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Archive for January, 2010

Once you get past the shell…he was all hands….

January 24th, 2010 Karen No comments

Hmmm… sounds like a date or two I had way back when.

Actually, it’s a piece fresh off my work table.amorousammonites

Love is in the air for this pair of ammonites.  They are long exinct of course, but they seem to multiply and run rampant in my imagination for some strange reason.  Must be something about all those arms…. hmmm…

The entire necklace is not yet complete but the photo shows an idea I have on a possible design element.

Dancing with Red

January 12th, 2010 Karen No comments

Today was certainly an out of the ordinary kind of day.  I spent the day with a friend and collegue trying to coax a redtailed hawk named Red out of a very tall spruce tree.  It’s not really something that either of us really wanted to be doing.  Cindy, my friend and the Director of Avian Care with the Bird Treatment and Learning Center, has the usual small mountian of tasks and duties awaiting her, back at the clinic.  I myself should be chained to my work table getting back into a regular work schedule.   Cindy, has other birds to exam and treat and a board meeting to prepare for, I have a small show in a few rapidly approaching weeks.  Still, it is part of Cindy’s job to get Red, an escaped hawk back into her safe care.

So what the heck am I doing here?  Well, nothing was happening for me at the work table anyway, so why not give a helping hand (or at least lend moral support) where it may do some good.  In the studio, I find myself just sitting there. I pick up clay, put it back down.  I push it and poke it..even actually made a few things… but nothing really is engaging me.  Nothing feels very satisfying.  My muse, like Red, decided to make a break for it. 

I never really thought about having a “muse”… (a rather capricious spirit that bestows creative inspiration to artists)    It seems like an archaic, even fanciful concept, but I don’t know what else to really call it.  Ideas or inspiratons can hit you out of the blue and can just as suddenly desert you.  It is a very fleeting and fickle thing.  I’ve been feeling very annoyed and frustrated.  2009 was a bustling year for me, I enjoyed a long holiday break and now, it is time to get busy…..and  I need to get busy NOW!

 It’s just past sunrise, looking up at the big hawk, we are both delighted to have found him.  He had been leading volunteers on a hide and seek chase for 3 days.   Being an 11yr old, retired , falconry training bird, Red is wise in the ways of toying with his human keepers.  Cindy swings and tosses a dead mouse  up in the air to get Red’s attention.  She has it.  The hungry hawk jumps out of the spruce tree and swoops over her head for a closer look.  As he circles back around, it seems like every raven in the area descends on the small neighborhood cul de sac.   They mob the big predator and drive him back into the safety of the spruce.  A waiting game begins.  While the ravens circle and scold, the hawk and humans wait for them to grow bored and go elsewhere.  The temperature is in the single digits.  While we retreat to a warm van, Red puffs up a bit more and hunkers down.  Eventually, the ravens depart and Cindy continues with the flying mouse routine.  Red makes several impressive dives and passes.  He never lands on her gloved arm.  He just hits the mouse in passing, managing to just get an occassional chunk.

“It’s important”, she says, ” to be patient.  If you startle him by trying to grab him, he will never come down. We have to wait for him to settle on the glove and then calmly get hold of his jesses…then we can get him home.”  I knew how it was supposed to work, I’ve had enough bird training under my belt to understand.  Still, it was fascinating to watch Cindy and Red.  Cindy would show him the mouse, teasing and enticing.  At times, the hawk seemed to thumb his beak at us mere earth bound mammals .   At other times however,  he dove.  He would come close….closer, but not  landing.   It was like watching a strange exotic dance.

It struck me then.  Was I trying to grab my “muse”?  I have schedules to keep and product to produce, but perhaps I need to try a different approach.   Maybe I need to simply be patient,  stop try to force things. and move with a more relaxed pace.  Like Red, the “muse” will come only when it is good and ready. 

We didn’t manage to recapture Red today, but we are resaonably sure he will remain where he is overnight. He isn’t likely to go anywhere.   Tomorrow for both Red and myself, the dance will continue.  This evening, as I ready myself for bed, I feel reassured that all three of us, Cindy , Red and myself will eventually find what we’re after, it just may take a bit longer than we would like

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Evolution in 2010

January 12th, 2010 Karen No comments
Wow, 2009 went by in a flash, didn’t it?  I started last year worried about the economy like everyone else.  Those of us whom try to make a living on our art or craft find it especially stressful.  After all, nobody really NEEDS what we do.  When people across the country are cutting back on those “little extras” , a $28  hand sculpted caricature zipper pull would not seem to  land high on anyone’s priority list. 
Alaska has had the good fortune to not have been hit as hard by the floundering economy as else where in the country, but many people are still cautious.  While participating at some new venues (and several standard ones for me) I listened to many of my fellow vendors.  Some fretted and wrung their hands while others withheld any opinion, prefering to take the ”wait and see” approach.   Will small business production craftsperson or artists go extinct?
By year’s end, I made some interesting observations.  Those folks whom allowed the media’s gloom and doom to rattle their confidence did not seem to do very well.  Those whom maintained a more positive attitude, seemed happier with their bottom line. 
(a strange juju occurs in the confines of a craft booth during a show…customers will sense negatively and keep on walking.)
Another thing I noticed was the folks whom were happy with their sales (myself included) took steps to keep a potentially frugal customer interested.  This might mean introducing a new line of work that is more affordable or perhaps introducing an item that is very practical as well as beautiful,  fun & funky.  
So what does this mean?  Well to me, a former anthropology student, it boils down to evolve or die.  Those whom can not, or will, not change with the times (be they good or bad) will usually not survive in the long run.  (like the dinosaurs and the Neanderthals)
Thus  far, I have been able to continue keep my work evolving.  I heard folks whom have visited my booth year after year, comment on that very thing. “Gee, you just keep changing and getting better and better.”  To me, this is high praise.
So am I still worried?  Well, I can’t say current events don’t occasionally give me some anxiety, but, I do know that I refuse to live in constant fear and worry.  I will continue to do the best I can and hopefully, I will not find myself admist the the dinos and Neanderthals.
Best wishes to everyone  (even the dinosaurs) for a prosperous New Year.
4G USB drives for the funky techie

4G USB drives for the funky techie

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