first frost


Frost on the pumpkins. Serious hard frost. So, we are officially pointing towards the cold weather. Brilliant trees, brilliant blue skies.

Bought five big $3. pumpkins and 4 $2. pumpkins from the famed Brownies farm stand south of Jacksonville on my way back from swimming at the House of Health. The Brownie empire had the pumpkins arranged by size and thus price...in the front yard...gloriously bouncing off the blue sky and rich, thick grass. We are ready to carve tonight. Tomorrow is the prep for Tburg's annual best attended holiday, Halloween...and with the biggest, scariest house in town, we try to keep up with the zealous decorators...and rarely succeed due to the scale of things here. We will put out over 50 lumieres, do some lightbulb changing in the windows of the house and get some music (I like the ponderous work from Philip Glass--R. has other ideas). We spotlight the gravestones that came with the property...and let people come in the front hall. Other than that, gummy eyeballs or juiceboxes are what we offer. I would love to offer hotdogs like an enterprising family in Pittsburgh did while I was growing up...but when you start running the numbers and the health issues that could surface, high fructose corn syrup comes to the fore. We easily get 300 kids in 3 hours. We like it as it is really nice visiting time with our neighbors and friends. People without kids come around to say hi. We may offer drinks as treats for the grownups.

Working on a series of small projects. Need to resolve another Christmas Card for a new animal client. Some logotypes for the Museum of Glass and a tee shirt. Need to get my parts and pieces together for the slide show for SU.

Octopus on the skull live from the sketchbook. Was thinking about Memento Mori and creating some lists (after looking at a german book on Andy Warhol's print editions). Warhol would do a group of pictures with an over arching theme--flowers, Mao, Nixon, the ten significant jewish people of the 20th century--and pick away at an idea through a body of work. I am thinking a list of symbols, a list of shapes, a list of epitaphs. This might be a nice go to when things get stale.

wow,wow,wow

Back to the world of self promotion:

New ideas. Buttons from Justbuttons.org have a 1.25" black and white button (qty 100) for $20. in color $22.
That seems doable.
Easy way to get the work out.

Another, the Stickerguy.com. These are California guys that print just black and white or black and red stickers on vinyl. This must be the type of shop that the board and surf guys go to. My desire is to do a 3.5" die cut circle sticker in black and white which costs $61.for 250 pieces. Only downside is that it takes between 2-8 weeks to get them. if you order in "bulk"more than 1000 pieces) it can go faster. The cheapest is a business card sized sticker for $20. Hello Memento Mori stickers. Put them on your dumpster, put them on your bumper, put them on your coffin? I think these guys are going to get my job...and I will hope they are good. However, how great is the risk?

Hot on the trail

Pricing out labels for promotion (to put little death heads on) and 4" round vinyl stickers to bundle with the Memento Mori cards and discovered that JakPrints have great prices on all the stickers, and this new concern, www.ezclickprint.com for a 4" vinyl circle(weatherproof die cut). EZclick sells 250 1 color stickers for $186. which seems reasonable...and then I can pretend I am a skateboard company or local band or coffee shop--doing that guerilla sticker thing. Even take some to Huntington beach, CA and sticking mine with the real guys.

Christmas Chicken

I have this sneaking feeling that things might begin to blow out around Christmas. There were a lot of people looking and not buying during the Art Trail where $50. seemed to pinch a little. But hey, around Christmas, when you are stuck and a $50 present is not out of the ordinary, calling that lady in Rongovia seems like the right thing to do. The vibe is pointing there. And, with a bunch of work going to Corning for their Christmas Show/Sale--I may want to double up on some of the images and keep it in the back room for the"do you haves". I will really need to remember to sign the work (not important to me, I guess) as I have had to disembowel 3 images sold on the art trail to sign it ...and seal it up again and deliver. Big URG.

As I had said in Art Trail Recap--more chickens, more water birds, more stuff people know. Dogs are breed specific (to that, a blonde lab, a chocolate lab and a black lab are in order...but not now). Cows, pigs and horses are probably better options. With this in mind...a new chicken is amongst the dead on the drawing board just to slowly begin to move the needle. The Birds of Rongovia is open again...with the progress posted to see how this picture develops.

The Seminar talk at SU is starting to gel. Instead of soup to nuts in 40 minutes, I am going to show a brief overview of design work (exhibiting competency and experience) and spend the bulk of the time on illustration (electronic) and the commercial outflows (with a quickie overview with screen shots of how I do the vector thing as the students have some grasp of photoshop...and little to none of illustrator). Then, talk about the impulse and personal aspect of the Memento Mori project, the plans and manifestation and the immediate market use of some of these personal and impulsive images. End up with the idea that you can do your own thing, do it well, get it "out there", stay open when things come your way and see where things take you. Planning only gets you started. You cannot plan the end (just like death!)> You can only plan for now and stay relaxed intellectually> but put brawn behind all of the aspects of work, thought, connecting.

I think this sketch may point out, I am almost there.

Your thinking?

Getting ready for ski season


Back from a very muddy,wet and treacherous cross country invitational in tiny Marathon,NY. We passed cider mills, fields of halloween pumpkins and bright trees in the rolling brilliant green fields. Tburg came in 2nd (boys modified}with A coming in 11th. Soggy and sodden. He spent the week getting mentally psyched about this...and it was as hard as he predicted. He came in 11th. His pal Alec wiped out and hurt his delicate knee--finishing 10th. Even the girls were falling into holes, running through thigh high water without any idea what the unseen dangers were. Everyone was very full of team solidarity albeit sad as this was the end of the season.

Off we went to Greek Peak's annual ski swap. A. got a whole snowboard set up for less than $300 (all new). Wonderful clothing, helmets, goggles etc. One could buy snowshoes, cross skis and boots, skis and helmets. Getting ready for the snow season seems almost affordable versus the stabbing the ski shops give you (although it might be a season out of date). K got hot pink pants. A. got cordoroy pants and a new jacket. R. got a new jacket and helmet. They are all geared up. I have my illustrations and the pool. Something for everyone!

I was intrigued to get a big eyeful of snowboards and skiis strictly for the exposure to graphics and illustration that is so prevalent in the world of skateboards. The wild range of styles and offerings that are in the world of skateboards really isn't there. Colors are muted,dark or dun colored. Graphics are monochromatic, tone on tone or white or gold -- small without a huge impact. Very vector graphic. No one is venturing into story telling, or even big dot pattern/ Rosenquist-y billboard stuff (gigantic eyes, gigantic lips, a lipstick tube etc), or big dot pattern a la Mr. Brooks(graphic novel/comic book style). This whole thing is very anti or in the words of the Ralph Appelbaum group when we were working with them, ironic. Meaning...its not ironic...its a styling statement. Nothing blew my shorts off...unlike the skateboard world of decks and shirts and stuff. No stickers in evidence. And outside of seeing some cool stainless steel skiis...the world of skis are still in the land of pin-striping and striping...saving the cool factor for the final film treatments and embedded textures in the fiberglass on top. Colors were also dun and grey...with acid green or orange accents. Predictable.

I want to call Salomon and see if I can do some boards. Would be a rip. I wonder who I would call. Not the design department. Marketing. The king of the operation? My Lauder experience would have to add up to something for these guys. Lemme think.

As I gave a huge portion of my postcards away during the Art Trail Weekend, I ordered up 5 new cards (all from Memento Mori) to be packaged as a group (maybe with a sticker...am researching) in a blue polkadot envelope...or black or pewter (!) to be left behind and handed out when I meet people. This technique of handing someone an envelope with a present of cards is a huge impression that gave me a bunch of mileage with potential clients, and with my new design clients who love it. I am also taking little boxes of snacks (peanuts,sesame straws, sunflower seeds or peanuts,chocolate chips, raisins, craisins and apricots) in a tailored kraft box with a muted ribbon to the clients as well. I get nice notes back...and they feel as if someone cares. I do...and this is an easy thing to do...and seemingly more healthy than buying beers or taking out for a big transfat lunch. Looking forward to the cards coming. Working with PSPrint is a nice one as they have the options of a big card order (500+) or the economy order (100,200,300) for low money. If I can remember right, without shipping, the economy order of 100 cards (4cp over k) is less than $20. So..you can afford to be a bigshot. And with the stickers, the research is showing I can do that for little money too.

I was looking at all sorts of gravestones yesterday. I looked at some stones from Vermont. It was fascinating as the hand is much softer, more open and florid compared with the staunch, hard tack, hard bitten images created for the Marblehead Old Burial Grounds. Softer and almost more feminine by the Vermont carvers at the same time. Much more detail, more flowers, more scrolls and drapery. Bought a few books from Alibris and Amazon on the topic du jour. I will post when I get them.

It has stopped raining. The weather had it backwards today.

Gotta go.

IF: Trick? or Treat?


Any man's death diminishes me, because I am involved in Mankind; And therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee.
John Donne

In the spirit of Halloween, remember your own mortality and inevitable death...and act accordingly. It's not necessarily about candy corn, pumpkins and costumes. Halloween can be a moment to stop and reflect.

A view of the world from the lap pool


I am swimming laps every morning before the office officially opens. Its been great-- a little stunning how it shuts your brain off almost entirely except for the ability to breathe and count the laps...(even the counting can be a little shaky. I have thought that getting a little knitting counter and pinning it to the front of one's bathing suit might be the goofy answer. Or having a handful of rings that you move from one finger to the next. To be honest, I have tried...and almost just given up counting...making it a time based experience. We'll see.) I am feeling spoiled to have this glamourpuss place to go to with lovely lockers, glass doors on the showers and all sorts of amenities along with all the weights and machines if you want them. I hope I can keep it up as I have more energy...and thats what its all about. Coffee only gets you so far. This really is much better. My shoulders hurt. I swam daily through college and the first few years of work at Corning. Then walking...And to be honest, I like swimming the best. I somehow think that as we, as beings, are made up of so much water that there is a balancing that goes on with swimming and lake paddling. Chlorine gets in the way of the total flat line (brainwise). That's all for my non scientific babbling.

Spent the better part of the day on the almost Memento Mori project for a client using some of the scrap from my first phase of drawings--filling in the time while things print or save drawing octopus and skulls. Be YouTiful...hard and wiggly. Rigid and organic. A wealth there. I dont know if it is true to the Memento Mori...or as hard line as the rest, but I write the rules...and the more out there I go, the work gets more interesting. Did a nice star of david and cross. Not totally calligraphic, but inspired by the thicks and thins.

Gotta get started on the stuff I want to send down to Corning's 171 Cedar Street Christmas Bazaar--art and cards from the Ithaca Art Trail, and some new things in frames. Barbara compiled what we sold, quantities and total dollars on each "sku"-- so we actually have "data". Maybe a tiny bit of cash there too. Who knows. Erich says he thinks the cards will sell. I agree.

Am re-reading the Great Elizabeth by my all time favorite historical biographer, Carrolly Erickson--a great writer who tells a good story studded with bits and pieces of life, lifestyle, intrigue, gossip and sidebar information that somehow makes the individual she is writing about absolutely breathe. She has written about Elizabeth, Henry, Ann Boleyn, Mary Queen of Scots, Marie Antoinette, Catherine the Great (of Russia). You get the jist. Its terrific. I should also go the library ( here in Tburg, our library is a Philomathic Library..is yours?) and get a new, hot off the presses book. They always have things that I never thought I would like...and do.

Memento Mori continues. Today with Octopus. I have been working with skeletal hands...and have a little groove happening with them. You know...this work is evolving. Wow.

Gotta sleep.

new resource

While I was surfing around, I discovered that the publisher, Dorling Kindersley, a publisher known for their simple and elegant books for kids sometimes and for adults sometimes have a photo resource they are beta testing for possible reference and definitely for stock. Their signature type of image is often an animal or creature with a good expression or pose silhouetted on a white page. Their layouts are simple and strong and allow the gesture or expression to really shine through. We have all loved the Eyewitness books and videotapes as they communicate well, are well written and can hold the imagination of kids that are more interested in television than static boring things...like books. Imagine having that as a resource for all of us.

weather suggests fall


Rainy.Dreary. Promising colder weather.Leaves finally falling. Day filled with news and ideas. Lots of things moving off the desk and into production. Need to go as its late, and more stuff needs to get resolved and done. Have been invited to a commemorative Rotary meeting about the Chris Bond Run.

Am working on detail-y pics like this with shapes blocked in. Interesting. Have done about 4 of them and figure I need to work with it to see what works and doesnt. Working on the funeral project for my luxury client. Stars of David, Crosses, urns and willows are all the vocabulary they need. Sketches due Friday.

Take aways


1. Frame as much stuff as you can afford. People will buy unframed stuff...but the appeal of "instant art" is very much in evidence.

2. Keep the stuff interesting but not tons of unique stuff (like the accordion folded pieces on death that I offered). The death stuff was good as a book and as framed stuff, but an odd format doesnt leap off the shelf.

3. As much as I was told cards don't sell...they do. Just be selective about what and the collections (6 cards, 3 designs sort of thing).

4. Merchandise like crazy. Be a display queen. Labels and tags are key.

5. Talk a lot.

6. Banana bread was successful. Candy as well (except for people who brought teenies with them who thought the world had turned upside down in the sheer joy of so much sugar).

7. You shouldnt have to sell--really sell the stuff. Make options available and step away. The attitute of we have this one or that one...but no...let me see how I can make this more perfect for you is ridiculous.

8. Hire as many teenagers pre-event as you can to do the collating and mixing and filling and bagging. They somehow think its a treat...and it reduces the torture for you as the great artist.

9. Listen to what people like, want and hate. Adjust if it feels right. I am going to work on a bumblebee based on a request. Would love to do it...so why not take the prod.

10. Continue to do the art trail as it sets a deadline, gives great exposure, and you meet people on your own turf. All round good match with the goal to "get out there".

A new blog from the suburbs of Rongovia

From the edge of Rongovia is a small village, Ithaca--that boasts a new blogger with a great idea--talking about local food, wine, restaurants with recipes and much more. The author of Finger Lakes Feasting visited Rongovia for the Art Trail and was spreading the good news. Her recipe for tomato filo pizza looks great and easy enough to do...

hmmmmmm...maybe tonight?

Check it out.

Perfect day on our plateau


The community turned out in force for the Chris Bond 5K this morning. It was a perfect day for running. Low humidity. No clouds. Brilliant trees. Very convivial and fun. A. and his friend Phil ran...and they seemed to be in the groove. This is an event I hope isn't the end, but the beginning of a string of positive Tburg fun fund raisers.

Again, here we are at ten minutes before the last day of Art Trail. More banana bread in the oven (all the bananas that were on the edge are gone...yeah!). Hopefully we will get a nice crowd today. Yesterday felt slower than the first weekend, but no time to sit down the entire day...so not that slow. I need to focus on chickens, water fowl, and domestic geese and ducks. Maybe even take them on as personal assignments to get the wheels moving. A body of work on chickens could be good.

However, the Syracuse Seminar (a one hour chat with seniors in illustration, graphic design and advertising design) awaits. I have been marinating in this to figure out the top 3 things I want to say...and I am still scrambled. Need to get R. to help me sort it out. I want to write the entire thing and then fill in the pics etc. versus where I was going which was to get a zillion images together and then figure out what to say. A bit backwards--wouldn't you say?

two hours post art trail


Banana bread is demolished. Chocolate cake on the roster for tomorrow. Sold quite a few pieces (smaller, framed) which I think the new "totally finished art" approach is what the crowd is looking for. Lots of questions about editions etc. which I haven't thought about doing. I pursued this earlier this year...and really do not want to commit to an edition considering the very fair prices I am offering. If I had more lake birds (loons, ducks, blue herons etc.)--I could sell them. Chickens, hands down, are big too. My guess pigs and cows would go to.

More Memento Mori books selling. Those who are buying really are interested in the topic and where the work is going. I don't know, and they seem good with that. They also seem good with my neurosis around the topic.

Going to the Pourhouse for dinner...and for a break as we are back on at 11 tomorrow.

Ten minutes to Art Trail


The massive sculptural banana bread has been baked and cut. The postcards collated and packaged. The Art Trail Mix stirred and packaged. Around 12 new pieces framed (man, does a frame make the difference or what?). Have sold around 8 of the Memento Mori books. Last evening, one of the buyers of the said book came by to pick it up...delighted! He is wanting to buy the whole set. Imagine. Old girl neurosis turning a profit. Or is it a prophet? More books in the future?

I decided to layout more sketchbooks as they captured the imagination of the group. I just hope no one walks with them. I am missing one...and hope it is under a pile and not under someone's coat. There are more sketches in me, it was just that that book was a good one.

A. is off running across the country. R. is back from LA with new business suits and a new slant on how they are doing things at CMoG (not too bad)..

gotta go... I hear people.

IF: Growth


Willows are used as symbols of regrowth, regeneration, continual life. These trees send out branches that grow downward to touch the ground. These branches take root and establish new trees and so on. They are a living testament to life continuing beyond the original. The old New England gravestones use the willow sometimes by itself, sometimes with urns but not in this configuration. To me, there are a wealth of images in this beautiful tree. This image is from my Memento Mori studies. For more Memento Mori images, go here>>

beautiful day

Warm here. Mid 70s. Shady Grove lost her cast, had confirming xrays and is free from more vet visits. She will just need to stay relatively quiet for the next month to let her foot entirely heal. Poor thing, I think she thought I wouldn't be back to get her. Her entire body, tail and head were wiggling and wagging just to let me know that she was delighted I showed up.

I saw a complete field filled with these elegant wild turkeys amongst the evaporating dew, misty. Long and tall...quiet and still. It was a golden snapshot. The apple trees are laden here. We really haven't gotten a hard frost---so the color is soft, apples are still hanging on and there is tons of produce (tomatoes and basil still) packing the stands nearby and on Route 79 into Ithaca.

Just made 80 packs of cards for the weekend. Also made 10 packs of Ithaca Art Trail Mix (chocolate chips, peanuts, sunflower seeds, raisins, craisins and apricots) all from wonderful goods from the Mecklenburg Mercantile. I love this store. The Mercantile is run by a pair of sister in laws who buy wonderful food things from the Regional Access and break the cases down and sell plastic bags (a la bulk) filled with all sorts of things that are high quality and really affordable. And they carry eggs from Happy Hens(organic from Interlaken), organic butter and milk. You can go into the Merchantile with $20. and leave with two big bags of great stuff. Another local jewel.

Trouble with A. and antics with highschoolers. There may be some detention or something along that line. Lesson has def been learned. Urg.

R winging his way back to us tomorrow.

Thursday Thursday


Birthday presents to buy today as K has three parties this weekend. We raided the present closet and found two of the three...but not a good fit for the third birthday recipient. I know the closet drives poor R. crazy but it is truly a savior 90% of the time with my last minute child. We will be full bore on Ithaca Art Trail. Today, the trail mix needs to happen. The postcards collated. More stuff to be framed. I hope we have a big turnout. Keeps things exciting.

Have been cutting paper like crazy and the india ink is open and in use. It was interesting last weekend to hear a german lady saying she liked the Memento Mori work as it looked like Scherenschnitte (a german art of papercutting). Another person liked the work as it looked like energized Mexican work. So, an opening party to show the work might definitely have beer, but sauerkraut and tacos might not be a fit. I have been merging the cut work with drawn images etc. Its interesting as the hand cut thing is far more random looking than cut in illustrator. Big question is how do I make the work in illustrator look as fresh has handcut? or do I handcut and then either hand draw or use the trace feature and work into it? Need to try both.

Plugging away


Three days and round two of the Ithaca Art Trail going to happen again. Things to accomplish in the next few days:

--make and package Ithaca Art Trail Mix. Make a cute label.
--make new cover/or belly band for the new Lulu offering.
--make up 75 more postcard packs (10 cards in a polka dot envelope)
--check on the holiday cards. If need to, package more.
--print and frame images to fill in the gaps missing.
--buy some choker shirts for my own giving for xmas.

Saw Alice Gant today. She was watering her rainbow of flowers, getting ready for her second weekend on the trail. She was optimistic about the experience--and interested in seeing what happens this weekend and then via phone before Christmas. Interesting. I am curious to see if there is spin from last weekend--you know, friends bringing friends, watercooler recommendations etc. If the weather is good, apparently the traffic tends to be better than on dreary grey days. We'll see.

My friend, Paula Horrigan, who is a landscape architect, artist and art bookmaker saw the new Lulu book and was effusive about it--pushing me to get it to Dia Books in NYC as she feels there is a market there for this thing. Paula buys handmade books and collects them--so she is def. the customer and will know the places that might be interested in these things. I need to do a little research around this. It is exciting to get this sort of response which was more than the positive vibes that a friend would politely effuse. I was so charged up, I worked until close to midnight on the second book--working with my images, the new cut paper frames and photoshop. Started making some little helmet skulls, and some line drawings with inked backgrounds (that will be fused in photoshop) inspired by fabric I found on the internet. Paula went further about fabrics and home furnishings that her friend reps that are embracing this imagery.

I really want to get going on embroidering one of the images. Also, I am itching to get some really thick, all wool felt to make some felted images too. Felt, blanket stitching, even some buttons. Even buttons in the mode of those English mummers that had their complete set of clothes covered in buttons. Some of the Pacific Northwest native americans also do some of this too.

171 Cedar Street is having a holiday sale starting in mid November which I think I will send cards, books and prints (framed ones left over from the Art Trail Weekends). I am flattered to be invited. It may yield some sales--and def. increase exposure down in the Corning area. I have two holiday cards and am thinking about maybe printing one more design...Maybe? Boy, I really need to pencil in some time starting in May to prep for October, November sales. This could be something to plan, design and develop.

Erich located these cool heavy duty gold frames that the Chemung River School painters use. Am psyched. They have gorpy times ten.

Revisions on the holiday cards for clients. I hope we are close.

Funerary Violin


Book to Read:

An Incomplete History of the Art of the Funerary Violin
by Rohan Kriwaczek

Reviewed at NPR (http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6202644)

"If you believe Rohan Kriwaczek, author of An Incomplete History of the Art of the Funerary Violin, funerary violin is a previously unknown musical genre that was virtually extinguished by the mid-19th century in the Great Funerary Purges, said to be ordered by the Vatican.

But as first reported in The New York Times, violin dealers, string-instrument publications and other experts say there is no evidence of the funerary violin genre, forgotten or otherwise.

Despite the questions of authenticity, the book's U.S. publisher, Overlook Press, still plans to release the book, which includes pictures of legendary funerary violin composers like Hieronymous Gratchenfleiss, musical scores and information on the Guild of Funerary Violinists."

What do you think?