Encaustic Work

Untitled Encaustic Painting, copyright Joan Z. Rough 2011

Home again and almost caught up with all that I’ve been ignoring since I left. Unfortunately we’ve had no rain for well over a week and the garden is calling for lots of attention.  I’ve chosen drought tolerant plants for the most part and that does make things a bit easier.  I’m having a rain barrel installed next week so that should make it even better.  That is if we ever get more rain.

I promised some of you that I’d post photos of the encaustic work I did over Memorial Day weekend at the workshop I attended at BookWorks in Asheville, North Carolina.  It was a fantastic  weekend and I’ve found myself very excited by the technique and the possibilities it holds.  I’m planning on getting to work with lots of experiments in the days to come once I finally gather the equipment and materials I need.

Encaustic is an ancient technique using beeswax melted and mixed with Damar Resin to create the medium or paint.  Dry pigments or oil paint is then added to create the colors one desires and the paint is then applied to an absorbent ground, such as wood, cloth or paper.  The wax mixture is allowed to harden slightly and is then fused to the ground material using a heat gun, iron or blow torch.  More layers of paint can be applied as well as found objects, like paper, shells and trinkets of all kinds.  For me it is all about layering, texture, collaging …. almost what ever I want to do.

The piece pictured above was my first and started with a layer of red medium, over which I applied a number of layers of differing colors including white, blue, green and yellow. Once the paint had hardened I began scraping it away revealing bits of the colors that had been applied before the final coat.  I spotted a blob of wax at on the table where the wax had dripped as I had applied it to the board.  I pulled it up off the table, fused it in the center of the scraped painting and there, above is the final result.

The next piece is actually a spontaneous collaboration between by myself and my wonderful teacher Celia Gray.  She had been layering colors on a board inspired by the work of another artist as shown in a book on encaustics that I had brought along.   Near the end of the class on the final day another student in the class needed an extra piece of wood to work on.  Celia softened the wax on the board she’d been using with a blow torch, called me over and suggested I start using the layers she was about to scrape away to making the board available for the other student.  As she scraped, the warm medium came away in thick, rippled ribbons of color which I picked up and began applying to a board I’d just started with a layer of white paint.  I pressed them down on to the board and then curled the remaining ribbons into rolls and placed them down the center of the piece.  The result is pictured below.

My next experiments will be with collage.  I’ll keep you posted as I go along!

Close-up of untitled encaustic, a collaboration with Celia Gray, May, 2011

Opening Up To Life …

Angel in Florence, Italy, Polaroid Transfer on Water Color Paper, Copyright, Joan Z. Rough, 1998

When you open yourself to the continually changing, impermanent, dying nature of your own being and of reality, you increase your capacity to love and care about other people and your capacity to not be afraid. You’re able to keep your eyes open, your heart open, and your mind open. And you notice when you get caught up in prejudice, bias, and aggression. You develop an enthusiasm for no longer watering those negative seeds, from now until the day you die. And you begin to think of your life as offering endless opportunities to start doing things differently.

Pema Chodron

On Days Like Today …

Water Reflection #1, copyright Joan Z. Rough, 1983

On days like today when I feel sad or mad about what’s happening in the world, I try to be grateful for all of the blessings that surround me.  Sometimes I go back into my life files and pull out something that makes me smile to share with others.

An Apple A Day

Yesterday I watched an angel                                                                                                             Flutter through the supermarket                                                                                                     She lingered over the produce                                                                                                         Sampled carrots and grapes                                                                                                             Polished apples until they reflected                                                                                                 Stars and a tipsy moon                                                                                                                       Hanging over tasselled fields of corn                                                                                               I bought the apples   ate one at lunchtime

I saw her this morning standing                                                                                                       At the side of the road                                                                                                                       Tangled wings trailing behind her                                                                                                     I stopped to ask if she needed a lift                                                                                                 She shook her head    pointed                                                                                                           Toward the light plating the river                                                                                                   Red and orange banks of cloud                                                                                                       A dragonfly wrapped in sticky threads                                                                                           I went home    ate another apple

The moon filled my room with laughter                                                                                         As I climbed into bed                                                                                                                         The angel came to my window                                                                                                         Burnished the glass with her feathers                                                                                             Until it melted away

JZR, 1992

Alice In Wonderland

A few weeks ago I tumbled down a rabbit hole and found myself on the streets of New York City! I went by train accompanied by my sweet man and one terrible cold that wouldn’t seem to make up its mind as to where to land … in my head or in my chest.  I had spent 2 days prior to leaving considering whether or not I should go, having relapsed into a cold I thought I was over a few weeks beforehand.  But armed with my Doc’s blessing and some chinese herbs I decided to give it a whirl. The train was paid for along with tickets to 3 broadway shows.

By the time we arrived in the city, my symptoms were worse and I was regretting my decision.  But once we checked into our hotel and took a walk in nearby Bryant Park I was feeling so much better.  It was a beautiful 70 degree afternoon, laughing children rode painted ponies on the carousel, pink tulips were in full bloom and a street drummer around the corner on 5th played to a crowd of onlookers, each of us moving in our own ways to his magical beat.  Here I was in the Big Apple in all of its busy glory and it was difficult not to get swept up in its seductive splendor.  We decided to stay in that first night to give me some healing time.  Usually we’d be out looking for a good film that presumably might never make it to Charlottesville, but that night my tired body gave up and shut down at 9:30.

I have not always loved New York.  Until I graduated from high school on Long Island, I adored it.  It was where my dad took us Christmas shopping every December, where I first went to the circus and where there seemed to be so many adventures afoot.  In my senior year my parents actually allowed me to take the train into the city all by myself to meet a friend.  I got dressed up in my finest and met her under the clock in Grand Central Station.  From there we walked up 5th Avenue, ate lunch in a swanky cafe, shopping as we went along.  I bought a pair of shoes my father deemed a waste of money.  But I was thrilled with them and the opportunity to play at being a grown woman for a day in what I thought was the most amazing city in the world.

After graduating from high school I immediately moved to Vermont where I went to college.  I got married the weekend after my college graduation and then lived in Vermont for the next 18 or so years.  I didn’t make it back to the Big Apple much but when I did, I felt it was a crushing experience.  If you’ve ever lived in the rural north you’ll know what I mean. New York equals too many people, too much frenetic energy.  Not something I was used to by that time.  I have difficulty with crowds and the population of New York does nothing but grow. However, my fondness for The City That Never Sleeps is returning.  Even not feeling 100% well I loved every minute this last trip.

The day after we arrived I was still feeling under the weather, but we walked up 5th Avenue to the Plaza Hotel where an outdoor exhibit by Ai Weiwei, was in place.  He is the Chinese artist recently detained by the Chinese government and has only this past week been allowed to see his wife.  The Chinese authorities are once again at work silencing dissidents who speak their truths and Weiwei has been very active on that front.  Works by Weiwei are being exhibited in a number of venues around the world at the moment and his arrest has done nothing but make the Chinese government’s actions more obvious and his work more popular.  There is nothing controversial about the work we saw.  The pieces are simply bronze sculptures of characters in the Chinese Zodiac, beautifully executed.

Besides seeing two movies and three astounding plays we skipped the usual gallery routine and played first time in New York tourists.  The weather was spectacular so getting me inside for lengthy periods of time was difficult.  We went to the Central Park Zoo, the Top of the Rock and the wonderful farmers Market at Union Square.

The last day we were there was the most rewarding for me. We had gone to see the matinée performance of Jerusalem, a play that was definitely not my cup of tea.  (Look on my husband’s blog at View in the Dark to read his critical responses to all of the shows we saw and the movies, too. )  I was very disturbed by the play and needed to just sit and talk.  We stopped to have dinner at a restaurant on 45th St. between Broadway and 6th Avenue, across from a fairly new boutique hotel.  We were seated in a large window looking out on the street and the hotel entryway.

While we were leisurely discussing and enjoying well prepared steaks and accoutrements, I noticed an older woman going through large garbage bags near the hotel entrance.  She was dressed in simple but immaculately clean clothing and did not look like your average homeless woman.  She had no bags full of belongings with her and no vessel for collecting money. She and the maintenance man who was bringing out more garbage bags, seemed to be acquainted.

Being a shy type and very much an introvert, it’s difficult for me to go about striking up a conversation with just anyone on the streets of New York, especially a homeless woman who might very well not appreciate my approaching her and who might be … you know, crazy or something. Talking to homeless people can be a problem among the Haves of our country.  It almost seems as though we believe that simply making a connection with them will somehow make the needy person’s situation contagious and we’ll instantly become Have-nots. We can’t face the possibility that we may someday be in the same situation.

As I sat there enjoying my evening meal, I watched as numerous people passed by this aging woman on their way over to Broadway, without giving her a glance.  I decided that I needed to acknowledge her, to let her know that she was part of this glorious world we live in, even as she suffered.

After we finished our dinner I crossed the street and started talking with her.  I noticed she was not collecting scraps of food but empty soda bottles and cans for their refund value of 5 cents apiece and that the maintenance man was handing her the most promising bags of trash.  I told her my name and started asking her questions.  She stopped her work, smiled at me, introducing herself as Alice and that she sometimes liked to call herself Alice in Wonderland.  Looking to be near my age but tad older, she told me that she was a retired nurse and had grown up in an orphanage in Austria.  She said that she was going through tough times, but she knew she’d get back on top soon.  She thanked me and seemed very grateful for my stopping to speak to her.  I gave her a hug and a few dollars and she asked where she might find me so she could repay me one day.  I told her that it wasn’t necessary and that I’d always be thinking of her.  I’ve kept my promise.  A day doesn’t go by that I don’t see her on the busy streets of New York collecting bottles and cans so that she can get through her days and back on top.

I don’t expect an award for doing what I did, but I do acknowledge that my stopping to chat with her was something new for me. My courage is growing.  Alice is someone with a message for the rest of us who enjoy our lives filled far too many things.  Alice is no drug addict or crazy person.  She is a proud, hard-working woman with needs, living in a society that too often passes her by, not recognizing her presence, not willing to help.

The Garden

This spring blogging and a whole lot of other stuff has been put on the back burner for the garden and a wee bit of travel.  Once the days warm and the landscape begins to green, the plants call to me like sirens, beckoning me to get my hands in the dirt and to prepare the way for them.  I recently read an article in an herbal magazine that said that gardening is a solitary occupation.  I find it to be just the opposite.  Plants do speak.  Not in the way you and I might converse.  There are no words in the garden, only feelings … an intuitive quality that when one stops to listen and look, gives direction as to where plants would like to placed.

It’s been a year since we moved to this new old house and the garden when we bought the place was stark.  The photo below is what it looked like in April a year ago. The former owners planted a few trees and lots of boxwood and called it done.  I saw the potential for what it could look like in my mind’s eye and had to wait for almost a year to pass before I could bring about a transformation.   I’ve been having a blast!!   For me gardening is like prayer.  It’s about the only time you’ll find me on my knees, asking some higher power to tell me where to place the plants I collect. It is very much like painting with the earth being my canvas and the plants the pigments that I use to color the canvas.

About four weeks ago I began the piece.  It started with a friend giving me some purple coneflowers that she was thinning out of her own garden.  I promptly started visiting nurseries and garden centers looking for just the right plants to accompany them.  As I walked down rows and rows of potted perennials I listened and looked, waiting for the nudge that told me that certain plants would like to come home with me.  Having waited a year to begin, I knew how and where the sun would strike the canvas and that for the small beds in the back of the house  I would need plants that could take full sun and/or part shade.  I wandered back and forth picking those that called to me.  I loaded them into the back of my Prius, never putting the back seat down to make room for more and brought them home.  I spent several hours placing them around the beds until I had a notion that this particular spot was where a certain plant would like to be.  I started with two kinds of hybrid goldenrod,  yarrow in yellow and red, placing them around the river birch.  I had an image in my mind of how it would look in the late summer and early fall,  the yellows setting off the birch in the center.  At first I didn’t plant a thing.  I went back to the nurseries 3 or 4 days in a row, each time filling the back of my car with more plants that seemed to shout out to me.  After placing the new arrivals about the garden, I started planting and began to see what was happening.  I’d move one plant over there and back again until it was just right and there seemed to be no complaining.

Plants around the River Birch include goldenrod, yarrow and a variety of herbs.

And so it happened.  I ‘ve spent the last weeks on this project with only a brief time out for a trip to New York City. I made many more trips to garden centers, chose other plants and have now called it quits to just let it be. I’m sure I’ll be called again as new plants catch my eye.  For now I’m getting vegetables into the ground with three different kinds of heirloom tomatoes … orange, red and yellow bell peppers … two different kinds of eggplant.  We’ve been eating spinach and lettuce I’ve grown.  Beets and swiss chard are on the way along with carrots.

More photos as the season progresses!