From Linda Lee Greene Author/Artist
Outside
the kitchen window of our home on Long Island, New York, it was a cold and
windswept November morning of 1970. Thanksgiving Day was approaching and I
missed my family back in Ohio sorely. Oh, how I wished I could be with them;
but it wasn’t to be. I needed a distraction and decided the best way to
accomplish it was to lose myself in a painting. I gathered fall deco items I had
placed around the house and set them up on my kitchen table in a composition I
deemed worthy of a still life. A sheet of watercolor paper taped to my board,
and with my simple little pads of watercolor paints, a couple of brushes, and a
stick of charcoal to rough in the initial shapes, I got to work.
The charcoal shapes came together easily.
As is typical of the way I tackle most jobs, I touched my paint-loaded brush to
the item on the paper that I thought would be the most difficult to render—which
was the stem of the pumpkin. My first attempt was a total bust, as was my second
and my third. By then, my heart was galloping in my chest with utter fury at
myself. I pushed away from the table and paced the floor—across the length of
the kitchen, into the hallway, into the living room, and back again and again…pace,
pace, pace…and then a voice sounded ‘round my ears. “Empty your mind of what you
‘think’ a pumpkin stem looks like and paint only what you actually see!” I had
heard the instruction from my teacher in a painting class I had taken years before,
but obviously it had failed to register in my brain. I returned to the table,
emptied my mind, and painted only what I saw with my eyes. Wallah! In no time
at all, the still life painted in a primitive style I had hoped to execute
appeared with what seemed very little further effort on my part. It was almost
like magic.
I learned a big lesson that day, not
only related to the art of painting, but also to the art of living. Our preconceived
notions (opinions, prejudices, attitudes, and so many other absolute doctrines
we hold in mind) blind us to the truth of things.
With my humble painting titled,
CORNUCOPIA, I wish all of you an open-minded, a clear-eyed, and a very happy
holiday season.©
***
Multi-award-winning author, Linda Lee
Greene’s GARDEN OF THE SPIRITS OF THE POTS: A Spiritual Odyssey, is a novella
in which ex-pat American Nicholas Plato relocates to Sydney, Australia to
escape the mental torture of devastating losses. Strange encounters in
Australia’s outback with an indigenous potter reveal to Nicholas unexpected
blessings and a new way of living. It is available in eBook and/or paperback.
Just click the following blue link and it will take you straight to the page on
Amazon on which you can purchase the book. https://www.amazon.com/GARDEN-SPIRITS-POTS-SPIRITUAL-ODYSSEY-ebook/dp/B09JM7YL6F/
www.gallery-llgreene.com - Online Art Gallery
http://Ingoodcompanyohio.blogspot.com - Blog URL
https://twitter.com/LLGreeneAuthor - Twitter URL https://www.amazon.com/author/lindaleegreene
- Amazon Author’s Page
#LongIsland,
#NewYork, #Ohio, #Thanksgiving, #WatercolorPaintings, #CORNUCOPIA,
#HolidaySeason, #GardenoftheSpiritsofthePots, #SydneyAustralia,
#OutbackAdventures, #LindaLeeGreeneAuthorArtist,
Happy Thanksgiving, Linda from WNY to ENY.
ReplyDeleteEmma J
Thank you, Emma. I miss New York and New Yorkers. I was fortunate to live in areas of Queens and Long Island several decades ago for a period of 10 or more years, but New York and its people still occupy a snug place in my heart. Thank you for responding.
DeleteHappy Thanksgiving, Linda!
ReplyDeleteMarina
Thank you so so much, Marina. xoxo
DeleteLovely post.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much, Pamela. I hope your Thanksgiving was a grand ome.
DeleteLovely post and painting.
ReplyDeleteThank you very much, Catherine. I hope your holiday was a good one.
Delete