I heart kid’s art

Ford’s Dalek drawing

Both children have the most charming creative style. They like to have, at all times, paper on their easels, and they like to let me know when it’s time to refresh the canvas. So I clamp a piece of paper onto the easel, and the kids do all the rest.

While I’m on the phone in the studio, Ford is kneeling on the floor before his easel, oil crayon in hand, gracefully weaving arabesques onto white paper like a dancer, partly like an experienced surgeon. He amazes me with his consistency and experimentation. At his age, I was drawing pure representation: rooms and school buses and horses, familiar things. Ford, thirty years later, has the same hair and chin, but the picture is completely different. He fills the page, works at will, picks up where he leaves off, whenever he chooses. One piece may hang, awaiting completion, for three days. He will flit back into the mudroom when I take a break to read mail, and will deliberately choose a medium, often something new that week, and experiment with the flow of the material on paper, the texture of its friction. Sometimes, he’ll add a Dalek, or a robot, or some other recognizable icon of current obsession.
Here, a Dalek for sure:

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His abstract, expressionistic style has remainded consistent since he began making collages, at 18 months. Then, we used to sit at the dinette in the airstream, paper on the table and both weilding glue sticks. I’d ask him where this piece of torn paper wanted to go? Where does that piece belong? Do you think it belongs on the paper? Like conversation, documented in layers and textures, and I’ll remember this with a certain piognancy, as I remember his first steps (which he took in the same trailer!)

Chas is the same. Whether he has taken cues from Ford or not, he is also uninhibited. But while Ford’s marks bear a signature pattern, Chas’ style is vigorously expressive in one moment, exquisitely drawn in another. His hand bears dramatic pressure here, a faint scrawl there. Many times, lately, he is drawing something important to him, something concrete. A sea anemone, for example:

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I look at them and grin, thinking to myself that it couldn’t get any better than this. It’s one of my most passionate goals, taht they retain this sense of urgency to create, to be free with their ability, uninhibited by convention. We will always keep a space for them, wherever we are, where their mind can pause (with or without the castaway shoes and fallen markers) and play with materials at hand.

I wish this for you, too. 🙂

SPC :: Patterns :: week 2

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At the de Young Museum, I stood in the gift store, glazed with hunger, asking Damon where we should eat and still finding enough stamina to keep picking things up and looking at them: a Lomo fisheye, supersampler, and this piece of cardboard with a plexiglass kaleidescopic lens in the middle of it novelty. What was it for? Just looking through wasn’t enough. So Damon took my picture. And I took Ford’s
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and Chas’
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and decided that novelty lenses are fun! what are some other fun things to photograph through?….

more SPC patterns here.

Refresher at the DeYoung Museum

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We drove into the dripping fogcloud, nestled ourselves in Golden Gate Park;
ran across Strybing’s damp green lawns, held hands across Lincoln avenue;
climbed sculptures, tripped security fences;
touched artwork, careened down staircases;
shotgunned white halls, leapt off sacred benches;
sweated, grimaced, laughed, shrieked, held hands;
faceplanted onto a mirrored glass exhibit case,
you guessed who: Chas
took pictures, toppled glass vases;
stampeded back through the arboretum,
held hands under the weepy eucalyptus;
chased squirrels, held hands across Lincoln Avenue;
squirmed in our seats, drank Thai beer;
savored a steaming bowl of pumpkin green curry
corn cakes, satay and pad thai
held hands under the table
another beer, a better reference point;
Amoeba records for a Dr. Who series DVD,
Goodwill, lucky me, offered
a handmade, tailored vintage women’s western blouse
Then a quiet moment off Haight, where I brainstormed in peace;
Then snaked along the San Andreas faultline,
watched the fogclouds creep over Skyline
like a suspended avalanche,
a stampede of white buffalo, frozen in time,
pink-tinged crests from the hidden sunset;
and sundown’s reflection off Loma Linda,
A blushing blue bear on our horizon.
And suddenly we were home.

++more photos are over on flickr++