BLOG

Keep up with the latest art and adventures from Rene Shoemaker Art!

Discovering Birds

Last spring, I spent a few days with Linda in Highlands, NC, where it was fun to see how fascinated she and her husband were with the Dark-eyed Juncos that had built a nest on their back porch. I had never heard of that type of bird before and thought it was an intriguing name, and I also watched mama Dark-eyed Junco feed the baby Dark-eyed Juncos. The birds were not afraid of us while we sat on the porch, and they went about their business quite confidently.

When I returned home from that visit, I wanted to thank my friends for their hospitality in putting me up for the weekend. I had been especially busy that spring with 3 solo exhibitions, and being at their house was a well-needed retreat.

In between working on other projects, I began looking up photographs and descriptions of the Dark-eyed Juncos and found them to be just as cute in the photographs as they had been on the porch. In Linda’s kitchen, I had noticed a deep green ceramic rooster tile, and I used that as a jumping off point as a design inspiration for a gift for her. I started making 5”x5” birds and discovered that at that size, the bird needed to be an easy-to-read design. I knew that deep red was Linda’s favorite color, so after many tests of the color red, and trying different size birds within the 5”x5” parameters, and simplifying the drawing of the bird while trying to keep it recognizable as a Dark-eyed Junco, this is what I came up with and presented to Linda this spring:

 

As a result of this project, I began noticing more the birds around me - the ones that come to the bird feeder, the ones in the woods, and the ones in town. I started paying attention to their songs and their daily activities. About that time, I needed to borrow some of my architectural silk paintings from Krista G. for a new exhibit. While talking to her, Krista introduced me to some excellent bird web sites, including All About Birds and she told me how she had been recognized as ‘the person reporting sighting the most species of birds in Georgia’ this past year for a total of 322 bird species! I had a lot to learn from her -  see an article about her experiences in Georgia Magazine

I looked at the websites, took down the bird identification books from my bookshelves, and started experimenting and drawing other birds than Juncos - paying attention to the shapes, the feathers, the heads, and the different beaks that make each bird unique.

I found that this testing of a new idea, working on simplifying a design, and  choosing pleasing colors all brought much pleasure and fun to my studio work. I imagined the most brightly contasting color combinations, looked at opposites on the color wheel, and tried to think of colors that would create designs that would seem to pop off the silk and attract people’s attention to my artwork, and hopefully, make them happy, too. 

After all this background work and with all these bird inspirations, I got busy and painted 10 birds-on-silk. They will be hanging in Jittery Joe’s 5 Points coffeeshop and can be seen there. Here is a sample of what I came up with:



I also found it fascinating to learn about the nesting hawk outside the office of the President of New York University that is being watched on a webcam by people all over the world! The hawks hatched their baby birds on May 5, but you can still see some activity in the nest.

I feel so lucky that I can watch wildlife, including birds, so easily where I live. We have our own set of Phoebes that have been nesting every summer with us for 30 years. But really, for all of us, birds are so prevalent that all we need to do, wherever we are, is open up our eyes and ears and pay attention to them to take delight in what they offer us.

I can see these new painted silk birds sharing their lives in bedrooms, living rooms, on the walls, or displayed as pillows - what do you think? Do you have any ideas to share about the bird designs that I have not thought of?

Hope you enjoy watching your own birds this week!

Customer Profile - Nancy Aten, Landscapes Of Place, LLC

Today, I am honored to introduce Nancy Aten. She is a landscape architect, an artist, and an alumna of the College of Environment & Design at the University of Georgia. She was kind enough to share a little bit of information about herself, her lifestyle, and how she incorporates my artwork into her environment. 

I was impressed by Nancy the very first time I met her. She arrived early at the library where I worked at the College of Environment & Design, University of Georgia, asking to see the faculty publications file of articles and books by professors in our college. She was the first potential graduate student that I had seen - in 15 years! - to do research on the professors of our department before classes began. I knew right then that she was serious about her work and focused on her goals. 

Once classes began, Nancy continued to impress. She was a mover and a shaker! If something worked for her, she embraced it fully, and if it wasn’t - if she didn’t feel challenged enough - she would politely but effectively communicate with her fellow students, with the director, and with the Dean to see if any changes could be made. She clearly had results in mind - and she got them! Nancy now has her own business, Landscapes of Place, LLC, which focuses on landscape restoration planning and design. She is a printmaker, too - Check out her photography and prints and words on the Landscapes of Place Blog.

Nancy has been a Shoemaker collector from the very beginning! She was there for my first gallery solo exhibit, ethereal spaces. I have been greatly appreciative of her support throughout the years, and I loved having the opportunity to ask her a few questions about what aspects of my art attracted her attention, and what my works mean to her now. Enjoy!

……………………………………………

Nancy - tell us a little about you - what your background is, what you are passionate about, and what you are doing these days.

  • It’s hard for me to discuss broadly, so let me tell you what my life looks like right now. At the moment, I am sipping coffee from our local roasting company - it’s made with a bit of cocoa from Ghana.  Yesterday evening in the warm spring weather I spent a few hours in my wild garden, weeding a bit, transplanting a bit, photographing a bit.  During the afternoon I worked pro bono on a visual map for a small nonprofit that is trying to save a monarch migratory habitat here in town - it’s one of the last natural vistas. I know that I could help with visually communicating what’s needed, and was happy to get involved.  I sometimes find it hard to reconcile the current me with the Silicon Valley me of my twenties and thirties. It’s easier to relate to the ten-year-old me running around the wild yard where I grew up - climbing trees and hosting impromptu outdoor tea parties for my mother made from bark, pebbles, and leaves.

 Tell me about your lifestyle. Are you an indoor or outdoor person?

  • I love softly rainy gray days, when I love to sit on the stoop just under the roof and sip coffee or beer, depending on when.  So, that is both indoors and outdoors!  Others have said that the kind of outdoors you experienced as a child sticks with you… if you grew up in forested mountains, you still like that; if you grew up on open plains, you like that.  For me, it is the woods.  I had to work a bit to acquire a love for prairies!  I am always happiest and never grumpy in the field, and, these days, have come to love being in swamps and wetlands with hip waders on, working physically on habitat restoration.  I could also spend days on end inside musty library archives or in museums.  Or curled up reading.  When I was young, the library limited you to checking out ten books every two weeks (imagine that, too many people checking out books), and I used to get impatient once I’d finished my allotment.

 What is it that first attracted you to my artwork? 

  • That it is all about places, and love for places.  I could not stop wandering around your Ethereal Spaces, hung in a warmly textured and aged second floor gallery, to be this beautiful story you told about your home in the woods.  I didn’t want to leave.  I kept moving through it.  And now that memory is tightly intertwined with ones of you making lunch for me at that lovely table at your home, tempeh sandwiches and mocha, and conversations with your family.  

 What is it about each piece that you bought that spoke to you?

  • The color selection… I learned to honor and refine my love of gray from you, and this came hand-in-hand with understanding the beauty of pure clarity of color at the right moment.  The unexpected perspective of a place that reminds me to see complexity.  The pleasure of the graphic.  

What is your favorite use for my artwork? 

  • I like hanging the large pieces (in front of a window; from the ceiling cove against the limestone of the wall next to the fireplace).  I like seeing the two from Ethereal Spaces hanging together.  I love wearing your art, and do so frequently… over a suit jacket, on my shoulders, the smaller ones around my head.

 

What is your own personal art or craft? Tell us about that, and where your inspiration comes from?

  • Planting, thinking of patterns.  Watercolor sketches in the field (learned from Darrel Morrison and Sarah Pattison - both in Athens, Ga.).  Monotype printmaking, which is an infrequent opportunity due to needing to borrow a press… which makes it also feel like a rare gift.  I like watercolors because of the magic of colloidal suspension (as Sarah showed me), and I like monotypes because of the magic of lifting the print each time.  It is the physical processes of working in each of these that bring the pleasure.

Tell us about your hometown.

  • Milwaukee is at the intersection of the tension zone, the south and the north, the forests and the plains, the balance of rainfall and evapotranspiration, the subcontinental divide between the Mississippi and the Great Lakes, the middle of the old frontier.  A place whose memorable people include a founding scientist and botanist, a socialist mayor, a progressive historian, and whose human history is as complicated and unsatisfying as anywhere.  It is graduating young architects and urban planners, some of who said to me last week that they want to figure out how to protect the lovely quirks that we have in the city, and allow them to still happen, as they work.

Tell us about your blog - what inspired you to begin writing a blog?   

  • This is funny, because I just heard an interview on the radio at Fresh Air with author Gary Shteyngart, where he talked about living in a culture of self-expression… where nobody wants to read, but everybody wants to be a writer, whether it’s publishing, a blog, social media, whatever. (I missed part of of this, but at one point it seemed he was talking about a publisher who requires that anyone who submits a manuscript for review must also submit a receipt for a book that they purchased recently, to help prove they’ve actually read something - a great idea!). The blog is self-indulgent, and I don’t need anyone to read it, but it satisfies me to record thoughts I want to remember, to help keep making me into the person I want to be.  However, I love reading a few other people’s blogs… there are gifted storytellers who enrich my life that I wouldn’t otherwise have a chance to know.

What are your plans for the future?

  • Having friends over for an impromptu al fresco supper very soon… the ferns are unfurling.  Working where I’m wanted and can help.  Making unsolicited design proposals!

………………………………………………………………..………………………………………………………………..

Nancy M. Aten, ASLA

Landscapes of Place, LLC

Milwaukee, WI

nancyaten@landscapesofplace.com 

www.landscapesofplace.com

Dreaming of Travel

Today I got out one of my sketchbooks for inspiration - and to dream of traveling again.

What you see in this sketch is a scene in Ceret, France, a town where Henri Matisse visited, and Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque lived. I didn’t even realize it at the time, but the coffeeshop that I was sitting in was the same one that many of the artists visited while they were living there! I looked around while sipping my cup of espresso, and I found inspiration in the french door latch, on the window next to my table:

The weather in Georgia is a little cool today, with a quiet breeze, also reminding me of the clear crisp days in Ceret. The light there was that fantastically clear Mediterranean light that you may have heard tell of.

I hope that you dream of things you love today, too.

Shopping as Museum Experience

This week, I’ve been thinking about what a fun experience shopping can be. Whether I’m browsing, picking up necessities, searching for gifts, or treating myself, I’m always looking for inspiration. Some stores are so full of good design that going in is almost like visiting a museum! I also find it interesting to see what each shop’s “look” is, whether it is an online or brick-and-mortar store - what their aesthetic is and how they communicate it through their selection of products, signage, layout, and so on. 

For example, two of my favorite stores, UniQlo http://www.uniqlo.com/us/ and Muji http://www.muji.us/store/, 
are not in my hometown (I’ve only seen them in big cities) and haven’t had much of an online presence until recently…. making it extra special to visit in person. Both focus on clean, useful designs, and their products are presented - in packaging, store displays, and layout - in a very no-frills, minimal way. This is especially true of Muji - they design everything using a Japanese unit called “sunn” which means “thumb” - so everything is designed, usefully, by the thumb unit! So cool! That way, everything they design for, say, a briefcase or a carry-on travel bag, fits together so nicely - the soap container fits in the toiletry bag, the toiletry bag fits into the suitcase, the suitcase fits on the shelf in your bedroom, etc… I always keep a couple of their catalogs on my design book shelf! Recently a book has come out on the Muji experience - I can’t wait to check it out. You can read more about it on their website: http://www.muji.us/store/muji-book.html

In my hometown of Athens, Ga., Helix is a great store to wander into and spend a bit of time in. They support local craftspeople, they have a good collection of items, and their design sense is lively. It’s fun to go in there on a regular basis to see what new items they have located and made available to us. 

But for online shopping and browsing, Etsy rules. If you don’t know about Etsy you must learn about it RIGHT NOW! It is THE place to shop … it is a 6 year old online home-made marketplace - everything you buy is directly from the maker to the consumer. You also have the option to search by location, so if you’re interested in the local foods movement, for example, you can buy LOCAL CRAFTS too! People sell very usable items such as kichenware, totes, and jewlery in addition to fun things like toys, pet supplies, or pottery. It feels great to buy right from the person who has designed and created your item, and to know that the purchase price is supporting them and their ability to make what they love. It’s a bit like the historic cottage craft system of the past…. only much more versatile!

I’ve been doing even more research lately on the Etsy community, because I’ll be opening a shop there soon. I’ll sell greeting cards and smaller textiles (tea towels, napkins, etc) and perhaps one day make my silk items available there as well. Etsy has a wonderful support network built in - they really try to educate their community to be the best business people they can be. You can check it out at http://www.etsy.com/ - DO look around at what everyone else has - it’s wonderfully exciting! It just may change your life! 

Tell me, what are your favorite online or real-life resources for fun items, interesting gifts, or beautiful designs? Do you have any favorite Etsy shops you think I should know about? I’ll collect your responses and share them in future post!