Friday, July 20, 2012

Random Randomness






Thoughts while waiting for the heat to break:

I'm thinking this is one Long Art Summer.  I've been to two art openings (because I'm in them), and I have a Paint Out and Auction for this weekend in Cape Elizabeth, and another in New Hope, Pennsylvania two days after that.  All the while I'm trying to work up some paintings for two more openings in August.  If frenetic activity was considered a sign of success, I'd be famous.  But, alas...


Never in my life have I ever got poison ivy.  I used to boast that I could roll naked in that stuff, and I still wouldn't get it.  No, I didn't roll naked, but my shins and ankles have some lovely, blistered splotches of the stuff that itches like mad.  I must have set my easel up right in the middle of a patch while I was painting the piece below.  Jeez, I'm wicked smaht!





I'm gonna need an ocean of Calamine lotion...


Another thought about poison ivy:  Since I have no previous experience with the stuff, I thought all I had were itchy bug-bites (I've had plenty of those in my life)  so I scratched and scratched with abandon!  Lesson learned...


The other day on the great art blog Underpaintings by Matthew Innes, (I look forward to that blog everyday) Matthew posted a photo of Daniel Greene's palette, with all the colors he uses laid out.  He even gave out detailed instructions on how to mix the individual strings of color.  Tell you what:  Give me that palette, and throw in Mr. Greene's brushes to boot, and I still could never paint as well as he.  It's like saying "If I had Michelangelo's stone carving set, I'd make the Pieta!"  It's the carpenter, not the tools...




My studio gets awful hot in the Summer.  I only have windows on one side, so, I get no air circulation, which leaves it rather muggy inside.  I have A/C, but it cools the place off to about 80 degrees.  The wasps love it!  They get in and dive-bomb my head non-stop all day long.  I've yet to be stung, but it becomes rather disconcerting; Imagine trying to paint while keeping one eye on some hideous, loathsome insect as it comes in for a landing on your nose.  It almost makes me yearn for Winter-- when the studio can get down to zero degrees to start the day.  But hey-- no bugs!...



I've been painting out of doors alot this year.  Mostly to warm-up for the plein air events I've mentioned above.  But, damn-- all that green!  I used to mix my greens with a yellow and a couple different blues.   I thought that buying pre-mixed greens was "cheating".  I've gotten over that.  I now will haul out Sap green, Azo green, Veridian, Light Green-- you name it, if there's green on the label, I want it!  I just finished this little piece in the studio to take a break from all that green:





I'm trying to grow an elm tree to plant next to my studio.  I love elm's.  Once upon a time in the 19th Century, they lined all those Elm Streets that now have nothing but light posts to cast shade.  Dutch Elm Disease wiped out millions of those majestic trees in the 1960's.  I obtained some seeds from disease resistant elms a couple of years ago and watched daily to see if they would take.  We got some sprouts, but then-- nothing.  I had one twig grow to about two inches, but then it died.  I tried to revive it by moving into different sunny spots around the house, but after six weeks of twigdom, I gave up and put the pot it was in out in the mud room and forgot about it.  Three months later it sprouted again!  It grew leaves and about another inch in height for six weeks, or so.  Then, Winter came.  This Spring, I thought it would take off where it left off.  No.  Even though we had an early Spring and everything else that uses Photosynthesis thrived, my elm just sat there-- a three inch twig.  Once again, I gave up on it.  My dog Champ even knocked it over, spilling it and its soil all over the ground.  I just scooped it up and set it back outside.

Wonders never cease.  It took off shortly after that and is now over a foot in height, with branches sprouting out every which way!  My daughter calls it the "Jesus Tree".  Now, will I live long enough to see it cast shade on my studio roof?  Probably not, but I do hope that one day someone will lie under its branches and thank me.


Someday, little guy.  Someday...




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6 comments:

SamArtDog said...

Glad to hear you're so busy. Sorry to be stuck out here in the hellish hinterlands. May you and your supporting cast of hundreds tear it up out at Breakwater, but for Pete's sake, stay out of the puckah brush!

Tell Elmer J. Tree that I'm wicked proud of him. In my experience, plants who survive abuse grow the best. Give him another couple or three years, and he'll become a real shady character. Btw, you gonna let Champ pee on him?

Kevin Mizner said...

As usual, with the Cape paint out, I'm torn between two emotions: Dread that I'll suck horribly, and Nausea that I'll stink. BTW, Champ only pee's on my leg.

Charlie Gray said...

Hey Mizner blog readers , saw that Harbor Morn painting in the early stages. Right fine painting Kevin. Charlie Gray

Susan Roux said...

Hi Kevin. I can just picture you. Scratch the ankle, swipe the bee off the nose. I hear some people learned to dance like this. Soon you'll be cutting a rug! Add a little yee haw music and you're good to go.

Keep on keeping busy. It looks good in your work.

Kevin Mizner said...

Thank you, Charlie-- and thanks for the visit!

Kevin Mizner said...

Susan-- Those dance steps would be perfect for Luka Bloom music!