Showing posts with label snowy mountains. Show all posts
Showing posts with label snowy mountains. Show all posts

Monday, August 26, 2013

Saw the Mountains


This is a photo of a saw I painted over ten years ago.  It was done in acrylic and I'd forgotten about it until just recently.  It hangs in my Papa and Daka's home.


You can see profiles of faces in the clouds...


...and in the mountains.


These fir trees turned out so pretty.  I love the color of the blue.


More cloud faces and then my signature.  I remember I had so much fun painting this.  In cleaning out my shed recently, I discovered a bunch of old saws.  I'll be painting them soon.

Have a lovely day!

Friday, August 23, 2013

Snowy Mountains


To my joy, my brother and his family came to visit last week.  They camped out in the back yard...and I loved it.

While my dear brother and his family were visiting, along with walking, laughing, talking and canoeing--we did a lot of painting.  What fun--to share what I love to do most with those I love so much.  This little painting is the size of a baseball card!  This tiny painting started off as waves on an ocean.  Then my incredibly talented nephew suggested they looked like mountains...and so mountains they became.  I LOVE how this turned out.

Ah, I had so much fun with my family.  I admit to missing them today, more than I can put into words.

Have a lovely day--and think cool thoughts!  (grin)

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Unicorns and Pink Meadows


I hope you don't mind that some of the stories behind my pictures are filled with real life--and death. This story is painful--but ends with great hope.

I remember the day our beloved Grandmother Jenny flew to heaven. I sat in the upstairs hallway and cried in the dark. She ran into the arms of her Savior after a long hard night of struggle.

I began to paint. First a stormy reddish sky. As I wept, I crunched sodden browns, streaks of yellow and shadows of darkness into the murky horizon.

I sat back to ponder the stories Grammie had told of her life. Sharp peaks of hardship thrust through the years. She'd conquered them, one step at a time. I knifed thick paint from my palette, forming jagged mountains. Then tears as I covered the jutting peaks with cool snows reflecting pink from the angry skies above.

As I remembered her words of wisdom and faith, gentle tree-clad hills swelled beneath the mountains . . . I thought of her laughter, and the twinkle of her blue eyes and a bright meadow blossomed with faint pink flowers.

I smiled through my tears, recalling Grammie's vivid imagination. I retraced her wonderful stories peopled with elves and faeries. Then from my brush, the outline of a unicorn emerged. His white coat danced with pinks from the painful red horizon, reflecting the cheery pink flowers at his feet. His dark red and pink mane swooped joyfully against the mountains, and his face grew kind and winsome . . .

Spreading out from the unicorn's feet, yellow centers appeared in the pink flowers, twinkling vividly in the tender green grasses of the meadow.

I looked at that painting for a long, long time, thinking about how delighted Grammie would have been. Then I signed my name.

Painting has a way of expressing my heart.

In the hours I spent wielding my paintbrush, I worked through my pain, sorrow and feelings of anger and loss--to precious memories of my Grandmother's courageous life, to thoughts of her laughter and whimsey, to arrive in a place of peace.

And I can feel her smiling.