"Every man's life is a fairy tale written by God's fingers." Hans Christian Andersen
Sunday, June 09, 2013
Sunday, May 26, 2013
Emblems Of Love
Usually, when I visit my parents in Santa Barbara, California, I also set up my easel and make a painting in their yard. They have cultivated a garden and take care of their corner lot, with its giant pine trees, orange and lemon trees, and tall hedge that guards the perimeter of the property. The last time I spoke with my mother and talked about her beloved rose plants, she said, “Oh yes, they are beginning to bloom. You know Steven, I have eighty rose bushes and they each have at least ten flowers . . . that is 800 flowers!”
I
know the yard well—and all the varieties of color and scent of her
roses. She has a special relationship with the plant life around her,
and holds conversations with the growing things that exist in her
surroundings.
Although
my parents are advanced in age and becoming frail, they take deep
satisfaction in their surroundings. The bird feeder outside the
dining room window is replenished, a man comes regularly to mow the
lawn and trim the hedges, and my mother prays every day in thanks for
the elements and nature around her.
I
know that the jasmine outside their backdoor is now finishing its
bloom. Its unmistakable fragrance is etched in my memory.
Hopefully,
I can arrive there again in the next few months . . . and make
another painting. I always call it “Mother's Backyard” and after
I bring it back to Santa Fe, it always sells to someone who finds
emblems of love within it.
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"Mother's Backyard" oil on linen, 16 x 20 inches |
Sunday, May 19, 2013
Boldness, Drama and Controversy
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Garry Winogrand, Monkeys |
At
the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, as I walked through a special
exhibit of the photographs of Garry Winogrand (14 January 1928, New York City – 19 March 1984, Tijuana, Mexico), I suddenly realized
that if the same photos were in my gallery, most of them would go unsold. I knew that
they were curiosities and while intriguing to see, people would not
buy them.
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Garry Winogrand, Untitled |
My most powerful and original work is the least likely to be bought.
People enjoy experiencing boldness, drama and controversy in museums, but not in their homes. Only serious art connoisseurs, those who have art running in their veins, understand that great art involves risk taking, and want to be part of it. These collectors do not want to be associated with the mundane, but instead, what is cutting-edge, and advanced. And this is what arrives in museums.
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Steven Boone, Paranoia |
Sunday, May 12, 2013
Impatient Friend
The
sight of my sturdy green suitcase, waiting to be filled, resting by
my front door, suddenly filled me with gladness. It had been in
storage too long and now was like an impatient friend, beckoning to
adventure. Just the sight of it reminded me of Paris and Rome,
Nairobi, Bangkok, Berlin, Chicago and Auckland, and many places in
between. A thrill passed through me.
This
trip is not so exotic, but more of a pilgrimage. After my oldest
daughter Naomi died in 1999, for many years I would return to San
Francisco in the spring to remember her and the life we lived there
during the four months prior to her death. Those days were powerful,
as we were constant partners, blazing through the days, burning the
candle at both ends. Life seemed magnified by death—and so it is
when I revisit places we visited during our last months together
before she hastened on ahead of me into the next world.
The
hotel I stay at in San Francisco, The Seal Rock Inn, is where Naomi
and I lived. It is across the street from Sutro Park, where you can
stand and see the Golden Gate Bridge. The first year, when I returned
alone, a small shrine had been set up in my room as a gift by
Cecilia, the manager of the front desk. The staff remembered Naomi.
The Seal Rock is a family owned hotel with homespun values, and as I
returned year after year, I counted on seeing Kate, an old woman who
cleaned rooms. She was slow, but valued and we always had
conversations. She read my book, A Heart Traced In Sand, about Naomi
and our journey together. The last time I visited, Kate was 70 years
old and still rode the bus to work and back home. That was four or
five years ago, and now, I wonder, will she be there?
Sunday, May 05, 2013
Best of May Posts
Here are some selections from six years of postings from the month of May :
Visual Vocabulary
May 06, 2012
Sunday, April 28, 2013
The Unknown
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Oil on linen, 17 x 21 inches |
There have been many great artists who have come face to face with the unknown and been
challenged to enter the ring, rather than stand to the sidelines.
Perhaps this was a reason Pablo Picasso, (1881-1973) loved going to
bullfights. When the matador enters the ring with the bull, the
outcome is not known . . . certainly either the animal or the man
will die. The man depends on his talent to guide him and gain the
adulation of the crowd.
Recently,
I have begun experimenting painting with three colors only: red,
black and white.
Sunday, April 14, 2013
Essential Substance Of Life
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Self-portrait, taken in Montevideo, Uruguay |
The perfect place from which to create is one of boundlessness. A musician is in the flow and notes seem to come from out of nowhere. A painter is fluidly creating his painting and his marks sometimes are surprising . . . he has gone outside his boundaries and is in the realm of discovery.
Creation is timeless, and when an artist is creating he often is not aware of the passage of the moments. He begins, and when he looks up again, is finished, and then wonders, where did the time go?
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Self-portrait, Paris, France |
Sunday, April 07, 2013
Art Collectors
The couple strolled through The Steven Boone Gallery front door like a spring breeze blowing in the April air.
They checked to see if the little painting they had seen the day
before was still hanging. Yes, and then the gentleman looked at me to
say, “We want this, and will you sell it without the tax?” They
went on to mention that they had a big painting of mine already. I replied,
“Since you are collectors, I will be happy to pay the tax myself.”
I am not usually in the gallery, so I am pleased to have met this couple . . . I enjoy having face-to-face experiences with collectors of my artwork.
The painting they bought is one I made
outdoors in the autumn of a little country chapel in the high plains
of New Mexico. (See Gushing Waters). They spoke of their extensive art collection and I
remarked how wonderful it must be to visit their home, and what a
delight for their friends.
These days, as the temperatures warm
and the air is balmy, we can leave the front door open so that people
on the street can simply walk inside as they tour Canyon Road.
Artwork hangs on the wall outside as an enticement, and the folks are
like bee's attracted to flowers.
Sunday, March 31, 2013
Best Posts of April
Random Act Of Kindness
April 13, 2007
Inspiration To Fly
April 18, 2008
Chicago
April 26, 2009
Pleasurable Dance of the Senses
April 10, 2010
Delirium
April 24, 2011
Spring Fragrance
April 22, 2012
Sunday, March 24, 2013
No Bitterness
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Naomi Boone, age 18 |
I had been an intimate witness to her suffering. As soon as Naomi entered high-school she immersed herself into meaningful activity—joining the German club, the Ski club, and in sports running track and field and cross-country. When her cancer was diagnosed, she had been painfully lifting her leg into her car to drive to school. The verdict was grim for her survival.
The next two years were full of pain, exhilaration, uplifting victories and dreadful defeats. Naomi had expressed that she did not want to die a slow, painful death, but this is what fate had in store for her. In the end, she was forcing herself to eat, she could not walk, and was attached to an oxygen tank. Her lungs were full of disease, so that she suffocated to death. How was it then, that her final words were, "I love my body, it has been so good to me."
Naomi formed a special relationship with her mortal form. She knew that her body was in a life and death struggle, and she developed a tremendous compassion for it. She cheered it on, begging and supplicating, caressing and loving it. She saw her terrible conflict with cancer as an epic spiritual battle of light and dark, and she firmly planted herself on the side of light. As the disease gained the upper hand, and the life force she loved so dearly could not save her crippled form, she remained loyal and praised her troops for such a brave fight against insurmountable odds. Not a trace of bitterness.
When I meet tests, and get frustrated, I think of Naomi and her walk through the "valley of the shadow of death."
23rd Psalm, The Book of David
The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.
He maketh me to lie down in green pastures: he leadeth me beside the still waters.
He restoreth my soul: he leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for his name's sake.
Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.
Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies: thou anointest my head with oil; my cup runneth over.
Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life: and I will dwell in the house of the Lord for ever.
~~~~~~
Sunday, March 17, 2013
Groundbreaking
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Paul Cezanne, (French: January 19, 1839 - October 22, 1906) |
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Pablo Picasso, (Spanish: 25 October 1881 – 8 April 1973) |
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Claude Monet, (French: 14 November 1840 – 5 December 1926) |
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Georges Pierre Seurat, (French: 2 December 1859 – 29 March 1891) |
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Piet Mondrian, (Dutch, March 7, 1872 – February 1, 1944) |
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Steven Boone, (American: 13 May 1952 - present.) |
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