Start Your Engines

In the company of the Muse
and a troupe of her affiliates
(or is it her initiates?)
the air vibrates with enthusiasm
creative epiphanies sparking
in the air like mini-lightning
One session –  a jolt from the starter
revved up for a daytrip of ideas
Regular gatherings
keep the engines running
on a symbiotic think fuel
and maintained by heart mechanics

Beginnings

Babies are babies
no matter what animal
And the cuteness factor
quadruples the chances
for adults to emerge
The innocence of beginner’s mind
is open and attractive
And the pristine thought patterns
quadruple the chances
for inspiration to be sparked

Simply Incongruous

Some hairy clown in a tutu
stopped by to console
the agitated hippo stuck in the mud
• • •
How can one describe that
without seeming absurd?
Certainly some of life’s observations
are best kept impressed on the brain only
paying silent homage
to the appearance of reason and sanity

• • •

My brain takes it in
and spurts it out at odd times
Aw, heck!
Life is just silly, sometimes!

Incorrigible Joy

On the precipice
of discovery
Where epiphany and spark
idea and imagination conjoin
At the apex of Spirit’s
creative impulse
There you will find
incorrigible joy
Fierce and undefeatable
JOY!
Sylvia

Sylvia

Speculating on the Antennae

 

I recently went into one of my favorite local art stores – Utrecht – to price some things for a class I will be teaching later this month. It was actually more of an Artist’s date. Being open to the creative flow, I made a couple discoveries. I love when that happens. The first was that Utrecht and Blick are combining forces. I’ve enjoyed shopping with each of them individually, so I anticipate that I will find this a pleasant merger.

My next discovery was more personally satisfying. As I was nosing around the color pencils, a person that I recognize as a local artist commented on the Utrecht brand pencils that I was looking at. He said, “Oh, now those are great pencils!”  He said they had a real creamy and rich feel to them, and that he liked them better than the prismacolors that I always use, because they didn’t have so much waxy build up when layering.  I bought about 25 colors to try them out. Today’s image is a result.

There was a time about 30 years ago that I read about a technique of layering prismacolor pencils with a super hard (8H) pencil in an art magazine. It was written by this fella that did super realistic pencil portraits. I tried it, and before you know it I was hooked. I never got to the realistic portrait thing because I fell into an emotionally inspired series that just presented itself to me every time I picked up the pencils and a new blank piece of paper.

I ended up combining some of my Prismacolors with these pencil because I didn’t have all of the colors I wanted. There really is less waxy build up and I am not certain that I dislike waxy build up. It adds to the richness. Anyway, they are nice pencils. I will be acquiring a full complement of their colors and using them with my prismacolors. Never too many good pencils I say.