May
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This painting came from the unexpected.
- I was hanging an art show at a community club house and didn’t expect a lovely lily pond with perfect flowers in bloom.
- As I was painting it I found myself putting my brush in unexpected colors – bringing in purples and oranges in the sparkling light of the out-of-focus lily pads.
- And the main flower ended up being an entirely unexpected color.
In real life, the big lily was an intense hot pink. Someone who has been interested in owning a painting of mine at some point liked the idea of this one, but wondered if the flower could be a more subdued color. Taking on the challenge, I intended to make it a white lily. And while I was at it, I wondered if I could re-do the water. Instead of nearly black, as was in the original image I wanted to paint it light blue, reflecting the sky.
Then again, true to my experience, paintings have a life of their own.
The water had lots of interesting reflections, but once I painted it all in, the reflections didn’t make sense in a sea of light blue. The only way to rectify the mess I’d made (oy!) was to go back to dark water.
I painted subtle blues, turquoises and greens to give the white flower some dimension. And, no matter what I did, it was flat and dead and overshadowed by the relatively pale colored flowers to the right. In order to save the painting I had to bring in pink. But the pink was layered over blues, turqoises and greens, making it a much more subdued pink than if I’d taken inspiration from my reference image.
The name ties up a few ideas:
- It was late May when I saw the lily pond
- This lily floating on the top of the water does not insist, it allows permission and possibility.
- And even though my hands were directing my brushes, I certainly had to allow what may be with the end result. I have never felt less “in charge!”
Summer 2018 – 20″x40″ – Watercolor on paper
Ho’omana
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I just love plumeria flowers. They are my absolute favorite tropical flower. I love the way their petals weave around each other in the center, how pristine they are. They are graceful and lovely and elegant. It doesn’t hurt that they have a wonderful fresh perfume to them either! Though I have a collection of hundreds of photos of them, whenever we go to Kauai I take more. I return to favorite trees and gather ever more images for paintings. This is the fifth such image I’ve painted.
It took the image that inspired this painting in the gardens around the parking lot (beauty is everywhere!) around the National Tropical Botanical Gardens on the south side of Kauai in May 2016. It was fairly early in the morning and the sun had come out after a pretty heavy rain. These were the exact conditions under which I took the image that became “Imagine” – my big, huge water lily painting – a winning formula. Raindrops are enchanting, but when they are combined with the bright light of the morning sun, the whole thing is transcendent.
The series of images didn’t have one that was painting ready, so I did little re-arranging of pieces of a couple of them to make up this composition. I have a few 20”x40” pieces of paper left over from making 40” squares – I was working to use one of them. It’s a great size to travel with as all rolled up it’s only 20” long – easy to carry on the plane.
I started painting it on Kauai in February. I disciplined myself to get the background and leaves done first, so it wasn’t until I was home that I got to dive into the rainbow colors of the petals. The water drops were a challenge – so much complex detail. I’ve painted plenty of them before, but on some petals the drops seemed to be on top of each other making these crazy patterns of blue, violet and white. I really had to focus and just paint what I saw in my reference image.
The finished painting seems like a combination of light and water splashed all over these pristine flowers. That transcendence I felt in the moment is here looking at it. Even after being finished a few days, its name hadn’t come to me. I asked my Thursday evening group what qualities they saw in it – I put the words they said into an online English-Hawaiian translator. I wanted a single word, one that was easy enough to pronounce, and that sounded Hawaiian. “Ho’omana” was the result of a translating “worship.” This was it. Further research tells me ho’omana the name for the Hawaiian matriarchal spirituality from the time before the ali’i and any contact with the Western world. I also found that it means: praise, worship, spiritual power and empowerment. “Ho’omana” may be a big name to give to these flowers, but in my belief system spirit is in everything, so why not?
February – March 2017 – 20″x40″ – Watercolor on paper
Hula
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I’m a conservationist – even a bit of a scavenger. I feel a strong need to make use of everything I can. This painting, at least painted in this shape and size, came to be because I had this piece of paper that was 20″x40.” I’ve painted a few 40″x40″ paintings out of Arches 60″x40″ sheets of watercolor paper, leaving me leftover pieces. It’s good paper, I must make use of it!
I toyed with the idea of making two 20″x20″ paintings of somethiing. But, I had this wide image… I’ve been contemplating painting this image for much longer than I’ve had the paper. It’s yet another from the no-longer-there lily ponds on the southside of Kauai. It’s old enough that it was actually taken with a film camera. I was attracted to it because of the intense blue. It took some collaging in Photoshop – I’m so grateful to my former boss, Steve Kimball for teaching me these skills. They’ve become integral to my art-making and help me realize the artistic visions of the painters in my groups too.
I started this piece on the previous year’s trip to Kauai – which ended up being a trip when I really needed to rest and hardly painted. Once home, I wasn’t feeling it. I needed to move on to paint the hot colors of Jubilee. I brought it along on the following year’s trip, when I didhave the energy to paint more.
It was a painting that was a challenge to appreciate myself. Though there were moments when it was very fun to paint, it was coming through quite loose and imprecise – not how I usually paint, and I wasn’t sure about the result. But friends and students liked it, so I pressed on. I painted all the flowers last. This helped. I needed them painted in to see any dimension.
I was in Light Rain scanning it for making prints with my friend Julia, who, at the time worked there. Musing on what to call it, I thought about floating, and the primordial soup and somewhere in there I used the term “dancing.” Julia kept saying “I like ‘dancing.'”
I had also been playing around with possible Hawaiian words. So, what is “dancing” in Hawaiian? “Hula” hit the right note. On top of it being easy to say – and – remember, I looked up the history and legend surrounding “hula.” The legend goes that the gods created the world through sacred chant and dance – hula. Out of the primordial soup dances the world.
June 2015 – 15″x30″ – Watercolor on paper
Imagine
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Another waterlily from the south side of Kauai, but not just another painting! When I took the photo that inspired this painting, I was drenched – out for a morning walk, it just poured rain. And then, as it does in the tropics, the clouds broke up, letting the sunlight make everything postively sparkle! A perfect time to be out with my camera! I was captivated by the water drops and small puddles all over this lily and the way its reflection is so clear – drops and all in the pond. I didn’t really plan on making this one so large. But now that I’ve painted it, I cannot imagine painting it smaller – all the detail would have been impossible! I had torn a jumbo sheet to 40″ square and had planned to paint cherry blossoms. But the arc passed on that idea. In July I was thinking it was time to dive into another large piece and went looking for images for this big square. I projected a few images really big on the wall in one of my Friday groups and they all agreed this was the one. In the middle of painting it, I was working on the shadow-y reflection of the lily and I had a contentious conversation with someone close to me. All stirred up from it, I sat back down and asked myself how I was to make art from that place. And it hit me – the shadow is part of this piece, it’s part of relationship, of each of us, of life in this universe. This painting speaks to me of wholeness, of including it all, the bright, sun-lit part that’s easy to embrace, as well as the dark stuff. In the process of painting, I was listening to Deepak Chopra talk about the shadow. He said just this. There is no defeating the shadow – only consciousness can allow us to be one step ahead of it so that we don’t operate from it. I’ve been challenging myself to name these paintings with a single word. My iTunes playlist gave it to me again. John Lennon’s Imagine played and I knew. I’m a dreamer and and an eternal optimist. One day we all will live as one – and it will be by ending our battles with the shadow in all its forms. “Imagine” really helped me hold my vision for this piece. There was still plenty to paint and I was anxious about getting it done in time for the Sausalito festival. All those water drops! All that detail! Would I ever get it done? I kept picturing it in my mind’s eye all finished. And here it is, shadow and all.
August 2013 – 40″x40″ – Watercolor on paper
Melia
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When Joe and I go to Kauai I often take morning walks down along the coast of Poipu with my camera. I have a particular love for the plumeria trees and their gorgeous, lightly perfumed flowers. I climb on rock walls to get up close to take a picture of a spot that has grabbed my eye. To take the photo that this painted from, I actually got up on the roof of the utility building of a condo complex. Climbing trees with my brothers growing up has made me part monkey! I started painting this piece two years ago. Other subjects called more loudly and I abandoned it. I took it along on a trip to Kauai in case the mood struck – and it did. I was drawn to this image largely because of the background – it was a challenge to paint the palms and the light and the diffused colors in the shadows. The original flowers are pink-pink but I was hesitant to paint them as they were. One morning I took a research-walk to survey the varieties of plumeria to see if there were white (or mostly-white) plumeria that had a similar rounded petal shape. There are! So I took some photos to give myself something to work from and I set about changing the color. It was something to find the colors of the shadows apart from the pink of the petal. I’m happy with how it came out – and really happy that made them mostly white flowers. They have a fresh airy-ness that suited my mood. Joe suggested I look up what “beautiful flower” is in Hawaiian. When I learned that the word for “plumeria” is “melia” I knew it was the name. Spelled the same, but pronounced differently, Melia is my mom’s childhood nickname. Sunlit, fragrant flowers from paradise for you, Mama!
April 2013 – 22″x30″ – Watercolor on paper
Dazzling
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With all the trips to Kauai that we make, you might think these two hibiscus flowers were growing there, but they were in a pot on the patio outside our kitchen here in Fairfax (Northern California). They will not survive our winters without protection (we do get frost). In the summers, though, they are quite happy. Alas, this plant is not still with us.
It lives on in this painting.
Beside the yummy color, I liked this image because it has a sense of companionship – the two are aligned, facing the same direction. With all the work I’m doing with PAX and masculine and feminine and partnership, it really spoke to me. I had been scared of all the detail on the surface of the petals – there’s a lot going on there. Recently I’m looking at why that is and realizing that it’s the left brain that both is freaked out about the detail and makes mischief in the painting process. It so gets in the way of making good art.
It’s useful for standing back and analyzing why a particular part of the painting doesn’t read. I find that listening to music while painting helps keep the spacial right brain engaged – and it soothes the overworked left brain too.
My papa gave me the name – it was his reaction to seeing the finished painting. Thanks, Papa.
July 2012 – 22″x30″ – Watercolor on paper
Birds in Paradise
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These bird of paradise flowers were growing in the front yard of a home in the Marine Street-Wind-and-Sea part of La Jolla, CA. As a result of the La Jolla Festival of the Arts in June 2009, I was asked to submit three ideas for the poster art for the 2010 festival. What an opportunity! I flew down for the day to scout out ideas with my camera. It was mid-September and a gorgeous day. This is a small bit of the strip of flowers growing on the street-side of the fence enclosing an amazing-looking garden. I perched to get the view through the flowers towards the Pacific Ocean. I painted this one with the prospect that the festival organizers might choose it to be the poster. They decided to have me paint another one (stay tuned…), making this one available to another home! I’ve been wanting to paint bird of paradise flowers, and have not been inspired until this one; the fence along the left and the h1biscus and bougainvilla in the background softened the composition and rounded out the color palette. I really wanted to name this one simply “On the Way to the Beach” but I thought that we’d all refer to it by the flower name, so it’s both.
November 2009 – 22″x30″ – Watercolor on paper
Lily Reflections
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These lilies are in a pond outside the Plantation Gardens restaurant in Kiahuna Plantation in Poipu on Kauai. When we go there, I often visit for painting ideas. In addition to the lily ponds they have the most extravagent collection of orchids I’ve ever seen! Though the same dimensions as the previous water lily panting – and the subjects are of similar scale – it still amazes me how different each painting ends up being. Paintings really do have a life of their own. A space of nearly two years between the painting of them and a whole other thing emerges. There’s so much more going on in this one. The reflections of the lilies are the star of the show for me. In Southside Lily Pond, the light was such that the reflections had very little detail, nearly black. In this one, it was earlier in the morning, making the reflections the most full of color and richness. The reflections of the reedy succlulent plant growing at the back edge of the pond is also makes a big impact. There are differing opinions about the dark shadow in the center of the painting. I like that you cannot tell exactly what it is – it’s mystery and murkiness. And it wasn’t until I was really in close doing the drawing that I realized there was a little dragonfly or damselfly on the lily on left. So, I made it bigger and spread its wings in the tropical light.
March 2010 – 30″x22″ – Watercolor on paper
Manualoha
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The first trip that Joe and I took to Kauai we stayed in a place called “Manualoha,” which translates from Hawaiian as either “lovebird” or “parrot.” “Parrot,” I read on one web site, because parrots can express love. So sweet. Our end unit had a private garden space in the back, making our two weeks there especially restful and beautiful. On another trip back we stayed in the same complex, in a different condo with a private garden. (I think this was the trip where I painted the first plumeria painting.) Over the back lanai was this plumeria tree. I love this variety – the range of color, the rounded shape – just so luscious! Like rainbow sherbet ice cream! In order to take the photos, I had to perch up on the patio table and chairs with my camera. I may have been risking my neck, but I was going to get close enough to get a good shot! This summer I’ve been in the mood to paint flowers with a vengeance. In reviewing my collections this one jumped out at me. In the midst of running after Bo, our new Labrador puppy, I managed to get this one finished. It’s a happy painting and I found it easy to paint. It’s nice to not be challenged ALL the time. It is summertime after all.
August 2010 – 22″x22″ – Watercolor on paper
Pink Plumeria
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This painting was fun to paint and yet I could never find myself really satisfied with the outcome. It just looked like a overgrown tropical postcard. I had cut the photo as the background in the photo was just black. Introducing the leaves on the top section as I did, made it less than satisfying. I kept adding more shadows, and more colors in the leaves, changed the background. It still wasn’t going to please me. My friend Brenda saw something in it, so she added it to her collection. We decided it worked better as a square painting, so I tore it and painted the edge. She framed it on chocolate colored suede and I’m amazed at how rich and beautiful it is.
Summer 2006 – 22″x22″ – Watercolor on paper