Day 8 – Tea Party
Day 9 – Brag about yourself or something you are doing
For most people (I think) it’s an uncomfortable thing to brag about yourself, and I believe that I don’t do that a lot. However, I could be wrong, because isn’t this blog just one great big brag session?? I guess it is what it is.
This is a picture I painted in 1997. Yes. Seventeen years ago. Amazing fact – it has survived seventeen years worth of de-cluttering. I spent a lot of time on all the fiddly details and it was one of my first tole paintings ever, but that’s not why I love it.
It reminds me of the relationship I have with my younger sister Ann, the one closest to me in age. (There are almost ten years between me and our youngest sibling, and a fifteen year old doesn’t set spending time with a five-year old as one of her priorities.) So the tea parties I remember are the ones where Ann and I played at being civilized grown ups for as long as we could stand it, before taking off outside again to act like the little hooligans we really were.
My hair was dark and straight as a poker and I was always jealous of Ann’s Shirley Temple curls. Mom dressed me in red while my sister got to wear beautiful blues and chocolate browns. I would (of course) be the one in charge of the tea-pot and the slicing of the cake, because I was older and bigger and incredibly bossy. I’m not like that AT ALL anymore. Just ask my sisters, and they had better agree with me.
One of these fine days I will get back into painting. For awhile I rented a display space at a little store called “Rose Tree Cottage” and sold a lot of my stuff there. I still have the records somewhere of all the things I painted, and they number in the hundreds. When it became more like work and less like fun I just stopped doing it. When I have all kinds of time on my hands and no job to go to I will set up a little ‘studio’ again and see what happens, and what magical memories are still stored away in my old and muddled up mind.
There are all kinds of flaws in this tea party painting. I could point them out to you if you haven’t already noticed them, but sometimes I think it’s the imperfections in things that make them good. And dear. And worth hanging on to for seventeen years.
Adorable!
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This is so adorable, grandmalin. I’d hang it too. I love the detail & the story behind it.
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When I looked at your painting for a while, I got this feeling that it might be possible to step into that lovely innocent world of make believe and stay there. If only I could.
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That’s a beautiful painting! I can’t paint to save my life.
I also agree with your thought on imperfections… heck, it’s a philosophy I pretty much have to embrace!
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I love this painting. It has that storybook, carefree feel of childhood. How interesting that you are aware of its imperfections, while I see a perfect place where I wish I could spend an afternoon.
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I love the painting. I also did this type of painting about 20 years ago and had a booth for several years. It was a fun, creative time but I’ve never felt the urge to do it again.
Lillian
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A memory (and an adorable painting!) well worth keeping. The imperfections make us (and our art) real – touchable by others. It’s what gives us our connection.
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Yupik are so gifted, brag away!, Dianne
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That’s you are! Shall I blame the iPad or me!,,
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“Adorable” was the first word that came to me, too. It truly is!
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I like that you take the time to add detail that others who do this type of painting often do not. Your clock would make a nice tiny painting on its own. Your red dress has quite elaborate striping, and sleeve detail. Nice.
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