fall-winter holiday journal 2017
fall into winter
Thousands of birds have been feasting on our madrona berries this year.
It seems to me that life accelerates as we fall into winter.
This year is no exception.
And I'm reminded
that along the way,
it's good
(brings wellness)
to slow down,
pause,
remember well,
be thankful,
and simply be.
welcomed into this moment
My website is by design, a happy place to visit.
Cozy up with your favorite warm beverage and enjoy these photo stories.
Remember that usually when you click on photos, you'll discover still more.
thankful
I'm thankful for family.
I'm thankful for friends.
I'm thankful that I get to create - to live the challenges and blessings of life, and life as an artist.
I'm thankful for health and for my citizenship here.
I'm thankful to be spiritually alive.
I'm a very rich man.
studio show invitation
studio art show & sale december 9 & 10
You are warmly invited to visit my studio art show and sale
- Saturday December 9, 10AM - 8PM
- Sunday December 10, 1PM - 5PM
I'll have original art and some reproduced artwork priced from three dollars and up. Come purchase a one-of-a-kind heirloom gift for your loved ones. And I am always grateful for your support of me in the arts.
The sale is in my home-studio on the north shore of Offut Lake,
at 4137 116th Avenue SE, Olympia WA 98501
The photo at right shows one of my small watercolor paintings in progress. This and similar small, original artwork will be for sale at the studio show.
Community Offut Lake Boat Parade
Adding to the festivity on the evening of December night will be the local lighted boat parade. Sparkling lights reflect on the water whether rain, wind, or snow (fog caused issues one year). People gather for hot drinks around 5pm at the resort. It's usually best viewed from our side of the lake around 6pm.
The photo is from our dock lined with lighted mouth-blown cloches.
dye-painting silk workshops
experience silk painting in a lakeside studio
Consider a silk painting workshop for yourself and/or as a gift.
ease
At the age of eight or nine, my twin nephews painted a beautiful dragonfly silk. To this day it is one of my favorite silks, likely because children create freely and without inhibition.
the dyes do the work
Dye-painting silk in the serti method is something most anyone can do. The richly colored dyes migrate through the silk weave creating lovely patterns. A very "forgiving" medium, these dyes won't make muddy color. Even if you mix up a brown, the silk's sheen will create a metallic bronze version of your brown.
In a friend's words, "dyes in silk is like watercolors on steroids."
may
In May 2017, my studio was graced by four talented and inspired ladies. None had dyed or painted silk before,yet they all created beautiful silk artworks. Click here to see photos of this beautiful day.
april
Click here to see photos of a studio day in April.
july
Click here to see photos of a previous summer silk workshop.
classes info
Click here or on the "classes" tab at top to see upcoming classes schedule...
re-invented
Always improving the creating experience... I've revised my silk class size to three to five (max) students. And because the excitement of creating, the learning, and standing can become physically tiring, I've split the day into two days: Friday afternoon and Saturday morning.
artful living
My ordinary life is rich with colors, flavors, sounds, smells, and sensations of nature, garden, kitchen, and studio. Along the way, I capture moments in photos to share with you here in "artful living."
Click on the apples photo at right to view images of daily life as an artist - from garden to harvest to lakeside living.
Enjoy!
exhibitions
"paper art" at the commerce building
Four of my stone lithographs were selected for display this August through October at the Washington State Department of Commerce Building in Olympia.
The artworks exhibited were Paper Dollar, Paper Cutter I, Paper Clip, and Paper Weights.
Because the show was hung within the halls and offices of this secure building, I've no photos of the display. I enjoyed meeting the other artists and seeing their work on October 35 in an informal reception in the lobby.
come to the table
Come to the Table, features thirty-five carefully selected works including everything from historical pieces by Albrecht Durer, to modernist work by Jasper Johns and Sadao Watanabe, to fresh contemporary pieces created by CIVA-member artists. My artwork "Because We Can't Eat Rocks II" is included among the thirty-five artworks in this travelling exhibition (since 2014).
Click here to see the show in Boston.
select commissions
silk-in-glass commission
I'm pleased to announce my first completed installation of silk laminated within glass. The artwork fills the spaces between open trusses of a residential interior. The photo at right two of four panels. Click to see more.
Land and Sea Passage
As students, faculty, and visitors enter Gilson Middle School in Valdez, Alaska, they are greeted by a vibrant suspended mural--over 26 feet wide. Read more...
Macroscape Slides
Three new glass artworks resembling over-sized microscope slides measure two feet high by six feet wide. Each artwork is uniquely created in mouth-blown art glass laminated onto dichroic float glass. They are installed in the Margaret Murie Life Sciences Building at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks.
Illuminated Passage
This suspended mural of dye-painted silk measures over 300 square feet. For Liberty Middle School in Spanaway, Washington, it depicts junior high years in a metaphor of a river passing through a canyon.
I love it. It turned out to be all I hoped for and more. Read more...
Experimental Image Glass
I continue to collaborate with Seattle glassblower Jim Flanagan to create gently abstracted imagery within colored glass. Click here or on the photo at right to see our most recent sheets of blown glass (and scroll down, as the newest work is near the bottom).
Tree of Life
Commissioned for a thriving church in the town of Dunwoody, near Atlanta, Georgia.
Discovery
This mural in dye-painted silk was commissioned for Katchemak Bay Campus of Kenai Peninsula College of the University of Alaska. Discovery was installed in Homer, Alaska, in June of 2012. Read more...
Generations: Incubation
Kenai Peninsula College etched mouth-blown glass public art installation
Click here to read about Generations.
Here is a link to KPC installation photos
studio and story
2011 nest images on cotton paper
Click here to see photos of ten images completed in January 2011
stone impressions - watch the art-making process on video
People often ask me how I create a stone lithograph. It's hard to explain in words so I have a short video that shows the process.
Click here for photos and video on stone impressions.
silk rivers
These river silks were inspired by and modeled after the beautiful Fremont antique glass we used for the Kenai Peninsula College installation.
flowering
My Grandma's name, Florence, means "to flower" as in the sense of a blossom. And 2012's flowers were an explosion of color. See photos in her memory...
Be silk scarves
Links...
gallery of Be silk scarves
significance in Be-ing
silk care
displaying silk
past journals
- fall 2017
- summer 2017
- spring 2017
- new year 2017
- fall-winter 2016
- summer-fall 2016
- spring 2016
- fall 2015
- summer 2015
- spring 2015
- new year 2015
- winter december 2014
- fall 2014
- summer 2014
- spring 2014
- new year 2014
- fall-winter 2013
- summer 2013
- spring 2013
- winter 2012-2013
- fall 2012
- summer 2012
- spring 2012
- new year 2012
- fall 2011
- summer 2011
- spring-summer 2011
- winter-spring 2011
- winter 2010
- fall 2010
- summer 2010
- spring 2010
- january 2010
- winter 2009
- fall 2009
- summer update 2009
- summer 2009
- spring 2009
- winter 2009
- fall 2008
- summer 2008
- spring 2008
- fall/winter 2007