Taratories Blog

Artisan Show

Recently we had a Whole Foods 365 Market open up here in Akron very close to where we live and it is great not only for the healthy selection of foods for a good price, but also for the fact that it has a local coffee shop located inside of it.  The coffee shop is called "Artisan Coffee" and they serve the most delicious drinks!  Last month was the first month that they started hanging work on their wall and this month I had the wonderful opportunity of hanging my work in there.

IMG_2165.PNG

It is such a cozy corner and my animal collection seems to fit perfectly on the wall.  I am hoping that my work brings some cheer to this neutral space and something fun to look at for the people sitting with their coffee.  My work will be up for sale through the end of April and can be viewed there at 1745 W. Market Street, Akron, Ohio 44313. 

IMG_0227.JPEG
IMG_2341.jpg
IMG_2343.jpg
IMG_2344.jpg
IMG_2364.JPG

Interview with the Cleveland Library

I had the wonderful opportunity a couple of weeks ago to have an interview with the Cleveland Public Library. They asked me questions like, "When and how did you become interested in art?" and "What is the best piece of advice you've been given?" It was fun to think back into my past and into my art in this way. I've never had an opportunity like this and it was such a gift!  Now I have a little 2 minute mini artist documentary of sorts to pass on to my kids some day!

In the library's gallery there is an interactive digital wall where you can now find photos of my art and also this video.  I'm excited to check it out!  You can too! (library located at 16918 Harvard Ave. Cleveland, OH 44128).

Lost: Wales Residency

My last full day in Corris was quite an adventure.  I packed up my studio and wanted to take a walk to the Craft Center in Upper Corris.  I had read about it before I came to Corris and I thought I would go see what it was all about in person.  I had instructions on how to get there from people in the house and it didn't seem that hard to get there.  Walk to the end of the road and make a sharp right, then you will get there...

I walked, and walked, and walked.  I never saw a sharp right.  It felt as though I was on a highway. Cars were flying by me and I had no place to walk besides the road in some parts.  I walked in the grass outside of the guard rail when I could.  I was very nervous that I was going to get hit, and started to feel nervous that I had also gone the wrong way.  

When I came to this waterfall and stream I just knew I had either gone too far or taken a wrong turn so I decided to just turn around and walk back the way I came.  Then it started to pour down rain.  I was SO GLAD that last minute I decided to throw my backpack on which had my umbrella in it.  Rain actually ended up benefitting me because I had a bright yellow umbrella which I waved to oncoming traffic to alert them of my presence on the road!  Somehow I felt a surge of confidence as I walked behind the thin yellow fabric.  I almost reached the town of Corris when Yuki, the volunteer at Maelor, pulled up in her van and rescued me!  She showed me where I made the mistake of veering to the left (which I felt at the time was a straight path) instead of turning right where I should have.  She dropped me at the door of the Craft Center and said she would wait a minute until I made sure it was open.  Sure enough it was CLOSED FOR THE SEASON!!  How ironic!  I was so glad she stayed and waited so I didn't have to walk back into town in the rain anymore.  What a day.  I was gone for hours!  We were laughing so hard at my stupidity!  

That night we all went out to the pub for dinner at Dolgellau which is a neighboring town.  It was so great to have a last hoorah before I left the next day and really made up for the wet wandering I did earlier.  The three of us resident artists were joined by Yuki, the volunteer, and Veronica and Mary who are owners and founders of Stiwdio Maelor.  

The next morning I took one last walk in the town and said "goodbye" to the local cow who has a huge bellowing "Moo" that I hear from Maelor every day.

I also said "hello" to some rams in a tractor who passed by.  I stood and thought to myself, "This is Wales."  I had to say goodbye to everything.  I went into each room in Maelor and thought of memories in each one.  Endings are so hard, but I was so excited to see my family as well which lessened the sting.  I have missed them so much!

I will have one last blog post for my residency that will tie it all up in a bow.  But until then, here are some detail shots of the last painting that I did in Wales.

An Artist Worth Remembering

Last Fall I had the opportunity to go to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City to see an amazing exhibit featuring a large collection of paintings by the famous John Singer Sargent, a leading portrait painter of his generation.  I have always admired his work and it was thrilling to get up close to his paintings and take in all the details. 

As I was viewing this exhibit, a girl in the distance caught my eye.  She seemed to have been transported in time from another era with her dreamy victorian ensemble.  She fit in with the paintings and it even felt as though she could have just stepped out of one.  I wondered what she was thinking.  Who was she?  What was her story?  I felt the need to photograph her to possibly use her in one of my paintings.  

A couple of weeks ago, my friends and I were talking about what a great trip that was to NYC and I thought back to our time in the gallery.  I thought about this girl whom I photographed and started to make a connection.  I had a feeling that this mystery woman was actually an artist that I started following on Instagram a few months ago.  I pulled out these photos from New York, and, sure enough, it was a match!  

Her name is Teresa Oaxaca and she a figurative oil painter and Master of our time.  It makes sense that she was at this particular exhibit because she observes and copies the painting of the Old Masters.  It also made sense that this is the outfit she was wearing because this is her normal attire!  She always wears period clothing which I think is so enchanting!  I was so excited when I realized that it just so happened that my family and I were going to be in Washington D.C. the following week, and Teresa was having an exhibit in Alexandria during our time there!  Her exhibit was entitled "Misfits" which I thought was such an appropriate title.

This piece was a self portrait entitled, "Blue Duchess" and it was right outside the entrance of The Art League Gallery on an easel.  I loved the way that it was a cross between a still life and a portrait.  The painting beckons me to ask what her story is.  The wig, the doll, the mask, the striped stockings, the flowers... all leaving me with questions.

She makes these frames herself and I love the way the colors and whimsy of them really compliment the paintings.  The frames really work together with the paintings and seem to make them complete.

This painting is truly bizarre and I love the composition of it.  The blue is striking, and again, more questions.

Each piece was unique but they all fit together in a cohesive way.  This show was definitely worth taking time to see and I am so glad we did!  So next time you are wandering around a gallery, take note, you may be brushing shoulders with an artist worth remembering.  

Behind the scenes of the Sarah Jessica Parker Painting

This is a story which all began in March of this past year.  I was new to Instagram and just happened to start following the actress Sarah Jessica Parker on her birthday.  On that day, she posted this charming photo from 1958 of a model wearing a Christian Dior gown.  The photo was taken by Sabine Weiss.  I absolutely fell in love with everything about this image.  I was sleeping one night and the connection between this vintage photo and Sarah Jessica may have come together in my subconscious brain or something.  A vision woke me up of Sarah Jessica being the girl in the photo with all of her shoes from her SJP shoe collection surrounding her.  I sat up in bed with inspiration swirling around in my head.  Night time is usually when I have the clearest sources of inspiration that I later use when I sit down to paint.  I decided to go with what I saw that night and paint what I had envisioned.  

I primed my piece of canvas and couldn't wait to get started!

First I drew out the placement of Sarah Jessica and the background.  I found a photo of Sarah Jessica to use as reference that was the best match for the direction of her head and neck.  Once I attained her likeness, I moved on to the floor, legs and feet, and walls.  I contemplated what color I should paint her dress, and landed on this beautiful blue.  Painting the folds of her gown were so exhilarating to me (I know I am a weird).  

The shoes were like the icing on the top.  I painstakingly searched for the perfect shoes from her collection to add into this painting.  It was harder than I thought it would be to pick the right colors and styles that would make a good color scheme.  It was difficult not to include all of her shoes, but if I did that, there would have been no place for the beautiful Sarah Jessica Parker!  As I painted these shoes, I just fell in love with them. I love the strip of complimenting color that graces the backs of their heels.  The sparkle emanating from some of the shoes make them (in Sarah Jessica Parker's words) "the modern day glass slipper."  They all have their own distinct personalities and I enjoyed painting every one of them!  

Lastly, I painted the designs in the background which helped create movement and energy in the painting.  I feel like the designs compliment the shoes and really help tie the whole piece together.  

I enjoyed every part of doing this painting, but when it was all finished in August, I felt that it didn't belong with me.  It belonged with the one person who would appreciate it most, but I had no idea how it would ever be possible to give it to her.

A couple of weeks later, I saw that an art exhibition was going to be at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City that I really wanted to go see.  It was a huge collection of John Singer Sergeant's works all in one place.  He is a portrait artist that I have always loved and I thought that this would be an awesome and inspirational exhibition for me to see in person.  It had been a couple of years since I had traveled to New York and I was ready for an adventure and determined to get there.  I found a few other girls interested in joining me and within a week we coordinated a day when we were going to drive to one of the greatest cities ever, see an amazing exhibit, and drive home the next day!  I know people thought we were crazy, but I would have driven there for even a couple of hours!  A week before we were scheduled to go, I saw a post on Sarah Jessica Parker's Instagram saying that she was going to be at the Bloomingdales in NY making an appearance and selling shoes from her collection! I looked at the date and she was going to be there the day after we were leaving to come home.  I couldn't believe it.  We were going to miss her by one day, but I was determined to find a way to get my painting to her because it seemed like too much of a coincidence for me not to try!

I emailed Bloomingdales and asked them if I could leave the painting at their store overnight so that she could get it the next day.  They told me that there was no secure place for me to leave my painting overnight. Dead end. The end. No, not really.  I am a fighter and someone who likes a good challenge.  So when I have a road block in front of me, I am more determined than ever to find a way to accomplish my goal.  So a couple days before I was scheduled to leave for NYC that is when it all came together.  Through God's help and some amazing contacts, I now had made arrangements to drop this painting off on my trip to NYC!  The seemingly impossible was now possible and I was excited to say the least!!

While hailing a cab with one hand and the other clutching my carefully wrapped painting, I felt that I was in a dream.  What all started with some inspiration from a beautiful image, then a vision one night, some hard work and determination, prayer, and now an open door, had led me to this moment in time. 

All sorts of thoughts were going through my head in the elevator if you can only imagine. 

The grand finale... going to the SJP collection offices/ show room and handing over this gift that felt like a piece of me.  But knowing it was literally safe in her hands and surrounded by the very shoes featured was worth giving it up for! This was an experience I am so thankful for and one I will never forget. THE END.