fish fossil


fish fossil
Originally uploaded by Dancing Crow.

I studied geology for my undergraduate degree, and what I liked best was paleontology. I liked the stories of how organisms changed, and I liked the sedimentary processes that saved the remains, and I was grateful that the blood and guts were not present by the time the fossils were ready for me to study.

ammonites


ammonites
Originally uploaded by Dancing Crow.

Thinking about fossils, I went looking on Flickr for pictures of trilobites, but I found instead all these gorgeous swirled images of ammonites.

After I finish some trees, I have a fossil or two in my future. A set of fish bones. A trilobite. Definitely an ammonite.

updates

Part of whatever I was sick with required a round of antibiotics and was probably strep. The rest of it has been receding slowly over the last week. I've been sleeping, and drinking a lot of fluids, and waiting impatiently to feel substantially better.

It is hard to think it is June already. May hardly made a dent on my consciousness and here we are rampaging towards the longest day of the year and the last day of school. Both the same, as it turns out.

I got postcards printed locally, and they are fabulous. There are now five horse postcards, and five brown things, and I will have them up on Etsy soon. The works that are headed to the Wisconsin gallery are mounted and languishing at the framers. When they are done there I will hie them to the UPS store to be swaddled in bubble wrap and sent on their way.

I have started a new piece, but it isn't to a stage where it can be photographed yet. You'll all be the first to know, I promise!

birdpeople 3


birdpeople 3
Originally uploaded by Dancing Crow.

I am learning more about the family life of the bird headed people – here a parent juggles a baby while a youngling hangs from one arm. I’ve been here.

I just realized I forgot to add any texture inside the people. I’ll stare at it a while to see if they really need it. I think they probably do.

greek parthenon horse


greek parthenon horse
Originally uploaded by Dancing Crow.

Another of the ancient equines – this is from the Parthenon, brought home by Lord Elgin and sold to the British Museum. In looking at parts of the Parthenon that have been in London and in Athens, you realize how much these pieces have been through.

I had some trouble getting the shading done to my satisfaction – it took paint on top of stitching.

coming soon, to a roadway near you…

Aerin, who turned sixteen last month, spent her school vacation in Driver's Ed (which was dedicated, and extreeeeeeemely boring). Yesterday she passed the permit test, and came home with an official permit, complete with a horrible picture. She says they watched videos for class, which seemed to date from the 1970s and 1980s. Her father and I said when we'd been in driver's ed, in the 70's, all the videos and movies had dated from the 1950's. We think someone, somewhere, is making videos of teens driving now, and archiving them for use in twenty years.

bird people 1


bird people 1
Originally uploaded by Dancing Crow.

I think this might be the first time I have taken anything from a sketchbook and used it in a fabric piece. I drew these people, thinking about bird-headed characters, and they kind of got away from me.

This is the first of what feels like several. This one is not what I had in mind, so I turned it in a series of related experiments; in fill patterns, in outlining threads, in fabrics to make the people from. Lynne liked it, so she has it on her wall in her new studio for a while. We agreed it looked like her people with birds on their heads had been squashed to make these people.

We had a meeting of the Artist Support Group in Lynne's new studio. It is in the old mill building in the middle of Easthampton, with a FABULOUS view of the Holyoke range and huge white walls and lots of table space. We were going to make power figures, but we got distracted talking about taking/making time to do the art, and how much of what we do is for other people (like baby blankets and wedding presents), and how do you transition away from that in a graceful fashion.