or even just a boat. The bottom line of that dream was to have a space of my own to create in. Last year I enjoyed a spurt of creativity where I started writing a novel that I felt was truly going places. I wrote about 14 chapters in various locations - the kitchen table, the bed, the car when Aidan was sleeping in the back, once even at the gym. It felt amazing - like I was becoming a real writer. Then summer holidays came, and the big boys were home 24/7, and I lost momentum and stopped writing. Now my creative energy has turned back to the canvas and I'm taking another kick at the paint can.



In high school I took all the art classes offered. I really wasn't as good as the others in my class, but I kept with it because it felt good, meditative almost, to go into the art room and create stuff. I watched as my friend Hethr (yes, she spells her name that way) did beautifully detailed work that I didn't have the patience for. Or Andy who did the most amazing shading, making his sketches jumped off the page. Andy's talents were so far above me that I went out and bought him a set of good pencils and left them in his locker as a gift from an anonymous donor (he was putting a portfolio together at the time to get into an art program in college). My art teacher said my work was too cutesy, and that I needed to expand into more realistic stuff. Still, she gave me an award at my Grade 13 graduation for creative arts. I didn't think I deserved it for my talent, but definitely for my appreciation of it!

During my first year at Trent University I painted t-shirts for my friends. Little cartoon-like paintings of them with speech bubbles containing their catch phrase of the month. I made cards too, and gave them away. But I never thought of doing it as a career.

At the end of that university year I sat in my friend's living room and we talked about what the heck we were going to do for summer jobs. That's when Glenn piped up and said, "you and Ally should paint t-shirts and sell them." Then Johnny (whose real name was Steve) said, "set up shop at the Peterborough Marina because there's a lot of foot traffic and your work will get noticed." Ally and I couldn't think of anything better to do with our summer, so we started planning. We applied for a Young Entrepreneur's loan through the royal bank. Found a paint supplier (Marylou, my Mom's kind and generous boss at the wool shop) who let us buy fabric paint at cost. We sketched, doodled, and dreamed, then we approached the new managers at the marina about setting up shop there. Rick and Mary were very supportive of our ideas. We pulled a picnic table to the edge of the walkway, and got to work. Rick and Mary even gave us other jobs to help supplement our income (we were slow painters). I cleaned houseboats,  public washrooms and showers, rented paddleboats, and worked a hotdog and balloon stand on Festival of Lights nights. It was a good summer in many ways. I got a great tan (I usually burn) and lost weight (from biking to and from work with Ally riding double on the back carrying a tackle box full of paints).  I talked to a lot of interesting people, both locals and tourists who were enjoying the area (and appreciating the clean showers).  And,  I almost quit school to become a crew member on a boat called The Ivanhoe (this was unknown to the handsome owner of the boat, but was a delicious little side-dream alternative to finishing my English degree).

That summer at the marina ended over twenty years ago. I went on to work at an insurance office uploading automobile policies and browsing the shelves at the local library on my lunch hours for books of poetry to engage my creative brain. Ally graduated the next year, and we never kept in touch.  I believe she moved back to Toronto, but I have no idea if she continued on with her artistic streak.  I like to think that she did.  I also hope she looks back on that summer with a little fondness for the adventure we took on.

For the past year I have been longing to experiment with Acrylics. My mother gave me $50 for Christmas, and I knew exactly what I wanted. A paint set. James, the boys and I took a trip to the art supply store that I liked, and I found a basic kit that came in a plain black box. The first thing I did was paint a little self-portrait (cartoon style), on the front:


The first picture I painted was of my Grandmother's cottage on Lake Huron.  I've tried drawing it repeatedly over the years, but can never quite capture it right.  This was my first attempt:


I realized that drawing the perspective on the cottage is very difficult...how to create depth in the center showing that there was a flagstone patio?  And trees - good God, how does one paint trees so they don't look like big green triangles? 

Second attempt:

I liked the trees, but not the cottage as much. The rock garden was still horrible, I needed to work on that.

Third attempt:




I used more black to give definition, and I liked the effect, but not on the tire tracks on the grass.  That just didn't turn out at all.  The garden itself was much better.

I've put the cottage aside now - I like different bits from each piece, and maybe one day I'll get all of those pieces to fit together.

My next project was a painting of my favourite poem, The Owl and the Pussycat:




There are many things I like about this painting - the bold colours, the outlining, the subject, the pea-green boat, the tree and the daisies.  What I don't like, and need to rework when I get the time is the fan that the cat is holding.  James says it looks like an oversized paw, and I have to agree.  I think I'll repaint it yellow to match her hat.

Then I made an attempt at a miniature....the lighthouse is one of my favourite images, so it seemed right to attempt it here:


My current project is an attempt to learn from Tom Thomson, who just so happens to be from my hometown area in Ontario.  This is how the painting is at the beginning of the process:



I'm happy with the trees along the far bank, but I'm really not happy with the sky or the canoe. Thomson's colours are so interesting, I have a difficult time trusting myself to do what he did.  In the end, I think this painting will need to be a marriage of his style and mine. I might even make the canoe red, as homage to my husband's old Clipper Canoe that brought us together in the first place (but that's a whole other story for another time).

Now, I"ve tweaked my dream of being an artist or a writer. Life shouldn't be about either/or.  I'm more than a black and white caricature, I realize that now.  I've finally decided on a dream that makes me happy.  My dream is this: to live an interesting life. That is a big umbrella to fit under, and it pretty much covers any whim I follow.  I'm hopeful that it will continue to lead me and my family towards a happy life.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Olympic Grey Areas

I've been thinking a lot about the Olympics and how I feel about them.  If you read Olympics for Poets, you will remember that I was contemplating why we privilege sports over other activities - I wondered if we ever put that kind of effort into celebrating our poets, surgeons, or teachers. 

It's not that I'm against the Olympics - it's just that my mind looks at grey areas of life - not the black and white.  So, while I can say, "yes the Olympics seem to be about more than sports - it's an opportunity to put our best foot forward.  To celebrate our national identity, while at the same time honouring all of the other nations involved. The Olympics are a wonderful event that bring together our musicians, poets, fashion designers, artists, reporters and photo journalists, etc. and blah, blah, blah..."I still wonder at how the Province of British Columbia can bounce back from such enormous output of cash.  Will we be feeling the economic repercussions for years to come?  Our schools and classrooms are pretty much stripped down to the bare bones (music programs, teacher-librarian's, reading specialists....gone. I notice this lack of richness when I compare the schools in Manitoba to those in BC.)

Only time will tell what the outcome will be.  For now, I'll try to enjoy the Olympics for what they are, and push these questions to the back of my mind.  I'll try to feel the joy through the eyes of my boys, and the kids at their school.