How shall I LINE thee? Let me count the ways …
Thick … thin … curved … straight
Vertical … diagonal … horizontal
LINE you can vary in width … direction or length
PLAY with Line!
it is the joy and delight of the Artist.
How shall I LINE thee? Let me count the ways …
Thick … thin … curved … straight
Vertical … diagonal … horizontal
LINE you can vary in width … direction or length
PLAY with Line!
it is the joy and delight of the Artist.
Posted in Art Theory, My Paintings, Paintings | Tagged Exploring Line, Line Art | Leave a Comment »
It is another snappy, cold morning and we are up at six am to go to a lake to fish. I am dubious since this is Southern Arizona and there does not appear to be any water in this parched land.
My optimistic husband, D.L., has brought his ratty, old folding chair, all his fishing gear and flies. He assembles his fishing gear and sits down alongside a guy who looks at him doubtfully, nods, and says “There is no trout here in this lake. It is all catfish and crappie, dontja’ know ?” He then proceeds to hand D.L. some vile objects which he identifies as chicken livers. Yuck!
Enough of that … I am off on a walk around the lake, which I consider a pond, and come across a middle-aged woman with a little red wagon loaded with food, water, and fishing stuff. She is trying to pull the wagon and hold the hands of two 80+ men. It is not going too well as they are wobbling down the embankment perilously close to falling in.
My offer to help is quickly accepted and we all keep tottering along the path lapped by the cloudy water. I hold their hands and she pulls the creaky red wagon. One man smiles sweetly at me, waves his other hand, and tries to say “the best fishing hole” which comes out “s’bst ishin ole” due to several missing teeth.
The cheery woman tells me “I bring them to the lake every day with their lunch”. She nods to the brown lunch bags in the wagon. “Then I pick them up at 1:00 when it is my own lunch hour.” I hesitate, then ask her if one of them is her dad? “No, no,” she says. “They are my neighbors down the street and I have been doing this for them for six years. They are much happier out here with the cottonwoods and the quail.” They both nod and treat me to huge toothless grins as they seat themselves carefully in the chairs she sets on the bank for them.
What a great person she is! I tell her she is great and she blushes and replies “Just what I would want someone to do for me.” She unpacks a tiny table to put between them, arranges water and sandwiches, kisses each one on the cheek, waves to me and runs off to her car. The two guys really could not talk, due to the lack of teeth, so they blew me kisses and happily settled down to fish.
I walked a few steps past willows and reeds to spot a covey of quail. I look back and the two men are tearing tiny pieces off their sandwiches, tossing them on the ground and making quail-like noises. They duck their heads when they see me then wave again and laugh. No doubt waiting for me to be gone so they can feed their buddies pieces of sandwich.
Another half mile and a ash-throated flycatcher sits up on a post, posing and preening, giving me time to fumble up my binocs and inspect it at leisure. The air was crackling clean, the cottonwoods tall as pine trees and yellow, glorious yellow, as the sun began to warm the earth. I think of the group I just left, smile, and say softly to myself “A splendid morning … well met, friends, well met.”
Posted in Arizona, Birding, Travels | Tagged Birding, Fishing, Kindness | Leave a Comment »
If language is thought of as “a system of communication …either written or spoken,” another category might be added : visual symbols can also carry a message. This fanciful painting explores the concept that butterflies “talk” to each other using the marks on their wings. Here is a collection of marks taken from various species of butterflies with a dollop of imagination.
Posted in My Paintings, Natural Phenomena | Tagged Butterflies, Butterfly, Language, Mary P Williams, Visual Symbols | Leave a Comment »
Dispersal … That is the word which fits a certain three-week period in a seasonal retirement community. May I share with you the feeling of temporary loss?
The Little Deaths of the Winter Texans
The palm trees bases are serenely wrapped with Christmas tree lights presenting a spiraling row of glowing blue lights which make magic in the evening dark.
“When I came back in the Fall and there were no blue lights I clutched my heart and said to myself, “the Park is going downhill.” A week later they repaired the spirals and turned on the lights and I breathed a sign of relief,” my companion said.
“Yes, I agree, it is like a little death of something we hold on to that gives us a slight lift of our spirits. A bit of beauty.” I reply.
Another season in The RV Resort and Park begins and the activities speed up. There is the small card room, the large card room, the ballroom for dancing (trail dancing, swing dancing, formal waltzing, clogging) and magic acts, etc. There is bean bag and wood-shop and quilting. Most anticipated is Sip n’Dip at the pool with a Karaoke band and bodies strewn up and down the patio baking to the desired envy-producing brown to display back home. It is a signal to the children, grandchildren, and friends that this person still has a vibrant, active life.
Sandwiched between the gaiety and good feeling there are hushed discussions of who did not come back this season. Memorial service notices appear of the bulletin board. Ambulance sirens enter and exit the park late at night. The tendrils of unease sneak along the streets.
Still, here are the men clustered in groups, playing darts, playing billiards, playing water volleyball in the small swimming pool. Happily hurling insults back and forth with the ball. The weeks fly by as friendships are renewed, gutters are repaired, weeds are whacked, and the irritating things that could go wrong … do go wrong – including the many things that can go wrong with an old body.
Now there are trips to the Dr. and a rush across the border into Mexico to do the dental work that costs so much in Canada.
And then … Season Over … who will not return? Whose children (40 or 50 years old) are coming to pack them up, load a truck, and take them away, never to return? Who has sold their unit? There is a last dashing around as the seller of a unit tries to give away several years of patio chairs, barbecues, dart boards, and water shoes. Who is staying? Do they want this item or that? Do you want my grapefruit picker? Would you like my container plant?
Two weeks of final dinners, drinks raised to celebrate going “Home” … back to Canada, Iowa, Nebraska, or Minnesota where reside the grandchildren we never hear from. The “grands” cannot afford to telephone and we have all painfully forced ourselves to learn to email only to find “the Kids” have moved on to I-phones and can only be reached by texting. Free classes are given by one of the computer nerds and we struggle with the tiny, tiny keys we cannot see on palm sized phones and know this is another little death if we give up.
No tears … last hugs … promises to be here next Fall …“God willing and the creek don’t rise.” Yet we all look searchingly at each other, memorizing faces, holding these persons in our hearts while the undercurrent sweeps us along with the knowledge that our days are truly numbered.
These are the little deaths of the Winter Texans in the Rio Grande Valley.
Posted in Creative Non-fiction | Tagged Retirement, Texas, Unease | Leave a Comment »
It was my 76th year to heaven and the weather turned around … there stood I in the Rio Grande Valley with paint on my hands. To be creative is to be divine. Perhaps it may be unbelievable but the drive to “make something” grows stronger with age. The question is not how (wood? marble? oil paint? acrylics? paper? canvas?) …
the question is what …
what stirs in our dreams ?
Posted in My Paintings | Tagged Creative Drive, Creative Stirrings, Creativity, Dreams | Leave a Comment »
Steady wind … strong wind …
Fine sand whirling past.
Palm trees bending low …
and ever lower … Break ?
Will the trunk snap ?
Never! I have never seen
it snapping … Pieces break off
but never a broken tree.
Posted in My Paintings, Natural Phenomena, Texas, Watercolor | Tagged Palm Trees | Leave a Comment »
A tiny percentage of humanity is able to be off-planet … but we have machines, robots, tools … wonders await us as we explore the universe!
Posted in Etchings | Tagged Galaxy, Space Exploration | Leave a Comment »
1975 Death Valley, California : SPRING
While driving thru a barren desert I glimpsed a red band circling around a hill.
I stopped, got out, and walked a quarter-mile to the base of the hill.
What could that red stripe be ?
It was a pile of red beetles … 2 or 3 deep …
too wide to step over … too wide to jump over …
Reddish orange with a black edge and each one inch long …
each individual struggling to reproduce the species.
Shining in the sun … copulating …
Why was this strip of land their chosen place to gather ?
Posted in Etchings, Natural Phenomena | Tagged Beetles, Death Valley | 1 Comment »
Strange structures on a far-flung world. Made by creatures? By natural processes? Of the many, many worlds in our galaxy are there some touched by old civilizations?
Posted in My Paintings, Natural Phenomena, Watercolor | Tagged Galaxies, Other Worlds | Leave a Comment »
Were we able to fly out in space and look back on our planet we might see the Aurora Borealis in full glory … this is a sight humankind has only been able to see in the last few decades. Named for the goddess of dawn, Aurora, it is also called the Northern Lights. We live in an exciting era!
Posted in My Paintings, My Paintings UTPA MFA, Natural Phenomena, Watercolor | Tagged Aurora Borealis, Earth, Northern Lights, View of Earth from Space | Leave a Comment »