As a resident of Texas, the spring bluebonnets and Indian paintbrushes color the landscapes with their beauty. I was particularly delighted by the bees buzzing around the blossoms...gathering their nectar. This painting was entered in the State Fair of Texas.
8/24/10
Buzzin' around Texas
As a resident of Texas, the spring bluebonnets and Indian paintbrushes color the landscapes with their beauty. I was particularly delighted by the bees buzzing around the blossoms...gathering their nectar. This painting was entered in the State Fair of Texas.
Rhododendron with Guy Magallanes
7/25/10
Grace United Methodist Church Art Exhibit
I was recently selected to display my artwork at the Grace United Methodist Church's 2nd annual View, Enjoy, Celebrate Art Exhibit from July 23 - Aug 23. This is a photo of Oscar Duran (who organized the exhibit) and myself with my painting The Caryatids.
Here's Looking at You

I'm from Big D - My, Oh Yes!
Waiting
Richardson Civic Art Society Exhibition - 2010
From May 5 - May 31, 2010, I was fortunate enough to be juried into the Richardson Civic Art Exhibition. The painting that was selected was Waiting, a portrait I painted from a family photo my father had taken of me when we lived in Athens, Greece. One of my favorite activities was to feed the pigeons in a park across from where we lived. I added the pigeons to the painting even though they were not part of the original photo. A close up photo of this painting is featured as an earlier blog on this site.
5/26/10
New watercolor technique
5/19/10
Gallery Showing
Gallery Main Street -Tyler, Texas
I was fortunate to have a painting selected to display in their exhibit: "In Focus - It's a Macro World" ... East Meets West. The exhibit will run from May 13 - June 22. I met many wonderful fellow artists and members of the Tyler community. Two delightful visitors enjoyed my painting because one was born in Japan and the other had lived in Japan for several years. Great fun to visit and share with others!
5/9/10
Silvery Reflections
4/24/10

It was a very special moment to share with my mother when I found out that this portrait of her had won the award. She is 93 years old and the photo had always lingered in her memory, despite the fact that it had been stored away for years!
4/16/10
Selection for Main Street Gallery

4/11/10
Far and Away

Inspector GO-GO Helps Students
Using art to teach - One of the most effective lessons I taught this year was when I was trying to show students how important it is to organize their thoughts and ideas for their compositions. They are required as 4th graders to pass a written composition as part of the state's standardized testing. They know one of the requirements to "earn" a passing grade (or better) on their compositions is that there must be some system of organization of thought. I held up a painting I had done whose subject matter was "scattered", disjointed, disconnected, lacking of meaning/organization, etc. They commented that the painting didn't make sense and they had no idea what it was. Then I showed them the painting that was redone with organization, purpose, meaning, etc. and they loved it! I told them what I charge for a painting, and asked them if they thought anyone would pay me that much for the 1st painting, and of course they laughed at the thought of it. But they all agreed that the second painting was certainly worth that. So.....a "picture was worth 1,000 words". They really understood that just as I must "earn" the price I ask for a painting, they must "earn" their grade for their compositions.
Inspector GO-GO and I had many other great adventures with the students, incorporating art to "teach writing"!
FYI - I am wearing "ladders" hanging from my glasses. This is in reference to a wonderful children's book In the Attic by Hiawyn Oram. The main character finds a "ladder" to the attic in his home where he has many imaginative adventures. I encourage students to use their own "ladder" to their imagination as they are creating their wonderful narratives.
Labels:
art in writing,
Inspector GO-GO,
writing effectively
Spring Inspirations

Spring came to our lake in all of its glory. I wanted to catch the soft, almost transparent, leaves of the camellias which grow in our yard. They are the last of the camellias before spring bursts forth in our gardens. The bowls are from the collection of lacquer bowls collected by my mother when we lived in Japan. The cherries were a "tasteful" match for the composition.
3/30/10
Design in Art and Gardening
I recently presented a program to a local garden club discussing the principles of design as applied to both art and gardening. As mentioned in an earlier blog, I was a gardener before I began painting. All of the "learnings" and discoveries I made as a gardener transferred very naturally once I picked up my brushes!
3/29/10
Reflections
3/28/10
The Dance
3/27/10
3/26/10
A Passion for Watercolors

A Passion for Purple
Florals, still lifes, portraits, and architecture are the subjects I find the most inspirational as I take my journey through watercolors. I am always searching and discovering unusual colors, shapes, designs, and patterns in all things I observe.
Labels:
animals,
florals,
portraits,
purple,
still lifes,
watercolors
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