Crank up that synth
I've finally gotten around to listening to Hurry Up We're Dreaming (M83), been driving around to synth beats and epic songs that make your insides hurt, in a good way.

Naturally, it makes me want to listen to The Moody Blues.
 




Golden Press Card Awards

I have not shared here that I received a Golden Press Card Award for the illustration I painted for The Metro Pulse a couple of weeks ago. It's an award given by the East Tennessee Society of Professional Journalists, and I received an Award of Merit (Second Place) in the Art Illustration category.

It's an honor as an artist to receive a journalism award. At the awards ceremony, I sat with Metro Pulse writers and folks from WUOT. (Jack Neely would have been sitting at my table if he didn't have another function the same night. Bummer!) I entered a world that evening that I know very little about but have much admiration for. It was a lot of fun to be a part of.

Hopefully, I'll have a chance in the future to do some more illustrations like this. (You need an illustration? You like my work? You have money? Email me!)

I have to thank Travis Gray, the art director at the Metro Pulse for asking me do the illustration in the first place and for giving me the freedom to go forward with my vision for it. I made the painting in about three days, and though it was new to work under such a tight deadline, it was a lot of fun.

And now I have a silver-lined certificate to show for it.

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Preserves No. 102 and 103
I'm in the process of listing these on Etsy every weekday. Here are two from this week.


Preserves No. 102
Preserves No. 103
And here's a friendly reminder of what their all about:

Each of these mason jars are hand-painted with acrylic on salvaged wood and sealed with polyurethane. Their dimensions are 7.25" x 5.5"

The wood was donated to the Knox Heritage Salvage Program instead of being thrown into a landfill. Knox Heritage is a non-profit committed to preserving historic homes and buildings and conserving natural spaces in East Tennessee.
Each piece in the "Preserves" series is hand-painted with acrylic and then varnished. On the back, they are signed, numbered, and include a hole for easy hanging on a nail.

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They're Baaaack
After almost a four month hiatus, guess who's back...


Above, I hold in my hand Preserves No. 100. I finally made it this week for my friend Alice, as promised about a year ago.

gold painted edges

My goal is to make five a week. Ambitious? Yes. Feasible? Yes/I think so/We'll see. Ha.

Preserves No. 101 for sale here

Though they're similar to the ones I made last year, you may notice a difference in them as I begin listing them.

There has been a shift in my work lately with color, as I have been drawing inspiration from current fashion and music. It's showing up more and more in my work, so it makes sense that it would happen here. Neons and metallics are a go-to at the moment for me.

hot pink painted edges

It reflects my sensibilities lately, to take an iconic object like the mason jar and give it a modern flair. Pop culture meets folk art, I suppose you could say.
Narcissism brings us together
I read this this morning, courtesy of my pregnant friend's Facebook page.

It got me thinking more about something I've been thinking about for a while.

I read another article recently about how more and more women are beginning to share their labor, in real time, via social media.

I want to give my generation (late 20s/early 30s) the benefit of the doubt here. I want to believe most of my peers are appalled at such a thing. I am. Mortified, really.

Then I think about younger generations, the ones that have known very little life without social media. By the time they are having children, will it be commonplace to update your status while pushing? What will become of our culture?

To be clear, I think it's an incredible thing for a woman to carry around a tiny growing person in her stomach. Even more, as I personally know more and more women taking this task on, it gives me a joy that I've never experienced before.

With that being said, I admit, however, that I'm tired (oh, so tired) of seeing baby bump photos on Facebook. Add ultrasound photos to that list as well.

I've been wondering why I've felt this way. Am I being cynical, as is my natural tendency? Maybe. Am I jealous? No, I'm really not.

So I've come to the conclusion that what bothers me about it is how we can so easily cheapen joyous, awe-inspiring occasions by turning them into advertisements for ourselves. We take private, magical moments and publicize them so publicly*, and ask others to affirm us, to assure us we are on the right track.

Though I've never had the opportunity to consider posting baby bump pictures, I'm guilty of the same thing when I post updates and photos of my travels, social gatherings, and accomplishments. We put the best versions of ourselves forward in an effort to garner some amount of praise, some bit of validation from others while simultaneously living in reality, which we know has it's fair share of failures and disappointments.

(No one reads this blog, but) In the off chance you are sitting there thinking, "My baby bump pictures were not about me but my baby!" consider yourself a saint and stay exactly the way you are. But if you're anything like me, you know the struggle of which I speak.

Ok, enough beating up on pregnant women (poor choice of words?). What about the most narcissistic group of all: Artists.

We are a self-absorbed people asked to promote and defend the work we make knowing it does not serve a purpose in the grand scheme of human survival. Yet, we create because there is a mysterious force inside us that tells us that if we don't, we will spiral into a dark depression and our spirit will surely die**. We possess an ability to communicate on a level other people can't, to make money throwing paint on a canvas or fashioning a sculpture out of paper clips and, as a result, we place ourselves above those who can't. Or something like that.

As I force myself to be more comfortable promoting myself as an artist (lest I never make a living doing what I love), I can't shake the feeling that I'm not supposed to function this way. I haven't come to a place in regard to self-promotion where I've felt like my motives were right; it always feels like bragging.

So I guess what I'm asking is, how can I trick others into thinking I'm humble and noble when I talk about how great I am in order to attain more wealth?

While you ponder this, I'm going to go post some pics on Facebook of a hike I went on the other day. It was the best day ever!

* I've always wondered why an email to 20 or 30 of your closest friends and family with your ultrasound photos attached wouldn't suffice. Everyone can go bonkers via an exuberant and intimate email thread.

** This might just be me.
Amalgam
First Friday
May 4
7-11pm
Fluorescent Gallery
627 N Central Street 
 Knoxville, TN

If you are in Knoxville Friday, May 4th, please stop by Fluorescent Gallery while making your rounds. Those showing are:

Robmat Butler
Lesley Eaton
Briena Harmening
Kelly Hider
Brian Jobe
Carri Jobe
Christopher King
Per-Ole Lind
John McRae
Beth Meadows
Katie Ries
Jessie Van der Laan

This is our first group show as a studio. Please come out and see what we've been making this year. 

Friska
Whenever Juicy gets frisky (batting around toys, hunting invisible critters, galloping through my apartment, crumpling rugs and bedspreads) her pupils dilate and her nickname becomes Friska. Though her posture in this drawing doesn't reflect her wild behavior, I wanted to capture how adorable she is in these moments.

P.S. I am so excited. Two cats are now following me on Twitter! (hahahaha)