by ruralpearl | Dec 2, 2011 | Cut Paper, New Work!
5 x 7 inch paper cutting. Sold.
I’m taking a break from printing prints and greeting cards and making buttons and magnets and packaging it all. My last art fair of the year is tomorrow (Dec. 3) at the Lawrence Arts Center. It’ll be nice to have a break from art fairs for a bit. Not another until February, and then again until May. I’ve got lots of new works in mind to get started on, including some animation.. just ordered a new (used actually) digital camcorder. I didn’t know it would be so difficult to get a camcorder (an affordable no frills camcorder) with firewire these days. A firewire connection is necessary to run the live video feed into my computer and to work with my stop-motion capture software. I think it used to be standard on camcorders, but not anymore, so I went the used route. I had to go back about three years to find something.. I’ve still have my old one that I got in 1999 but the image quality isn’t where I’d like it to be, so I’m hoping this new one will yield good results.. Post coffee rambling. More later.. And come out tomorrow if you’re in the area — 10% of all sales go to the Lawrence Art Guild. 10am-6pm
by ruralpearl | Nov 29, 2011 | Cut Paper, New Work!
5 x 7 inch paper cutting. My donation to the benefit auction for Big Brothers Big Sisters and Ottawa Community Arts Council of Ottawa, KS.
by ruralpearl | Nov 13, 2011 | Cut Paper, New Work!
8 x 10 inch paper cutting. Sold.
…Sunday log: Working. Printing greeting cards (a couple new ones included) for wholesale orders plus my two upcoming holiday art fairs. I also just ordered a bunch of coffee mugs with my artwork on them- more news on this soon. This is something I’ve wanted to do for awhile. This is the month of taking plunges.. Also taking the long way to cut a bunch of print paper down to print size (as I wait for my newly ordered guillotine cutting machine to arrive..). I also read “The Light Within Us” by Albert Schweitzer this morning — a short and sweet inspirational book to keep my mind motor running. Back to morning jogging and paper cutting tomorrow. Interview for Lawrence Magazine on Wednesday. And of course, more blogging soon..
by ruralpearl | Nov 10, 2011 | Cut Paper, New Work!
“Illuminated” – 5 x 7 inch paper cutting. Sold.
“Autumn Tea” – 5 x 7 inch paper cutting. Sold.
by ruralpearl | Nov 7, 2011 | Cut Paper, New Work!
Inspired by mandalas, and unknowingly (until I was informed from my aunt from Pennsylvania) similar to hex signs (read about them here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hex_sign). Each circle measures approximately 4 x 4 inches and is individually matted and framed to 8 x 8 inches.
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by ruralpearl | Nov 4, 2011 | Cut Paper, New Work!, News & Events
I’ve been invited to be a part of the 200th Anniversary of Grimm’s Fairy Tales exhibit at the Buell Children’s Museum at the Sangre de Cristo Arts Center in Pueblo, Colorado, opening on Jan. 7, 2012. I’m working on a series of paper cuttings inspired by various Grimm Brothers stories. This is the first one that I’ve finished, and it was inspired by the story, “The Moon”, which you can read below.
THE MOON by The Grimm Brothers
In days gone by there was a land where the nights were always dark, and the sky spread over it like a black cloth, for there the moon never rose, and no star shone in the obscurity. At the creation of the world, the light at night had been sufficient. Three young fellows once went out of this country on a travelling expedition, and arrived in another kingdom, where, in the evening when the sun had disappeared behind the mountains, a shining globe was placed on an oak-tree, which shed a soft light far and wide. By means of this, everything could very well be seen and distinguished, even though it was not so brilliant as the sun. The travellers stopped and asked a countryman who was driving past with his cart, what kind of a light that was. “That is the moon,” answered he; our mayor bought it for three thalers, and fastened it to the oak-tree. He has to pour oil into it daily, and to keep it clean, so that it may always burn clearly. He receives a thaler a week from us for doing it.”
When the countryman had driven away, one of them said, “We could make some use of this lamp, we have an oak-tree at home, which is just as big as this, and we could hang it on that. What a pleasure it would be not to have to feel about at night in the darkness!” “I’ll tell you what we’ll do,” said the second; “we will fetch a cart and horses and carry away the moon. The people here may buy themselves another.” “I’m a good climber,” said the third, “I will bring it down.” The fourth brought a cart and horses, and the third climbed the tree, bored a hole in the moon, passed a rope through it, and let it down. When the shining ball lay in the cart, they covered it over with a cloth, that no one might observe the theft. They conveyed it safely into their own country, and placed it on a high oak. Old and young rejoiced, when the new lamp let its light shine over the whole land, and bed-rooms and sitting-rooms were filled with it. The dwarfs came forth from their caves in the rocks, and the tiny elves in their little red coats danced in rings on the meadows.
The four took care that the moon was provided with oil, cleaned the wick, and received their weekly thaler, but they became old men, and when one of them grew ill, and saw that he was about to die, he appointed that one quarter of the moon, should, as his property, be laid in the grave with him. When he died, the mayor climbed up the tree, and cut off a quarter with the hedge-shears, and this was placed in his coffin. The light of the moon decreased, but still not visibly. When the second died, the second quarter was buried with him, and the light diminished. It grew weaker still after the death of the third, who likewise took his part of it away with him; and when the fourth was borne to his grave, the old state of darkness recommenced, and whenever the people went out at night without their lanterns they knocked their heads together.
When, however, the pieces of the moon had united themselves together again in the world below, where darkness had always prevailed, it came to pass that the dead became restless and awoke from their sleep. They were astonished when they were able to see again; the moonlight was quite sufficient for them, for their eyes had become so weak that they could not have borne the brilliance of the sun. They rose up and were merry, and fell into their former ways of living. Some of them went to the play and to dance, others hastened to the public-houses, where they asked for wine, got drunk, brawled, quarreled, and at last took up cudgels, and belabored each other. The noise became greater and greater, and at last reached even to heaven.
Saint Peter who guards the gate of heaven thought the lower world had broken out in revolt and gathered together the heavenly troops, which are to drive back the Evil One when he and his associates storm the abode of the blessed. As these, however, did not come, he got on his horse and rode through the gate of heaven, down into the world below. There he reduced the dead to subjection, bade them lie down in their graves again, took the moon away with him, and hung it up in heaven.
The End