Sunday, June 14, 2009

Homeless Little Ideas


Painting in the bookstore lately has reminded me of the type of drawings I was doing for awhile, snippets of storybooks that never took the form of an entire tale, disjunctive little scenes of my disjunctive little characters. Here are two chapters without homes, girls dangling with their daydreams, suspended between their ideas and those that were passed down to them from a wicked mother, a lonely town, a stuffy church.

Friday, June 12, 2009







Painting portraits of writers has been less of a chore than I thought it might be. I didn't like the idea of reinterpreting photographs that other people, who were actually fortunate enough to be in the same room with these greats, had taken. I thought it might be nothing more than mindless documentation. I should have known better. While spending hours upon days brushing in these faces, I've been graced with the translation of their words through the lines of their skin; I can see Humboldt in Saul Bellow's eyes, the little string bean tucked into Sylvia Plath's chest, Mrs. Rosewater in Vonnegut's expression, and I can guess who is afraid of Virginia Woolf. Some have found it reassuring that Gustave Flaubert and Lillian Hellman are so awkward and approachable in appearance, but to me the comfort comes in recognizing their words in every arc and shadow of their bodies.