In loving memory of my kid brother. Allan Max DeVore Jr. May 14, 1962 - December 30, 2017
My brother was a pain growing up. I mean it, a real pain. He got into trouble all the time. He was a handful for my parents. I remember my mom losing her patience more than once. It wasn't just that insider view either. He was trouble for everybody. He had run ins with the local grocery store clerks as well as teachers at school. A little boy full of mischief. Really, it wasn't anything more than that. But it was exhausting. Labeled as dyslexic with ADHD he struggled in school. He should have graduated a year after me, in 1980. Instead it was 1983. My brother and I got along more in our teen years than we did as children. Still, I thought he was a bit of a dunce. It wasn't until he left high school and moved away that he really blossomed. Out away from those preconceived ideas others had about him, he grew into a man. I was stunned.... and humbled.
He met and married Cara, now more like a sister than a sister in law to me. Under the wings of her and her family, my brother thrived. He built a little playground for his kids, and a deck.....and a garage....and renovated rooms and floors....etc. I remember visiting him one day in their home and I was in disbelief at his incredible handiwork. He was quite a carpenter. He worked as a machinist. Wait? Didn't that involve math? And when did he learn to tear apart a car and put it back together? As it turns out, my brother was pretty sharp. But he couldn't sit still. Give his hands something to do and let him go. Sit him at a desk and you are asking for trouble.
My dad and I were discussing this blossoming. Dad said "Chuck (Allan's father in law) taught him to use a hammer. I couldn't get him to stay home long enough." I think dad was feeling like he came up short as a father. But, dad, that is not true. As a kid, I remember mom and dad having water battles with us in the summer. They played with us, they chased us, and took us sledding. I remember building an oven out of coat hangers and aluminum foil on a snowy hillside on grandma's farm. We made biscuits and drank hot chocolate. Dad gave us a lesson in simple survival. He taught us that you didn't need much to get by. Dad got involved in scouting with my brother. He played with us, he taught us and he got after us when we were bad. Even as a rebellious teen, dad had more influence on me than he could possible know. If he didn't like a boyfriend, suddenly I didn't like them. For some reason, it mattered what my dad thought. I am sure it was the same for my brother. Whatever shortcomings my parents had, real or imagined, I never noticed.
My mom and dad were young. Dad was 16 when he married and 17 when I was born. They grew up along with us. And they stayed together for more than 30 years. They taught us about adventure and commitment.
During another conversation, dad and I were discussing the age of maturity. I felt I was at least 26 before I felt like I had grown into adulthood. Dad said he thinks he was closer to 30. The point is, we are still learning and growing well past the high school years.
So here is my first point, Parents are only a part of a person's journey. The other part of the journey takes its path somewhere out in the world. We can only hope that our kids encounter acceptance and love as did my brother. Parent's, whatever shortcomings you think you have, know that you are enough. Just do your best and say a prayer for the rest.
The next point I want to make is that we should endeavor to be the kind of people we hope our kids find in the world. Be the one to believe in the emerging adult. It matters. In a world full of naysayers and bullies, be kind. It matters
My brother was a fun dad. He was a prankster grandpa. He loved all things native american, wolves and his mustang. He won trophies in car shows for his souped up 'tang. He baked cookies and sent them at Christmas. He made a point to keep in touch. I got frequent texts from him. I will miss him. I will miss his pranks. I will miss his light.
Wayt on Art
Wednesday, January 10, 2018
Saturday, October 7, 2017
A Journey Worth Taking
An Idea
A painting begins with and idea or a fleeting image. As we traveled through Pennsylvania, I came across a home nestled in the hills. I was attracted to the neatly planted rows that followed the lines of hilly land. It was so graceful. I watched the clouds cast shadows across the distant hills and watched the sunlight dance through leaves and spill onto the roadway. I soaked it all in. This was home for me. These hills in Pennsylvania. I always enjoy the passing landscape. I just had to paint it.
So, snap some pics, plot it out and lay down some paint...The Painting Process
The Initial Critique
At this point in the painting, I need to iron out the composition. Color and details will take care of themselves as we move on. Movement in an image gives the eyes a path to follow through the painting but I need to make sure there is enough visual interest to make one WANT to move through the painting. The paved road became a dirt road, a fence appeared and some elements were added to the hills in the back. I know I need something at the bottom of the painting. I am planning some interesting shadows. I know that will work itself out as I go on.
Texture
Once I am pretty satisfied with the composition, I add some texture. Adding random texture at this point gives me some new opportunities. Sometimes it gets in my way and I fight with it. Other times it provides some happy accidents. The texture sometimes determines where my branches will be, or where the bits of color in a field will become flowers. Working with texture provides some magic!
Push and Pull
Here I alternate between plain gel medium (Heavy body) and gel medium mixed with paint and glazing medium. I bounce between using a brush or palette knife. Using a palette knife allows me to rake color across the raised areas leaving original color in the valleys. Sometimes an area seems off in color or value and I apply glazes with a brush. As the glazing medium gets caught next to ridges in the texture, it puddles and offers some cool effects! Working this way allows me to keep changing the color and value until it feels right. Sometimes I will deliberately throw in an unexpected color, just to get my brain unfrozen. It is a way to get unstuck when I can't figure out what to do.
The Value of a critique
For this painting, I asked for a bit of input from artists and students. Trained eyes and untrained eyes both offer meaningful direction. I knew the painting was too "green" and earthy yellow. It was a group of high school art students that suggested a color change on the house. They even went so far as to pinpoint the EXACT red that was needed. Another student suggested splashes of purple flowers. An artist friend changed my ideas about my shadow colors in the row of trees surrounding the house. All of it was worthwhile. Collaboration makes things better.
I love it when art just happens. I seldom have a rigid plan in mind when I start a painting. I always get to a place where I think "this isn't going to work". But it usually does end up working. Sometimes I get a painting that has some good stuff, but not enough to be "sale worthy". If I can get a few good moments in a painting, it is worth the journey in doing it.
Wednesday, August 16, 2017
A Tribute to a Dog 2
Just a couple of short videos
Update Jan 2018
It took a while, I had to set it aside for other projects. I really struggled with this one as to how much of a background I wanted. I finally decided that I needed some hint of a landscape as the tilted ground plane just made it so the dog would not stand up from it. I tried different color experiments to get the dog to "advance" but I just couldn't get it to work. So, I hinted at some background and it gave me the depth of field I needed. I am not sure but, I now think her snout is too long. But, I had to get it off the easel.
Monday, July 24, 2017
Tribute to a Dog
Maddie was my neighbor's dog. She was a sweet old soul. She would trot over to get some love in spite of the special collar that would gently remind her of boundaries. Many mornings I would catch her peeking in my back door window. She was gentle yet had a definite "presence" about her. One day she had a lump and within a couple weeks she was gone. I actually miss this dog and she wasn't even mine. Her owner said she was special, and he felt a deep bond with her. She loved trekking around the woods with him. He was lucky to have her, and she was lucky to have him. He is a young man, engaged to be married to another dog lover. He helps his mom and has cut down several trees for us over the past couple of years. He has a wonderful cooking hobby, and we have benefited from this as well. He brings us goodies for our parties. Well, needless to say, he never wants anything in return. So I have decided to paint him a portrait of his beloved Maddie. I asked him for a photo and he sent one where her back was turned and she was looking intently at something in the distance.
I am often asked about my technique. I always say that it starts with a well developed under-painting. This is where the thinking begins. I take a few things from the photo that I love. The way that the shadows break up the space and make that dynamic "X" composition. I knew I didn't want her to be central but I did want some empty space around her. I wanted the canvas to be large enough to pay homage to this sweet girl, but not so large that it demanded a prominent spot in the home. Size matters. And mood. I definitely want to keep that far away look, and the way the light hits her chest and legs. After much thought, I end up with my under-painting that maps out my initial decision about composition and mood.
Next I start adding texture by adding a layer of clear gel medium. I apply it with a palette knife. In the next layers I begin experimenting with color by raking color over the bumps created by the now dry gel medium. At this point I am not thinking too much about color combinations. I am simply thinking in terms of warm and cool colors. I am also trying to decide how much I want to include in terms of details. Should I keep the background ambiguous? Or add a detailed backdrop?
So I move on to the dog for a while, adding in more detail to his markings. All the while I am working with glazing medium and gel mediums, sometimes mixed with paint and sometimes just layers of medium to alter texture.
For now, the dog is black and white (and Payne's Grey). I know I need to add some other colors into the dog, but I need to resolve my thoughts on the background. For now, I have decided that the background is too "fantasy" and a bit cliche. I know I want to add a more earthly feel.
Stay tuned.
As you can see, this process allows the painting to evolve. It allows me to change my mind and gives me space to think. The result is that you can see bits of color peeking through the layers beneath. It creates a visual texture as well as a tactile one. But more importantly, it speaks to both the tedium and the spontaneity of the creative process.
Thursday, March 17, 2016
Insurmountable Grief
I stand, bare feet on
the ground.
It climbs up through my body.
Emanating from all corners of the world.
I am a channel, it is passing through.
I listen
and I hear.
A tale of inexplicable darkness.
Terrifying thoughts.
A yearning to soothe.
Prayer, a primal inclination.
I'm holding you
Smelling your hair
Feel my breath say
I started thinking about this drawing some time ago. I wrote the above poem in response to some things that were going on in the world and in my personal life as well at the time. I wasn't ready to be that exposed. Today, after visiting some of my old drafts, I feel I can more comfortably share this.
This is an older drawing. It was a class assignment in college. We were instructed to use tessellations. I immediately thought of quilts... and something hiding under it. I thought of menacing monsters hiding beneath the surface and rupturing the fabric. That was where I began with the assignment. Art can be a way of exploring when you just leap off of an idea. It ended up as a story about my own faith and my own fears. I understood then, as I do now, that there is a common human experience here.
The drawing is called "Security Blanket"
The saying in the corner "Don't be afraid, it comes to cover, not to consume" is a reference to what I have come to understand about my own depression. The saying rests at the edge of something washing over the blanket in waves. Like a tide. It doesn't have to end me, I just have to hold my breath and wait for it to recede is the concept. I had one very serious episode of depression after the birth of one of my children. I had never experienced such personal darkness before or since then. I was afraid of my own thoughts. It took a couple of years to feel 100% right again. Even after I "healed" from that experience, I had a "fear" of the little "mini depressions". What if it took over again? What if I went back down into that pit again? I was terrified of depression. But, with each passing wave of depression episodes, I began to see a pattern. It came and went like a tide. I began to trust that pattern, recognize it, and hold my breath. Over the years, the waters have become calmer. They still rise and fall, but not to the extremes they once did. Now it is just a surface nuisance.
This is an older drawing. It was a class assignment in college. We were instructed to use tessellations. I immediately thought of quilts... and something hiding under it. I thought of menacing monsters hiding beneath the surface and rupturing the fabric. That was where I began with the assignment. Art can be a way of exploring when you just leap off of an idea. It ended up as a story about my own faith and my own fears. I understood then, as I do now, that there is a common human experience here.
The drawing is called "Security Blanket"
The children on the image are labeled "Faith, Hope and Love" Love stitches himself to the fabric where a piece is missing. He wears "Christmas clothes".
The crown of thorns in the corner is the source of the "thread". These parts of the drawing are an obvious reflection of my own Christian faith. Having said that, I think that faith, hope and Love are common themes throughout all religions and are no stranger to the non-religious as well.
People say things that tear us apart. It allows the fear to take over and break through. "I just don't think I love..." Death, illness and broken relationships wreck our sense of safety and well being.
I came to posses a coin, I can't remember how I acquired it. It was a coin with symbols on it and it said "3 months". I learned that it was from Alcoholics Anonymous and represented the 3 months sober achievement. That coin is shadowed here, near this menacing hand. I have friends that hang in that precarious balance between sobriety and addiction. That coin speaks about a person that has made it 3 months and hopes to make it ...... but I have the discarded coin. What does that mean? So, here I place my thoughts about them, that unknown person and their struggle.
I am a people watcher. I often worry about strangers, about their lives. I wonder if they are okay. Sometimes I see that they are not okay, and I have no idea how to fix it for them. Or even if I were capable of fixing it.
On other squares there are symbols of various religions, including my own, as well as symbols that represent the concepts of "Justice and Law". There are symbols of Medicine as well. These are the things that we use to make ourselves feel better. We make ourselves feel "safe". They are the pieces of our security blanket. The things we hold onto like a child in need of their comfort.
The monster beneath is more human than not. It is amazing how emotionally fragile we are at times. Sometimes we are strong and at other times, not so much. Just below the surface of each of us. Just below the surface of our humanity as a whole.....there is trouble. Every now an then it ruptures and it can be frightening. But no matter where our "fabric" fails us, there remains Faith, Hope and Love. Those three things can work with the scraps of us.
Well, there's plenty more to think about here. But at the end of the day I have a naive belief in the kind of childlike love that says "No matter what you do, how you fail, how you hurt.....I will love you. Even if I myself have to be your missing piece." When my faith in that idea fails me, and it often does, I just hope. I hope that it is true.
For further reading, you may enjoy:
Walt Whitman's "The Base of all Metaphysics"
It is one of my favorites.
Thursday, January 21, 2016
My Morning Drive
I am a visual artist.
It will come as no surprise that I have a gazillion random photos on my
cell phone. I have pictures of odd
imprints in picnic tables, tree bark and half fallen fences. I consider my cell phone an extension of my
sketch books. It snags little snippets
of detail that I want to remember. Sometimes the cell phone camera just can’t
do it. This morning I found myself
wishing I had both, my “good” camera, and the skill to use it. I had neither one this morning. Even if I could sear the image into my mind,
I could not possibly sketch it. It
simply wouldn’t translate well into a quick thumbnail sketch. I don’t know if I
have the skill to work it into some future painting but I am compelled to lock
the image into some shareable memory. It
was a fleeting, temporary thing. I wish
you could have seen it. I have resigned
myself to write it.
My Morning Drive
It is cold here in St. Clair. The Weather Channel ap on my phone says it is
12 degrees. The sky is that boring bland
white. I look out my kitchen window and
immediately feel some remorse for not having filled the bird feeder. The trees are covered with a soft white
substance. I think it looks like frost, but
not quite. It really reminds me of a
pussy willow branch, all covered with fuzz.
All the trees, shrubs, bushes and weeds are covered with it. It is a cold fuzzy morning.
I love driving my friend’s children to school in the
morning. It gets me out of bed and
moving. I am always thankful for that
drive past the river as the sun comes up.
It is so stunning to see the sun cast such lovely colors across the
river.
I snap up a coffee from the drive through at Tim Hortons and
we make our way up Clinton Street . We get a little acceleration going just
before the railroad tracks so we can catch a little “air” as we go over
them. It is our little rollercoaster
thrill every morning. It is a guaranteed
laugh. That is always a good way to
start the day if you ask me.
Then it is Carney to Range as we make our way to
Marysville.
It was there, driving along Range road this morning that I
noticed the magic of this morning. The
sun casts its light on the trees and brush.
The trees always have that pink color to them in the morning. Today was no different. Pink trees with splashes of vibrant gold as
you travel along. But this morning all
the trees and bushes seemed to be covered in a fine, magnificent, glitter! To the right of me there were tall trees with
pink upper branches on the left, a small clearing of golden bushes. All covered with glitter! All along the road, barren bushes all fuzzy
white were blurry and sparkled!
That was it. I
couldn’t take my eyes off of the scenery.
It was a Disney kind of magic and I was so grateful to be alive and
witnessing it this morning. Carpe
Diem? Nope. I don’t want to seize anything. I just want to sit still and watch it until
the heat of the sun makes it all go away.
It was all I could do to keep at the task at hand. I had to deliver that precious little stinker
in my back seat to school. Secretly, I
wanted to just pull over along the side of the road, drink my coffee and snap a
bunch of pictures. Instead, I just drove
on, watching the magic. All the while
offering up the whispered thought, “thank you”.
Sunday, January 5, 2014
Out of the Ashes (World Wide Photo Walk - 2013 - Detroit)
I have been writing. I just haven't felt that I have anything worth publishing. There's a big ole snowstorm looming and it seemed like a good time to revisit some of my "drafts". This one stood out today because I have been thinking of grabbing up my camera and trekking out to capture some winter shots. As I re- read what I have written, another concern comes to the surface of my thoughts. Heidelberg. It would seem that someone wants to burn it to the ground. I know people don't always "get it" when it comes to the Heidelberg. I don't expect everyone to "get it", but I DO expect everyone to respect it. I am sickened by the blatant bully with a box of matches that would seek to stifle the creative voice. Personally, I think Heidelberg is as important to Detroit as Duchamp's "Fountain" was/is to modern art. Duchamp's "Fountain" is a bookmark tucked in the pages of our art history. It marks the moment we begin to see things in a different way. It marks the moment we begin to notice the beauty in the mundane and grotesque. Heidelberg is the moment in Detroit's history when we begin to see the voice of the common man. He is opinionated and concerned. He is compassionate and hopeful. And we notice. Something significant has happened here on Heidelberg Street and I am inclined to think we should preserve it. That is my rock solid opinion. I don't expect everyone to agree. That is okay with me. I am not asking you to throw money at it. Please, just don't burn it. Have enough respect for another mans opinion to just not burn it.
The following is the "draft" written after attending my first organized photowalk last summer:
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Part I - Technically Speaking
I went on my first ever "photo walk" this weekend. I had one simple goal, that was to learn to use at least two unfamiliar features of my camera. I sat up the night before the walk, reading my camera's manual. I decided upon a few features that I was determined to use, and familiarized myself once again, with a few old basics. We started out early in the morning with a trip to Detroit's Eastern Market. It was a dark rainy morning and the lighting proved to be a delightful challenge for this novice. It was in this moment that I had chosen to figure out that little lightening bolt button to the side of the flash. I have always avoided using my built in flash because it washed everything out, created awful shadows and just didn't seem to travel very far. I had a friend with me that has a similar camera. She's managed to learn a thing or two along the way, and she gleans a bit from me at times. Together, we managed quite nicely. Although I am not completely satisfied with the flash images, I have made significant progress in my ability to control the flash lighting.
The next stop was "The Heildelberg Project". The night before our visit, one of the houses burned to the ground. It was still smoldering. Again, I found the challenge in catching the faint wisps of smoke rising up out of the pile that was once a house, once an artists statement. The sky was white and overcast and offered no contrast that would make the smoke visible. I was forced to look deeper into the backdrop of my subject. This proved to be a good exercise.
Our final stop was a couple of homes in the historic Indian Village area of Detroit. Once again, I was challenged with lighting. With the significant number of photographers in one place, all shooting at once, respectful dodging and ducking out of sight became a bit of a challenge as well. I was a little more timid about shooting in the houses. I take too long to get my shot, so I settled with a few quick pics and made a point to just get out of the way of the more experienced photographers. The houses were a challenge for another walk for me.
Part 2 - Finding the Art
Aside from the delightful technical challenges of the photo walk, I found myself energized by simply looking through my camera's lens. I am searching for the story that Detroit wants to tell me. We are having a talk, the city and I, about love and fear.
At Eastern Market, my thoughts turned to the interactions of the people. The diversity of cultures within the city and the happiness of the people were apparent. There were smiles and laughter and music in abundance. The care and attention to detail in the display of goods was amazing. There was pride in those piles of produce. There was prosperity in an impoverished city. I came in from the suburbs with a fairly expensive camera hanging from my neck. And I wasn't afraid.
At Heildelberg I noticed that the tree/ sculpture was smoking like a chimney. I thought it was deliberate and I wondered how it was done. Only after realizing that the house had burned to the ground only the night before, did I make the connection. It wasn't long before the fire truck arrived to extinguish the tree and revisit the smoldering house. Fate could not have orchestrated a better teachable moment for the more than 50 photographers standing around the scene. There was action shots, reflective puddles, steam, mud, smoke.... and a stray cat. Fate had much more than just the technical challenges. All of it fit in with the art. All of it fit the story of the art. All of it echo the conversation the art was having with me. I needed my images to capture the smoke, the steam, the mud, the puddles of water, and I needed to capture the artists story that still lived inside of the chaos and cooling embers.
The following is the "draft" written after attending my first organized photowalk last summer:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Part I - Technically Speaking
I went on my first ever "photo walk" this weekend. I had one simple goal, that was to learn to use at least two unfamiliar features of my camera. I sat up the night before the walk, reading my camera's manual. I decided upon a few features that I was determined to use, and familiarized myself once again, with a few old basics. We started out early in the morning with a trip to Detroit's Eastern Market. It was a dark rainy morning and the lighting proved to be a delightful challenge for this novice. It was in this moment that I had chosen to figure out that little lightening bolt button to the side of the flash. I have always avoided using my built in flash because it washed everything out, created awful shadows and just didn't seem to travel very far. I had a friend with me that has a similar camera. She's managed to learn a thing or two along the way, and she gleans a bit from me at times. Together, we managed quite nicely. Although I am not completely satisfied with the flash images, I have made significant progress in my ability to control the flash lighting.
The next stop was "The Heildelberg Project". The night before our visit, one of the houses burned to the ground. It was still smoldering. Again, I found the challenge in catching the faint wisps of smoke rising up out of the pile that was once a house, once an artists statement. The sky was white and overcast and offered no contrast that would make the smoke visible. I was forced to look deeper into the backdrop of my subject. This proved to be a good exercise.
Our final stop was a couple of homes in the historic Indian Village area of Detroit. Once again, I was challenged with lighting. With the significant number of photographers in one place, all shooting at once, respectful dodging and ducking out of sight became a bit of a challenge as well. I was a little more timid about shooting in the houses. I take too long to get my shot, so I settled with a few quick pics and made a point to just get out of the way of the more experienced photographers. The houses were a challenge for another walk for me.
Part 2 - Finding the Art
Aside from the delightful technical challenges of the photo walk, I found myself energized by simply looking through my camera's lens. I am searching for the story that Detroit wants to tell me. We are having a talk, the city and I, about love and fear.
At Eastern Market, my thoughts turned to the interactions of the people. The diversity of cultures within the city and the happiness of the people were apparent. There were smiles and laughter and music in abundance. The care and attention to detail in the display of goods was amazing. There was pride in those piles of produce. There was prosperity in an impoverished city. I came in from the suburbs with a fairly expensive camera hanging from my neck. And I wasn't afraid.
At Heildelberg I noticed that the tree/ sculpture was smoking like a chimney. I thought it was deliberate and I wondered how it was done. Only after realizing that the house had burned to the ground only the night before, did I make the connection. It wasn't long before the fire truck arrived to extinguish the tree and revisit the smoldering house. Fate could not have orchestrated a better teachable moment for the more than 50 photographers standing around the scene. There was action shots, reflective puddles, steam, mud, smoke.... and a stray cat. Fate had much more than just the technical challenges. All of it fit in with the art. All of it fit the story of the art. All of it echo the conversation the art was having with me. I needed my images to capture the smoke, the steam, the mud, the puddles of water, and I needed to capture the artists story that still lived inside of the chaos and cooling embers.
Random thoughts:
Micheal Jackson's "Man in the Mirror"
I found Waldo
the "I Want You" statue
The art still speaks. It says, "Go ahead, kill me. Throw a big boulder in front of my tomb. Bring it. You can't kill hope. You can't kill love. You can't kill faith.
The Heidelberg project is an entire brain full of comments all spoken at once. Not everybody "gets it". I find that when you look at it through the lens of a camera, it helps you isolate the messages and see them in bite size pieces. I am told that the artist himself is a bit of a recluse. I disagree. He may not come out of his house to visit with you. He doesn't need to. It is as if he never left the yard. Everything he has to say is being said. There's enough conversation happening out there for a lifetime!
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That is as far as my "draft" went. Today, I don't have anything more to add, except perhaps, a few more images.
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