A Special Thing

There were a lot of us there, all excited and proud. The music and the graduates with flags and banners filled the Meyerhoff Symphony Hall. Watching my daughter graduate from MICA was a grand heart-warming, punch of a good time. I’m particularly thrilled because art is continuing through the generations. I followed my mom, a Parsons trained artist,  when I was a child, to see what she and her Taos Art Colony friends were working on. Art was life. Mine was rich in talented people to learn from. Then I had a daughter who loved living art with me. What a gift! To go from learning from living with an artist mother, to having the thrill of daily passing on bits of knowledge about art that can only be learned through interaction in the studio and in the field, has been wonderfully fulfilling. It’s a special thing to see a heritage pass on. I’m glad to know that this thing that possesses us through the generations is in good hands.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Comments Off on A Special Thing

My Father – Theodore Spencer Church

 

Ted Church with his mother, Peggy Pond Church

My father was a man of remarkable self determination and quiet courage. He grew up one of three sons of Fermor Spencer Church, a School Master at Los Alamos Ranch School, and grandson of Ashley Pond, the founder. Living on the Ranch School, high on the Pajarito Plateau, helped him gain a love for the outdoors and a disciplined approach to life.

He was introduced to my mother, an artist involved with the Taos Art Colony, by his mother, Peggy Pond Church. Ted became so unendingly delighted by his wife Elizabeth, that he often spoke of feeling her presence with him after her death. His love for my mother showed in his support of her art, which grew into support for mine, and then for his granddaughter Rachel’s. In his final week he spoke of his goal to remain alive long enough to celebrate Rachel’s graduation from MICA art college.

I grew up going to Meeting on most Sunday mornings, but dad’s Quaker journey didn’t exist only on Sundays. I would often find him in his study, “doing the books” for Friends Meeting, as he was the Treasurer for many years. His help with the Meeting grew into help with InterMountain Yearly Meeting, American Friends Service Committee, and Friends World Committee for Consultation. Through his involvement I had the privilege of meeting and learning from Elfrida Vipont Foulds, Margaret Gibbons, James Drummond, and attending International Quakerschool Beverweerd and the International Quaker Youth Pilgrimage. These people and places dad gave me access to provided me with cherished life-long spiritual, and educational gifts.

Dad’s quiet love gave me the privilege of knowing that he supported me, not just my best efforts. In dying as in living, the light of his courageous determination to follow what he thought best shone brightly. One of his final gifts to me in life was his insistence that I stay away from New Mexico as his life ebbed away, because he knew the dry air would hurt my eyes. I learned from him that quiet duty speaks love eloquently.

“Be still and cool in thy own mind and spirit from thy own thoughts, and then thou wilt feel the principle of God to turn thy mind to the Lord God, whereby thou wilt receive his strength and power from whence life comes, to allay all tempests against blusterings and storms. That is it which moulds up into patience, into innocency, into soberness, into stillness, into stayedness, into quietness, up to God, with his power.”
George Fox, 1658

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged | 1 Comment

Duck’s Adventure

I chose the odd group of an aluminum duck on a tricycle, a turnip, and a pomegranate as subjects. This group staged with strong lighting reminds me of stories I’ve read about friends who set off on exciting adventures. I’ve found myself wondering if duck and friends will survive. Perhaps they’ll save a damsel in distress, take a ring to the place it belongs, or meet some terrible wayfarers on their travels.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged | 4 Comments

Magnifying Glass

A turnip and a pomegranate may seem like unusual still life partners with a toy duck, but then a duck on a trike is not an every day thing either.  I’m using a magnifying glass to help me see details. Knowing just where a highlight starts and finishes, and how a shape slips into shadow, helps me to achieve a realistic look in the painting I am doing of these unusual companions.

Duck Magnifying Glass

The magnifying glass brings into clear view details that might otherwise have been overlooked.

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged | Comments Off on Magnifying Glass

Juried Exhibit at the National Institutes of Health

I am having a very successful year with paintings accepted into many juried exhibits. The exhibits have usually been sequential, but currently I’m showing works in three at one time. In addition to exhibiting in the Instructor’s Exhibit at Montpelier Arts Center in Laurel, Maryland, and the Annual Juried Exhibit at Strathmore Mansion in Bethesda, I have two more paintings on display in a juried exhibit at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Gallery in Bethesda, Maryland. Inquiries are accepted either by myself or the appropriate institution.

The Artist

Strathmore Mansion

National Institutes of Health: Clinical Center Galleries

Montpelier Arts Center

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged | 1 Comment

20th Annual Strathmore Artists Juried Exhibition

I have work juried into the 20th Annual Strathmore Artist Members Exhibition, February 26, 2011 – April 2, 2011.
Opening Reception: Thursday, March 17, 7–9PM
For more information call (301) 581-5125.
THE MANSION AT STRATHMORE
Free and Open to the Public

Mansion Hours – Galleries and Gift Shop
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday, 10AM – 4PM
Wednesday, 10AM – 9PM
Saturday, 10AM – 3PM
Closed Sunday

Parking for the exhibition in the Mansion at Strathmore is free in the Mansion lot on a space available basis. Enter the Mansion lot at 10701 Rockville Pike. However, parking is limited, and you may want to park on a street at a metered parking space, or in the adjacent parking garage. Parking is free on Saturdays. Major credit cards are accepted as well as a Metro SmarTrip card. The parking fee is $4.75 Monday-Friday. To access the Music Center and Mansion from the Grosvenor-Strathmore Metro garage, walk across the glass-enclosed sky bridge located on the 4th level. For more information: http://www.strathmore.org/planyourvisit/directionsparking.asp

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged | Comments Off on 20th Annual Strathmore Artists Juried Exhibition

One of My Favorite People

"Daniel"

One of my favorite people! He is an outdoors man who chases swift running deer, stalks fox, stands next to bucks in the forest, and knows all the entrances and bolt holes of clans of ground hogs. He also stares at the computer screen and writes fine literature. An amazing man.

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

The Instructor’s Exhibit

"Apple, Pitcher and Pomegranates" with Mandolin

I have the privilege of living in a home with other creative people. One of my sons composes music and plays several musical instruments. Today my painting “Apple, Pitcher and Pomegranates” rested on the sofa with his Mandolin as we got ready to deliver the painting to the Montpelier Art Center where it will be hung in the Instructor’s Exhibit. The painting is currently available for sale, but not the mandolin!

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

“90-Second Newberry” Video Contest!

Here’s a wonderful opportunity to show off your creativity! Enter a film in the “90-Second Newbery” Video Contest. “The challenge: make a video that compresses the story of a Newbery award-winning book into 90 seconds or less. Anyone can enter.” The first video: Madeleine L’Engle’s 1963 Newbery winner, “A Wrinkle in Time”!

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , | Comments Off on “90-Second Newberry” Video Contest!

“Retablo”

My new oil painting, “Retablo,” has been posted on my website www.aspenshimmers.com. As I painted it I thought of the sanctuaries of New Mexico that I have visited. El Santuario de Chimayo is one that I’ll never forget. There one encounters a dramatic history of human faith and hope for healing. This painting of an imagined peaceful corner with a Retablo, Indian blanket, and offerings brings to mind secret longings and silent prayers of the blended cultures of New Mexican Anglo, Hispanic, and American Indian peoples. New Mexico, with it’s historic blending of cultures, plays perfect host to mysteries of interwoven cultures and faiths.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | 2 Comments