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Saturday, May 31, 2008

Katherine Treffinger

I first saw the work of Katherine Treffinger in an online community of artists at Flickr, and I fell in love with her abstract expressionist paintings. When I began look for more of Katherine’s work, to my delight, I discovered that she has a web site http://www.katherinetreffinger.com. ( you can click on this entry's title or use the link under my Artists' Galleries). I was completely smitten with her work. In fact, my heart's desire would be to have one of her paintings hanging in my home. Because I wanted to share my "discovery" with all of you, I contacted Katherine and asked if I might write a feature about her for my blog. She answered me so promptly and so graciously that I knew her spirit was as generous and beautiful as her art.

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I am hypnotized by her original use of deep dramatic hues and the odd sense of tranquility she manages to convey with these typically passionate colors. Maybe it’s the heavily textured swirls of violet, orange, turquoise, and green, or maybe it’s the recurring whimsical motifs that soothe me. White swans and black graphics flow against geometric patterns of red-orange, cobalt, and magenta.

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In the 1950’s Katherine grew up in the era of creative freedom and bohemian art, in Saulsilito when California was the home of abstract expressionism. Her childhood home was across the street from one of the coffee houses in which Alan Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac read from their poetry, and her missing toys often turned up in the neighbors' sculptures. Needless to say, in this rich environment, her creativity flourished.



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Primarily a self-taught artist, Katherine has a degree in psychology from San Francisco State University and completed graduate work in the field of social welfare. She has exhibited widely in California, Oregon, Washington, and Colorado. When questioned about what her art represents, she is characteristically mysterious. She has said, though, that the black linear elements often seen in her kaleidescopic paintings "might be an entry to something or maybe an exit."

In one interview, Katherine said, "When I stand before an empty canvas or piece of paper, I am lost, unaware of what to do. In fact, my most satisfying work comes from staying ‘lost’. Navigational confidence is seldom productive for me. Each piece becomes the recording of a unique introspective exploration."



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For the past several years Katherine has been painting in collaboration with artist Cindy Bilotti. (see two paintings above). Upon reading the book "Zhou Brothers: 30 Years of Collaboration", Katherine became intrigued by the concept of collaborative painting. Cindy was also interested, so out of of their conversations about the relationship of the mystical and mythical to art and life their partnership developed . Before starting a painting, they each read the same myth and agree to follow their instincts to allow paintings to emerge from the process. They each paint on a single piece at the same time and enjoy experimenting with texture, tools, and technique. Sometimes, while working, they are quiet for long periods of time, but often they talk, laugh, and even shout in their excitement. I am completely fascinated, not only by the origin of thier paintings: fables and myths, but by the idea of sharing the joyous process of creating with another artist. What could be more sublime than that?

You can see more of Katherine's work online at Flickr or visit her website to purchase original paintings at www.katherinetreffinger.com.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

I Think I'm Going To Katmandu!

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Purple $ Orange

I know I'm posting this late, but I've been out of commission art-wise for the last day with a sinus/ear infection. I 've got my mojo back now, though, so here's my entry. My tribute to Laural Burch is acrylic on a 12 x 12 canvas, and I painted it as a graduation present for my daughter-in-another-life. Up, up and away, Brooke!


http://www.artygirlzchallengeblog.blogspot.com/

Movie Icons Some Of You Are Too Young To Remember

I've been cooped up sick for the past few days, and it's really been kind of fun to have an excuse to just to lie around watching movies and taking naps. Right now I'm watching "An Unmarried Woman" with Jill Clayburgh. I've always loved this film, and I started remembering the very first time I ever saw it. I was 17, very impressionable, and my parents had just gotten a divorce. This film hit very close to home at the time. In fact, I wept so copiously that my boyfriend, who was always a sensitive soul, asked if I wanted to leave the theater. I didn't, and I've seen it many times since then. I admired Jill Clayburgh's character's independence and the fact that she worked in an art gallery, in equal measures. She seemed sooo glamorous, and then there was that white tank top and billowy skirt she wore when she said goodbye to Saul and carried his painting home in the last scene... I started to wonder then which other movie heroines influenced me. At first I kept getting distracted by outfits that had influenced me, but, that was probably just the decongestant talking. Let's save that topic for another day. When I was able to focus, I recalled both Shirley McClain and Ann Bancroft in "The Turning Point," one's sacrifice for her child, the other's sacrifice for her art; two very strong women. Plus, I just love a dance movie (especially one with Mikhail Baryshnikov in it). Jane Fonda as Lillian Helman in "Julia" was intrepid and loyal; Ellen Burstyn in "Alice Doesn't Live Her Anymore," funny and tough,"Marsha Mason in "The Goodbye Girl," vulnerable and strong, at the same time, and a dancer, Faye Dunaway in "Three Days of the Condor," glamorous love interest for Robert Redford and a talented photographer, Meryl Streep in "Out of Africa," an autonomous woman and a writer, Dustin Hofman in "Kramer vs. Kramer." Yes, of course I know he's not a woman (although he was a cross-dresser in "Tootsie"), but he was what I wanted to be: a loving, devoted parent and a person that drew pictures for a living. I started to see several themes emerging: All of these characters were strong, independent, and highly creative. Several were strong, independent, and highly creative parents. Did I identify with them? You bet. Did they influence me at all? Certainly. Did I turn out like them just a little bit? I sure hope so.

I'd love to know which movie characters you identified with or influenced you, so, if you feel like it, leave a comment or drop me an e-mail and let me know.

Love,
Alberta

Monday, May 26, 2008

Arty Girlz Recycle Challenge: Necessity Is The Mother Of Invention

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Recycle is my middle name! In fact, if you look up recycle in the dictionary, you will see a picture of me getting out of a car to scavenge items that have been put out for trash. My children were trained at an early age to leap from a moving vehicle, shove curbside art into the trunk, and jump back in, before the car ever rolled to a halt, thus avoiding public humiliation by any friends that might happen upon the scene and see them foraging through garbage piles.

I can remember being about 8 yrs. old and desperately wanting to create art, but not having any supplies, so I collected bits of colored glass out of the street to make a mosaic on cardboard. About 80 % of my home is furnished in Cousin Mae's hand-me-downs, road-kill, flea market finds, and Salvation Army purchases, repainted, recovered, and revamped. Ava here, not to be confused with my sister Ava, is an "original sculpture" created from a wig stand I begged from the drama teacher at my school. I must confess that I was inspired by one similar that I saw in Domino magazine last month.

For more recycled treasures, check out my Flickr or scroll down a little bit to see photos of my attic studio. Almost nothing is new: the Queen of Mardi Gras lamp was once covered with Mallard ducks, the roll-top desk was my son's and was stained oak until 2 weeks ago, shelving came from flea markets, and my art table began life plain brown in my husband's accounting office!

Thanks so much for this challenge, Arty Girlz
http://www.artygirlzchallengeblog.blogspot.com/

Mixed Media Monday

I started this piece over two months ago, (see my March 16 entry)as a pencil sketch of my neice. From there it evolved into a painting, the first painting I've attempted in more than 15 years! I glued the sketch onto a 24 X 30 inch canvas and covered it with acrylic paint. Details were added using a black Sharpie pen. Although I am happy with the colors and the drawing, I'm not sure how I feel about the piece as a whole. This was definitely a learning experience for me. My next painting (a portrait of Doodlebug's identical twin) will have more curves than sharp angles and straight lines. It was heaven to be painting again, though, and I have at least five more ideas for paintings swirling around in my head!

Saturday, May 24, 2008

Doodlebug: Pencils/Pens

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I'm so excited!!! I must be the biggest geek the whole world. Violette tagged me. Here are the rules:

1. Each player answers questions about themselves.

2. At the end of the post, tag 5 people by posting their names.

3.Go to their site/blog and leave a comment telling them they've been tagged. Invite them to your site/blog so they can read the tagged post.

4. Let the person who tagged you know when you've completed your tagged post.
I have to answer these 6 questions:

1. What were you doing 10 years ago? trying to keep up with my 17 and my 10 yr. old sons, going to swim meets, basketball camps, being football team mom, teaching a middle school class for mild intellectual disabilities, packing boxes to move, finishing the last design details on the house we were building: choosing paint and wallpaper,designing cabinets and shelves, sketching windows and porches, patios and porches, the culmination of 2o years of tearing pictures out of design magazines and stuffing them into notebooks. Mr. Alberta finally secretly told all the subcontractors not to even LOOK at any more pictures I showed them.

2. What are 5 things on your To Do list?
plant my window boxes, finish Doodlebug and flying cat painting, color-copy some of Bob Dylan's album covers for a Father's Day painting, start sketches for my children's book, book plane tickets for our 25th Anniversary trip to Belize!

3. What are 5 snacks you really enjoy (in no particular order)?
Diet Coke, Weight Watchers Toffee Bars, microwave popcorn, (when I really treat myself:) Brie with fruit and wine, and, if it's a REAL emergency: chocolate covered graham crackers (fondly known in our house as "Party Grahams")

4. Name some places where you've lived.
Not many: Mississippi, New Orleans, Georgia

5. Name some bad habits you have.
procrastinating, feeling sorry for myself, eating mindlessly before bedtime, cursing like a sailor

6. Name some jobs you've had.
tennis court keeper, babysitter, camp art counselor,calligrapher, retail sales, Bible school teacher, waitress, bartender, special education teacher

Now, here's who I'm going to tag:

Janet
ArtBrat
Emily
Ava
Brooke

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Welcome to Alberta's Attic

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Please come in! This is what I've been working on for the last month. Ever since I read A Little Princess and was thrilled by Sara awakening to her magic attic, I've wanted my own snug, little room at the top of the house. And here it is, complete with slanting ceilings and all my beautiful art supplies.


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I love Mason jars; they keep everything I need out in plain sight. That's some of my art hanging above the "Jars Of Color," as my twin neices, Magenta and Amarylis, call them.

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My inspiration board is made from cardboard and a recycled picture frame that I painted pink. Beneath it is my Queen of Mardi Gras Lamp (yes, Ava, I am the Queen of Mardi Gras) and several of my treasures, like the Chintzware teapot and Capidimonte roses, both gifts from Ava. Everything sits on Cousin Mae's antique pie safe, which is perfect for storing fabric, art magazines, and other art supplies.


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Here's my first attempt at sculpture: actually she's a wig stand that I begged from our drama teacher. In the corner is an unfinshed portrait of Amarylis.

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This summer my plan is to paint something on the attic door next to my family portrait scrapbook pages. Please note the Muses above the door. They were the inspiration for the whole studio and were, you guessed it, a gift from Ava!

As you can see, my enchanted attic is my little piece of heaven. When I sit in the cozy red armchair, the rest of the world just melts away. I wish you were here with me: reading, dreaming, creating...

Please come back and visit again soon!

Monday, May 12, 2008

Inspire Me Thursday: Doors

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The real act of discovery is not in finding new lands, but in seeing
with new eyes. -Marcel Proust

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Mixed Media "Paint"

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This is the first acrylic painting I've ever completed, and I started a with a 12 X 12 canvas, trying several different techniques to see where they would lead me.
I put down a deep blue acrylis base and layered on my favorite black and white paper. Next, I painted over the paper with more acrylic. When that dried, I sanded off some of the paint to let the design peek through. I wasn't entirely pleased with the result, so I repainted the sanded areas with watercolors. Then I put on more blue, violet, and white acrylic using a stipling stroke to create depth. While this was drying I drew the little figure with colored pencils and cut out yellow stars. I remembered a clock face that I'd stashed away a couple of years ago just because I knew it would come in handy someday. I used colored pencil to draw the moon's face onto the clock(not very visible in this photo) and inked the edges of the moon. Last I used Modpodge to attach all paper images to the canvas, and this is the result called "Bring Me a Dream." I hope you like it.

Thanks for stopping by,
Love,
Alberta

Beautiful Girls (and Boys)

Well, last night, I finally finished my cards at 11:45 p.m. I will post the last two tonight. Ava said I've been in a "CREATIVE FIT," a term our mother, the original muse, Agent XLO05, used when I was little, to decribe the nearly-obsessive state I entered when I had an inspiration. Ava was probably right though.

What I was doing was making individual portraits for graduation cards for the students in my homeroom. I made different cards for the boys, based on my "Bring Me A Dream" painting; I just don't draw boys that well... I was so blessed with this group. of students. Being a first year high school teacher (after twenty-five years in middle school, no I am NOT still sane). I was apprehensive about spending 30 minutes every day with a group of students and having no specific agenda for them. Somehow, I was assigned the sweetest, smartest, funniest 17 seniors in school. They called us a family, and it really did feel like one. We talked about everything from the usual stuff: grades, prom, and mean bosses to the the more controversial: God, bigotry, politics, fidelity, and even antidepressants to the downright silly: shoes, Angelina Jolie's lips, and Monty Python. They helped me with my computer issues; I helped them with their college applications. They brought me Zaxby's chicken, homemade bread, and Serbian desserts, and I baked them chocolate cakes and gave them Jolly Ranchers. They let me listen to the new Shins and Damien Rice, and I played them Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young and Bob Dylan. They called me mainstream, and I said "I'm supposed to be mainstream; I'm 49!

They were unbelievable: already adults, some of them paying for their own health insurance, working full-times jobs, going to school, being moms, joining the military, dealing with serious issues like mental illness and dental bills. I will miss them so much when they're gone; I don't want a new group next year. It's going to be so hard for me when they graduate, almost like when my own son sgraduated last year, but they will be fine. They will be amazing.