Art and writing

Artist Andrew Wyeth has just died at age 91. I was reading about his perspective on art a few months ago and stumbled over a quote that I wrote down:

You can lose the essence by detailing a lot of extraneous things.

I’ve always thought Wyeth’s paintings are the perfect illustration of a New England sensibility: spare, stark. But that doesn’t mean there isn’t a lot going on. It’s the way I perceive that when someone from Maine answers a question with the affirmative “ayuh,” there’s a ton of unspoken (and intriguing) information behind it.

Contrast that to traditional Southern storytelling, which is rambling, expansive, with tons of details that seem relevant to only the speaker.

I struggle in my writing to retain the flavor of a Southern storyteller with at least a bit of a New Englander’s reticence. I can be the Queen of the Extraneous. I wish I could be a little more Andrew Wyeth.

I previously posted a picture of Andrew Wyeth’s painting Master Bedroom.

The dog in this painting looks like Rex, who’s currently on bed rest from a possible torn ligament (playing too hard with his foster brother, so at least he got it having fun). I think he may have gotten a pickle last night, along with his pain medication. I hope so.

Hump Day Happy

Sir Tyson, who is fostered by Timothy through the amazing rescue organization Scout’s Honor,
is happy when surrounded by toy carnage.

Tyson will gladly find YOU something to be happy about from this book if you comment with a page number between 1 and 611, and another number between 1 and 25. Unless, you know, you hate dogs, happiness, and America.

If it’s Saturday, this must be Ohio

I’m not sure I’ll ever know what day it is again. But I do know that Harley is 75 pounds of hilarious goodness.

Tomorrow, I’ll have my fifth Christmas.

I’ve gotten tons of writing material over the past few days. Now I just need to write a few chapters and get a contract. A book contract is one of my new year’s resolutions. The other is to go back to the gym. I’m keeping 2009 simple.

You?

Dog Love

Even though I’m far from The Compound and my dogs, I’m still getting plenty of dog love from:


Sequoia and Sherman


Cocoa and Mystery


and Biscuit.

Completely unrelated, I saw that former senator Claiborne Pell died. RIP to the man who helped many people fulfill their dreams of going to college. From the AP report:

When asked his greatest achievement, Pell always was quick to answer, “Pell Grants.”

Legislation creating the Basic Educational Opportunity Grants passed in 1972, providing direct aid to college students. The awards were renamed “Pell Grants” in 1980. By the time Pell retired, they had aided more than 54 million low- and middle-income Americans.

Pell also shared a strong interest in the arts, and was chief Senate sponsor of a 1965 law establishing the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Pell was well-liked among peers from both political parties, who respected his non-confrontational style. “I believe in letting the other fellow have my way” was a favorite refrain Pell used to refer to his negotiating skills.

For that last quote alone, he’s worthy of the Aries Hall of Fame (though he was born under the sign of Cancer). Supporting the arts was just the icing on the cake.

You know how it sometimes seems a day can’t get any better…

…and then it does?

Today I managed to accomplish every goal I set for myself. While I was doing it, I got to speak by phone to Lynne, Marika, my sister Debby, my friend Debbie, Jim–I feel like I’m leaving out someone, but at age thirty-five, a memory lapse or two is to be expected. I’ve missed calls from Timmy and Amy, but we’ll catch up soon.

I took some photos that you can see after the cut.

Continue reading “You know how it sometimes seems a day can’t get any better…”

Look!


It’s another shameless use of innocent dolls to promote A Coventry Wedding. Still on pre-order status at Amazon, but I happen to know a few people have gotten their hands on copies.

In other news, two new angels have joined the band.

Admit it; you were checking out those titles behind the angels, weren’t you? Book slut!

The angels arrived on craft night, the highlights of which involved Starbucks peppermint mochas, Betty Crocker Cookie Brownie Bars (BUY THIS MIX and don’t overbake!), new toys from Iowa for the dogs (it was the night EZ went to her forever home, but Sugar was happy to step in), and of course, Lindsey making a face as soon as I pointed a camera at her.

Not pictured with a toy: Guinness, because it wasn’t long before Margot:

Home improvements

I’ve been throwing stuff into the…what do I call that room? The study? The guest suite? Lisa’s room? Whatever. To keep my house reasonably uncluttered while accumulating gifts, wrapping them, and other such holiday nonsense, everything gets thrown in there and the door closed to keep out snooping dogs. This doesn’t please Margot, because the crates are in that room, and she loves her crate.

Over the past couple of weeks, Tom brought in what boxes remained of my mother’s Christmas decorations. There weren’t many, but I wanted to split them for the grandkids. (My brother, sister, and I divided the first round of decorations many years ago when my mother got sick of moving them.) I won’t lie; this was hard. When we packed up all her other belongings and gave away, donated, or sold them, she was still alive. Since then, there was a time when I went through the rest of her clothes and donated them. But that was months ago.

You really can’t dodge grief, and you also can’t anticipate when it will become sharper. Thanksgiving was fine, even though I could clearly remember Mother going to Green Acres with us last year (when I took all those BBQ Frito Thanksgiving photos). But it was Christmas Eve when Tom and I had to take her to the hospital, the visit that led to her cancer diagnosis. Though I’m not consciously thinking of anything that’s upsetting me, I know my ongoing insomnia is related to mourning. And when I burst into tears driving down the road because “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” starts playing–well, it’s not because I’m tired of Christmas music. Except for when I’ve worked retail, I like Christmas music.

Sometimes I believe we were smarter about mourning in the old days (no matter what Scarlett O’Hara thought). We were allowed to withdraw. Less was expected of us. We gave ourselves time to be alone, to think, to remember, to grieve. Nobody has patience in today’s world for the contemplative spirit. We have to move fast, drive fast, work fast, recover fast. There’s noise around us all the time.

That’s the life I consciously and gradually stepped back from over the past ten years, and in this busiest of seasons, I keep reminding myself of that. I don’t mind being sad. I don’t mind crying. I prefer to do it in solitude, and I’m not talking about it here because I want sympathy. I’m talking about it because I know friends who are also coping with losses who may need a gentle reminder that it’s okay to cry. It’s okay to miss him or her. It’s okay to feel a little lost sometimes. I’ll never forget the wisdom someone gave to me after my father died: The depth of your sorrow is equal to the depth of your love.

Instead of pretending everything’s fine, I decided to get control of that room. I bought a small tree and decorated it with some of my mother’s decorations, many of which were gifts from me. I organized everything that still needs wrapping so I can work in there tomorrow, in a clear space, with a decorated tree and its twinkling lights, and two dogs who are thrilled to get their cozy crates back. And we will have ourselves a merry little Christmas now.