ascent

I would like to unveil my newest finished product– a charcoal and conté drawing on paper.  I was enjoying the early visit of robins to my back yard and was able to snap this photograph with my iphone:

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follow my photo-adventures on Instagram!

 

and, needless to say, it made perfect fodder for this:

 

ascent

Prints are now available–with three sizes to choose from– for pre-order through the end of February, for March delivery.  Click on the link, my drawing, or the “Visit My Store” button to the right.

how far I’ve come

It’s easy to look back at all the mistakes I’ve made, where I fell short, or let myself down.  I am always hesitant to let myself get excited about the good parts, or to share my personal celebrations with others for fear that it will somehow be jinxed or that I’m getting ahead of myself and will then later have to explain my defeat. But today I am going to look at the positive that came from the last year.

I decided to take control of my life. I came to the conclusion that I can’t sit around waiting for life to happen, and that doing what I truly wanted to be doing wasn’t going to magically appear.  I realized that I didn’t have to jump through the hoops of what I believed was always expected of me first– degree and a “real” career– before I was allowed to chase my dreams.  I remember sitting through a class at city hall the summer after high school to get my child care license to work in a daycare and the woman leading the class gave an introductory speech and (I have no idea how this ties in to working part-time at a daycare) she said, “Do what you love, and the money will follow.”  That stuck with me, but I never quite believed it.  I tried plenty of jobs, ventures, even studied towards a specialized degrees where I had the potential to be making money, and tried and tried to love it enough to really make the money come in, but it never did.  I resigned myself to the idea that maybe it was only something for the lucky few.

A few years ago I went back to school after having my second son to pursue a degree in the field I had been working entry-level in.  Despite near-perfect grades, I dropped out of college… for the second time in 3 years.  I fell into a deep depression and was drawn toward my art room where I subsequently spent any waking hour that I didn’t otherwise feel obligated to be taking care of my family or going to work.  That first piece I painted was small– barely a square foot– but probably packed with more emotion and more catharsis than I have put into anything else in my life.  That piece spun off an idea for another painting, and another, and another still.  Over the next year, the act slowly turned from purgation, to process, to pleasure.  I was reconnected with my missing piece.

That was my epiphany, not in the sudden and astonishing sense of the word, but in the arduous and painful way that life presents most of its important lessons.  Art has always been where I have felt happiest. It is challenging, it is rewarding, it allows me to be myself.  Isn’t that what everyone wants out of their career?

But then there’s the money part.

Like I have mentioned before, my husband and I have been working diligently toward financial security and because of his overall kickassedness he got a promotion that made up the difference of my part-time income, allowing me to feel a little less stretched between the demands of parenthood and everyday life and the calling of my art studio.  I got prints made of some of my existing work, was able to pick up a few commissioned pieces here and there, but even riding the enthusiastic wave of new-venture, things waned. It wasn’t until last September when someone in my group of mom-friends had mentioned hearing of a place where you could go out for an evening and paint, that I had the idea to try a similar idea.  Applying the same concepts I had learned in my dismal stint in direct sales of the Mary Kay nature, I convinced a group of gals to let me walk them through a painting over the course of a couple hours and as many bottles of wine.  The ease with which it came caught be off guard, it was something I never felt peddling my wares in another person’s home, not even my mother’s living room.  Another request for a party came along, and before I knew it, I am doing what I love and the money is following.

I still have a lot to learn, much growing to do both personally and as a businesswoman, but for the first time in my life I feel like everything is right.  There may not be any footprints ahead of me, but the path feels familiar and the further down it I travel, the more amazed I am with the distances I am covering.

With that, I am going to leave you with a bit of perspective.  The painting below is the first-ever acrylic painting I made. It is from one of my high school art classes with Ms. Younger (who will forever hold a place in the credit-roll).  It’s 12″x 18″ on illustration board, recreated from a photograph from Antarctica.  Oh, how far I’ve come.

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faster than the speed of life

Taking a break for a quick update!  Life has been blowing by full speed lately.  Summer ended, kids’ school started, we decided to buy a house and are in the middle of that process right now (we are in the “bank limbo” stage… all this waiting is killing me!), my painting parties are off with astonishing success, and I’m excited to be working with a local business to offer painting classes on a weekly basis in their space as well.  *whew!* that was exhausting just to type.  Oh, and 5 hours of dance rehearsal for me and kiddo for our big recital this weekend.  Am I missing anything else? (probably).  Oh yes, add in the smattering of concerts, birthday parties, other family events, and a  round of the stomach flu.

Did I tell you we’re planning a weeklong vacation next month?  I can’t wait.  …..what’s that?  our closing date on the house might get pushed into the middle of our vacation?  *sigh* At this rate, I may not even survive long enough to go on vacation.

I have been working on a few other projects as I can.  Here is a sample as well as a photo from the last party I did where we took an Autumn landscape and abstracted it.  And I am loving my new venture so much, I might add.  Nothing like feeling like you’ve not only found a path, but to also be the one who is building the trail.  A big thanks to my husband, my parents and his, all the lovely ladies having parties, and to everyone else who has ever believed in me.

Too busy to blog!

Hi, it’s me, your long lost blogger!

I have been sketching. Not daily, but still keeping the spark alive.

I have been prepping canvases and boards for projects on deck.

I have been rehearsing with my hip hop dance team for our upcoming performance, and taking my son to his performances. (Today we went to a children’s cancer benefit so my son could perform)

I have been meeting with mortgage lenders and house shopping.

I have been doing everything…. except blogging.

This is my latest sketch.  Let me know what you think in the comments!

Cupcake and Crossbones

 

 

Contest!

Hey all!  I’ve decided to turn some photos I took into paintings, but to make things a little more exciting, I’ve decided to run a quick contest.  Follow the link at the end of my post to check out my pictures, follow that to my facebook page (like it while you’re there, too!)  and vote on your favorite photos from the fireworks album and the top 3 photos with the most “likes” will be made into 6×8 in. acrylic paintings and posted for sale on my webstore.

I’m ready to start painting, so the contest ends tonight!
Get your clicking finger ready…. set… go!  >>>Fireworks.

I mean it.

Here we go! Summer is officially in full swing, we finally finished up the school year for my lil’ critters and got my house back to acceptable standards.  This translates into me finally having the clarity of space and mind to begin drawing again!  Now I just need to get myself back into a good habit of working every day and get my kids adjusted to the idea that for that small piece of my day, my world doesn’t entirely revolve around them.  But I’m back in the saddle, and I mean it!

This is the piece I did today, one out of 5 or 6 in a series.  5″x7″ Prismacolor pencil on black paper.

Also, through the end of June all commissioned pieces will be $25 off! If you’re interested, please contact me at e11evenshades[at]gmail[dot]com for details and pricing information.

Saying Goodbye

In my last post (which I know was neglectfully long ago, but if you haven’t read it, please do, and understand that not much has let up since then) I wrote about my awesome husband and his awesome promotion, well, there’s more to the story.  I don’t like to count my chicks before they’re hatched so I held off on revealing that his promotion also meant that I was able to leave my job.  My last day officially was last Thursday. I am planning on dedicating more time and effort into turning my hobby, my art, into something larger.  Perhaps not a career, but at least something self-sustaining.

I have been a developmental therapist for the last 5 years, with the last four working specifically with children. If you’re not familiar with that line of therapy, it is basically a play-based therapy that reinforces life skills based on the needs of each client based on his or her developmental disabilities.  Sometimes it is filling in the gaps of areas that aren’t covered by more mainstream therapies like Physical, Speech, or Occupational Therapy, and often times will be reinforcing those therapies as well.  For the last three years and a few months, I have had the privilege of working with one particularly sweet little boy with Down Syndrome.  I was at his house for most of our therapy, and during those last three years I have not only seen him grow from barely more than a toddler into a little boy preparing to start first grade.  I have seen him grow into his charm, his sense of humor, his independence, and into athletic skill that truly exceeds those of most typical children his age.  I was a part of huge breakthrough moments that made me proud literally to tears.  I have been there through surgery, illnesses, and certainly our fair share of plain ol’ bad days.  But beyond my relationship with him, I was a part of their home for hours a day.  I was there to help him welcome both of his younger siblings.  I was there to see the triumphs and tribulations of the entire household, and even with my best attempts at maintaining professional boundaries, they are such a genuinely kind family that I could not help but to be made to feel like I was a part of it. I am beyond excited to be able to dedicate more time to my family, my artwork and everything else, but it was not an easy farewell.  I did not just leave my job, but what do you call it when it is more than just a paycheck?

In addition, last week was also my youngest son’s last day of preschool at the cooperative we have been with for the last two years, where my boys and I have both met wonderful friends, and an environment that makes it practically impossible for anyone not to do the same.  We are preparing for our oldest’s Kindergarten graduation coming in a few weeks as well.

And, last but not least, I finished another painting who will be making her way to a permanent home in the coming days.  She has pushed me technically and creatively.  One of my bigger pieces to date, at 2′ by 3′ a lot of hours have gone into it, and a as always a part of me bleeds out into the paint.

To put it mildly, this has been a painfully bittersweet week, full of the endings of chapters opening into the uncertainty of the blank calendar pages and canvases to follow.  So stick around… who knows what will happen next?

Earth Goddess; acrylic on board 3′ x 2′

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