Sunday, December 9, 2012

Color My Week: Red

I usually like to decorate in neutral tones with a few highlights of color in the autumnal family. Nothing too bold, beyond creating a warm and comforting environment. Then Christmas comes along and the boxes of decorations are opened and suddenly there is RED everywhere.
 

For a few weeks, I get to submerge myself in childhood Christmas memories. The good ones. And now I also get to watch my children get excited as they unwrap the ornaments and recognize their own paper wreaths or the collection of yarn ornaments from Danish relatives.


Even the silver glitter-covered shoe ornament that my daughter gave me two years ago has survived to give another season of joy.



But it's the color red that indicates that Santa is on his way and that the spirit of the season has returned to my house.


Happy Holidays!!

Saturday, October 13, 2012

Color My Weekend: Gray

"Gray day. Everything is gray. I watch, but nothing moves today." (Dr. Seuss' My Many Colored Days)

Every autumn brings a delicious new set of hues. As much as I love the almost-too-bright sun fawning all over the trees, I really truly love a gray fall day. The dark gray clouds make every rich color deepen or even disappear into the foggy mist.

Gray is technically not a color. It sits somewhere between black and white. Black and white photography relies on the grayscale to convey its art.



That's how photography began. A magical world drained of color, but boldly reducing emotion to somewhere between black and white. The visual equivalent of Shakespeare's moral excuse "Tis nothing good or bad, but thinking makes it so." (Hamlet)


Tis nothing black or white, only shades of gray.

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Color My Weekend: Brown

As a color, brown gets a bum rap. Brown does not make us catch our breath. It's a word to describe a dull, vague earth-tone that makes all of the other colors stand out, like grass and flowers and this man and woman:


Ginevra de' Benci by Leonardo Da Vinci
Self-Portait by Rembrandt van Rijn















Nothing vibrant and inspiring about brown, right? No family of brown paints at Sherwin Williams.  No child says "Brown is my favorite color." That would show lack of enthusiasm for the color wheel and require psychological evaluation. And brown's half-sister, beige has an even worse reputation.

But since winter is coming, I have been thinking about brown and how much I do like it.

Here are just some of the brown things that I like.


Coffee with just the right amount of milk.
Chocolate: creamy or dark or hot
Toast before butter
The leaves after the fall when the cold weather comes.
The "mud-luscious" world in springtime
Polished wooden floors to dance upon
Picture frames that hold the people I love
My first car
My current car
The toy box
The bookcase
Scotch

Have a great weekend!




Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Go here! Touch that!

Number 11, 2003
by Dorothy Ruddick

I have spent much of my cultural education wandering past/sitting before/staring at art, respecting its creators and the heartache and elation that went into each work. And always paying close attention to this rule: Do not touch.

I recently forced a roadtrip on a very hot day to Grounds For Sculpture in Hamilton, NJ, where I happily touched art. I touched a lot of it. I touched everything that had a green sign that said "You may touch this sculpture with care."

A lifetime of supressed impulse washed away as I moved from abstract metal boxes, to worn away Greek muses, to paintings brought to life ( the very fun Seward Johnson's Were you invited?  based on Renoir's masterpiece The Boating Party), to a frightening King Lear, shown below (Johnson again).



A special meadow exhibit of Steve Tobin's work let me wander through metal plant roots that swirled two stories up and swooped back down again. Some were dancing duos and some cast shadows that danced. I touched them all.



It was magical for a person who follows the rules and is never comfortable, even when the piece asks you to add yarn to the spiderweb or write on the wall.

Plus peacocks wander the front grounds and you are asked not to chase them. This one stood next to me, this close, for 10 minutes preening. I felt we had something special.



So, go visit if you can. It was the most fun I've had in a while.

Sunday, May 27, 2012

A Rose Is A Rose No More

Yesterday afternoon I took this picture between rainstorms:




Today, that rose does not exist. The storms scattered its petals and tore its stem.

I almost didn't grab my camera. I started to say that I was tired. I tried to ignore the pale pink against the rusting blue metal.

I have learned to recognize this impulse in myself to take the easy path and ignore the spark to take the picture, write the blog, carpe the diem. The choice of inaction is silly and lazy. I am neither silly nor lazy.

And I will no longer hesitate.


Monday, April 30, 2012

Photographs: The Good, the Bad, the Blindingly Difficult

Recently, I've been photographing items for a school auction. Pillows, paintings, collectibles, etc. There has been a wide variety.  I have limited time, so I have to see the essence of the object immediately and make it as commercially attractive as possible. No flash bouncing off the metal, true colors, etc.

Most of it isn't that difficult.  It's the multi-media art extravaganza's that are tough.



And the 3D fanny pack sets.



But I really like photographing the dolls.



Friday, April 20, 2012

Color my Weekend: I Just Don't Know What To Say



Yes, it is spring and, once again, the weather changes nature's color palette, filling the trees and gardens with pinks, purples, and yellows. It makes the poet inside me ask, "What shall I call the subtle pale green of the buds that stretch away from the branches that bore them?"

No accurate words come to mind. Let's make one up. How about verdino, meaning little green?

I love that we can make up words where we need them. Check out Merriam Webster for 10 examples of words people created or borrowed to describe color where the primary word was not enough.

And if you bring those colors indoors, Real Simple will tell you what the paint on your walls says about you.  My walls are a creamy neutral, but I try decorate with colorful objects.

I even see a bit of verdino over there.






Monday, April 16, 2012

A House With an Edge

The contemporary architecture Muse is trying to lure me into her bony grasp.
I recently visited a friend's newly purchased Charles Goodman-designed house in Silver Spring. Tucked into the trees, the bungalow style home actively rejected the colonial passions of the DMV area. So sweet. So manageable. So much a part of the other group of his houses on this street and yet with  enough details to escape a cookie-cutter label.

But here's where it gets dicey. Inside, they had gutted the whole house and turned it into an updated space with lots of angles and bursts of color. The hidden doors pulled me in, past my own instincts. I liked to look at it. I really thought it was stunning, but, in truth, I could not imagine living with all of those clean lines and sharp edges.

I'm trying. Really I am. I'm keeping an open mind.

And maybe a bottle of scotch nearby. That usually takes the edge off.

Monday, April 2, 2012

The Bright and Shiny Things

Every day, I walk past a building, a face, a moment on my way to my next responsibility.
Every day, there is an opportunity to see, to question, and to breathe deeply.
Every day, there is possibility beyond the practical.

Everywhere: pictures inside of pictures and words beside words
and laughter floating above a coffee cup.