Oh Egg

The meadowlarks are home again.  Home to me and my wild spaces.
Most mornings, I wake up to a blend of meadowlark and robin song drifting in the open bedroom window.
It’s tremendously beautiful and I feel I’ve been literally bouncing out of bed with a merry heart for so many days in a row.
Up the mountain, when I am running and the sound of mountain water is flowing all around,
I see the birds building their homes in the slender twigs of the caraganas and I wonder
if they would be angry with me for stealing one of their perfect eggs.  But how could a robin be truly angry?
We only ever seem to hear of the buffalo hunts, the easy tracking of mule deer through sagebrush, the arrows piercing elk hearts and silencing the bugle of a bulls forever,
but did the native people of North America collect eggs from the spring birds — claiming just one or two from a nearly full clutch
nestled so sweetly in a shallow home made of down, grass and horse mane?
Did they take those eggs home to their little deer skin tents and scramble them up for breakfast to eat with their bannock, hot from the fire?
I often wonder.
What about the pioneers, crossing the mountains and valleys of this continent, with their babies barefoot and wild, wrapped up in sun bleached gingham and freckles.
Did those westward leaning children seek out the robins nest in spring and appropriate an egg or two?  Did they give them to their mother because they matched her eyes, and gentled her calloused hands for a moment?
Did their mother smile at the sight of that gracious, perfect sky blue and forget all fears and hardships?
And for that matter, what is more golden and delicious than a freshly laid egg from a happy hen?  The smooth shell wrapping endlessly, as they tend to do.  The softly pebbled surface,
as though ready for a mighty bonspiel.  That easy motion of a wrist and carefully gripping finger tips tapping wall against Pyrex on the kitchen counter.  The surprise as the shell gives, unhinges and splats its treasure.  The whisk.  The whisk!
The mopping and sopping of French bread and the sizzle of egg whites on a cast iron frying pan.
Oh egg.
You glorious little miracle, you.

Empty Open: The Why Of The Organized Specimens

This weekend past, I sat down in the studio and knew I needed to make something, for the sake of creative habit.  I found myself thinking about hollow forms and all the designs I’ve made over the past five years that incorporate an element of hollowness.  I realized that I always fill a hollow form or close it — I never leave them empty and open.  I wondered why and I wondered if I was simply being sensible about how I designed around a hollow form element or if there was something I needed to address with regards to my self.  The opposite of full and closed is empty and open.  Why have I never considered the other option while making hollow forms?  I realized I felt a need to explore the option of making them empty and open.  When I realized this, I felt something stir in my chest and rattle like wind through willow bones.

I sat down at my studio bench and designed a sort of open, shallow container that I planned to fabricate and leave empty and open.  I sawed out the components, cleaned them, trued the edges, cleaned them a second time in acid, hand sifted them and fired them until I achieved the colors I was hoping for — a white enamel over-fires along edges and thinly sifted areas as a beautiful, minty, spruce green. It’s a very lovable color.  I never grow tired of it.  So I fired and fired again until I saw the colors I wanted.  Once the piece was finished, I thought it so smooth, lovely and extraordinary, as well as minimal, textural, empty and open.  As I sat there and held it in my hand, the way I felt about it changed, I found I felt slightly uncomfortable.  I wondered if anyone else would like this object so empty and open (which is something that I rarely think about when I’m making things, I never wonder if a piece will be loved by others, I just make the objects the way I like them to be).  I can’t quite explain it with words, but looking down at the empty open object in the palm of my hand was like staring at something made of bareness and truth.  I wanted to avert my eyes or cover myself with fig leaves.  It was the strangest thing.  I wondered if I had surrendered to the steadiness of expectation, with regards to crafting hollow form objects and jewelry, and then filling them or closing them?  Perhaps I was over thinking things, or perhaps I was on the cusp of understanding something about myself?

So what did I do?  I filled the shallow container, I made it less empty and open.  I placed a tremendously delicate little, chartreuse, pod-like component on the edge of the empty open and I felt silly because my goal was to explore the empty open and here I had made the object less than what it was supposed to be — though it now looked like it was more!  So I sat down and began again.  I made a second shallow vessel and it was very fine and I liked the enamel work very well, perhaps more than the first.  When the piece was cool, I held this empty open in my hands and marveled at the inflections of the enameled hues.  It was was lovely, open and empty.  And then I made another chartreuse pod-like specimen and made the empty open less empty and open.  I allowed myself this.  I didn’t want to rush.

Then I began a third shallow container and the same thing happened again!  When I came inside that night, I brought the components I had made with me and I thought these three objects were marvelous, reaching and perfectly beautiful, even if they were less empty open than I had attempted to make them.  I wondered if this was a failed exploration on my part or if making empty open and being empty open is meant to be a gradual process for me.  If I let go a little bit everyday and allow myself to unfold from previous perceptions and habits, bit by bit, might this exploration of empty open truly arrive at itself?  I think about people living in their houses, filling every room and shutting all the doors, is there something lost in that fullness?  Think about being in an empty room, once it is filled, the fall of light changes, the bounce of sound is obstructed.  What if we were to leave more things empty open in our lives, in the world?  What if I were to leave more of my hollow forms empty open, what kind of small space would be achieved, and in that space, how would light cascade and sound re-sing itself?  Doesn’t emptiness result in some gorgeous sort of fullness?  Perhaps empty open is actually fullness purified?

I reckon making something empty and open leaves space for freshness, change, new growth.  Perhaps the key is to make yourself empty and open from time to time, like spring cleaning — a purge!  Out with the old and in with the new!  Like a bite of pickled ginger after a nibble of sushi, a cleanse of palate.  Perhaps empty open requires daily work, just like everything.  How does empty open affect our relationships, our work, our time?

What I want to do with empty open, out in my studio, is this:  I want to feel comfortable leaving an enameled vessel this way.  I want to arrive at a point where I know it’s ok to leave it empty open.  I want to feel comfortable with the starkness and the space, the way I’m comfortable on a mountain, in a douglas fir stand, all by myself.  I don’t want to fill things out of habit.  I want my intentions to rule over material fullness.  I want to be free and safe in the empty open spaces I create.

Today, I’m going to try again.  Now that I understand more of the WHY behind this exploration, I feel more confident that I can create something that is bare and sweetly vulnerable.  The studio has been warming up for an hour now, I’m going to go get in it.

Have a glorious Monday, all of you.  This is your chance to make a new beginning, every week.  Go forth courageously, I will too.

xx

One Stone At A Time

[sterling and 23 karat gold]
Last night the wind was really screaming while I was laying awake in bed.  Anytime it’s windy I find the night is very unrestful for me, but last night, I felt a bit anxious too about general life things that are happening here.  So there I was, laying awake in bed, listening to the dogs yap in their sleep and the wind screeching through the blue spruce when I suddenly remembered something, quite out of the blue.  A few years ago I was passing through Vancouver on route to Squamish, on a climbing trip.  My climbing partner and I stopped off at Stanley Park for a stroll and while walking along the sea wall we came upon a fellow who was balancing stones — building precarious cairns.  We sat down on the bulkhead and watched him for quite some time.  I remember thinking to myself, “Look at that fellow.  He lives his life stone by stone.  No more.  No less.”  I watched him scrabble through the rocks, carefully selecting the next large stone he would add to his cairns.  At some point, I spoke up and asked him how he managed to balance rocks as he did, for some of his stone sculptures were tremendously high and rather impossible looking to me: they looked so tipsy but held so staunchly.  He looked at me and gruffly stated, “Oh, each stone has a special patch of crystals it will stand on.  It’s just a matter of finding that special place of balance and then using it.
Indeed.
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I don’t know why I remembered that experience last night but I’m glad I did.
This current obsession I have with cairns is continuing and I don’t mind one bit.
It’s like I’m out in the studio performing my own balancing tricks, one stone at a time, as each day passes.
Working on this series has been very cleansing and some of the poisons that plagued me last year are finally finding their cure.
These forms and colors are such therapy.  This mind space is such calm.
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These are some simple little rings, elegant and minimal, built of sterling and festooned with 23 karat gold in some cases.  When they aren’t singing their jangling song, they’ll be reminding you to take things one stone at a time.
All day.  Every day.

On Letter Writing

Whilst reading a book in the bath the other morning, I came across this lovely paragraph by the eternally quotable L.M. Montgomery:

“In a generation or two letters will be obsolete.  Everyone will talk to absent friends the world over by radio.  It will be nice; but something will be lost with letters.  The world can’t eat its cake and have it, too.  And none of these things really “save time.”  They only fill it more breathlessly full.

[Saturday December 16, 1922 — Volume 3, L.M. Montgomery Selected Journals]

Spot on, Maud!  Spot on!  Well, except the part about the radios, we call that the interwebs these days, my dear and lovely friend.

I sat down that morning to do a little letter writing to distant friends because I find the work relaxing and joyful, even when the news I share is dark or sad in nature.  I’ve always been a letter writer as far back as I can remember.  In grade one, I had a penpal in Moosomin, Saskatchewan and she never wrote me back but I wrote her religiously and zealously on a monthly basis for a full year.  I remember one day her non-responses really miffed me and I wrote her a letter to tell her she was an awful penpal.  After that, she finally wrote me a letter, it was the only one she ever wrote and shortly after, I admitted defeat and never wrote again.  I guess some penpalships just don’t stick, and that’s fine.  In real life, people fail to jive all the time!  Why wouldn’t it be true of letter making as well?

Anyway, now I’m just rambling about my epistle failures of the past.What I really wanted to share with you is the why of my love for letter writing.  I like to make some moments of my life slow and sacred.  For this reason, I am a bather (additionally and admittedly, I also have a gorgeous tub).  It forces me to slow down and relax for a stint when I make a bath and get in it for a soak.  Letter writing does the same thing for me, it causes me to slow down and invest myself in a moment before I get carried away by the tides of life again — that is to say, it is an activity that pleasantly locks me in a moment, it forces me to be present.  I think a well written letter is a work of art and for the most part, a lost art.  A letter is a long distance dialogue and should be viewed as a continuous conversation in my opinion.  A well written letter should contain your own fresh life news, responses to the news that was shared with you by the correspondent as well as a fresh batch of questions or declarations that will incite further dialogue in future letters.  Nothing is more drab than receiving a letter wherein a gal only discusses her own life and doesn’t give a girl anything to respond to in the way of opinions or general rebuttal.  Trust me, you’ll find yourself scuffling about for something of interest to say when writing back.  Besides, don’t you want to know more about your friend?  Don’t you want to ask questions and discover each other?  Which reminds me of another quote I read recently:

So many people are shut up tight inside themselves like boxes, yet they would open up, unfolding quite wonderfully, if only you were interested in them.

[Sylvia Plath]

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When it comes to a successful penpalship, I have a few suggestions for you, please feel free to contribute to my points in the comment section of this post, I’m sure you have wonderful ideas to add to this list:

1.  Buy stationary that you love, or make your own, either way, write letters on paper that pleases you aesthetically.  It makes the work a joy to sit down to and it makes the letter a joy to receive.  My favorite places to find stationary are in gallery or museum stores, Etsy or TJ Maxx!  I’ve also been known to write letters on leaves, birch bark, and other natural detritus!  Just call me Jilly Crockett.

2.  Set aside a time to write your letters so that it feels like a special time of sharing.  I like to write letters in the morning at my kitchen island when the light is brilliant and new and my cup of tea or coffee is delightfully hot.

3.  When responding to a friend by mail, keep their most recent letter on hand so that you can refer to it directly.  This allows you to address any ongoing conversation in your previous correspondence as well as answer any questions that might have been asked.  ***To be fair, my life is so disjunct here in the wintertime that I often misplace the letters that come my way or when I’m in the mood to write and am free to sit down for a stint, I don’t have the energy to go to my letter dresser and find the most recent piece of mail from my friend — I’m a much more artful letter writer in the summer months when life is a different sort of crazy.  Sorry, to all my dearest penpals.***

4.  Write letters to give, not to receive.  Write letters to put a piece of joy and hope in the mailbox of a friend.  Finding a handwritten letter in a mailbox is like discovering treasure.  I often meet the mail carrier when I see him coming, eager to receive my mail, eager to chat with him and discuss the day with a lovely person.  Letters bring light to my days and that’s a light I like to give to my friends and acquaintances in return.

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This week, I wrote eight letters.  How about you?

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It’s Saturday.  I just found myself yearning for a garden and a farmer’s market and perhaps freshly picked beets or carrots from the rows in the backyard.  Spring is springing and it’s quite nice.  I feel something gentle sprouting in my soul and I’m beginning to anticipate the summer months.

Be well, you beauties.  Have a glorious weekend.