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Hello, I'm Rachael.

I am primarily a painter and friendly multi-tasker/ troublemaker in Upstate New York. I try to blog often but mostly I try to paint.
Leave me a comment (I'm more likely to communicate directly than in the comments), ask me a question, do your best to share what you have to say, OK? Thanks

I'll be at Second Storie again this year, Thanksgiving Weekend, Rochester NY!
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Heartliy suggested blogs and sites...



blogs first...other stuff second
  • Everyday Matters to Danny (well written, well drawn)
  • I like how Tyler looks at art
  • thinking about art is thoughtful
  • Eye Level is the American Art Museum's blog, smart and visually interesting
  • Mark's small ponderings tell the honest, interesting story of a working ceramicist
  • Mark is also one of the Shoestring Collective (I am too!)
  • Genine draws and blogs here
  • Onionboy thrives, draws and writes
  • Anna tells her artist's life true
  • wish jar journal by Keri Smith is charming
  • great art blog by Libby and Roberta in Philly
  • miami art exchange blog

  • David Byrne's blog of ideas, lots of time visual and musical
  • Katie's New Eyes are open and focused on her children, art, God and her p.o.v from the South
  • art, architecture, etc. enjoyable blog
  • Witold Reidel's blog is swell
  • Elise paints and writes in Alaska

  • 2 blowhards
  • Martin's Anaba is an artist's blog from Richmond, VA
  • Illicit Cultural Property blog raises important questions

    non blog

  • Steve Mumford's Baghad sketchbooks
  • Second Harvest feeds people
  • the met teaches about art
  • there are great artist resources here
  • this list was lightly edited late December 2008...

    take good care of yourself and be nice to strangers...
    Blogroll Me!








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    Wednesday, March 01, 2006
    knocks and knocks

    It's been thin and quiet around this blog but I've been day-jobbing and re-prioritizing family and reading and writing. It's enough to get up in the morning, get showered and out into the world with my to do list in tow and my sketchbook in hand. I draw, I dream, I listen and I wonder when the news of good people dying too young is going to stop. The untimely death of my kind and caring, warm and wonderful aunt-in-law (mirroring as it does the untimely death a few years back of my caring, warm and smart aunt) has me thinking anew about the true uncertain of live. How we could go at any moment. It's a true truth and a scary one and I'm not suggesting that you stop what you are doing and get all morbid.
    I am wondering how we go from the quick silly wit of kids (think knock-knock
    jokes) to the way poets think about death ( knock knocks get mortality in this essay by Donald Hall).
    And you know how we never have enough time, never have enough money, never have enough ideas to make art? We make the best we can in the time allotted sometimes and othertimes, we (and this is the royal pronoun have you, when I say we, I really mean me...maybe you, too?) make nothing for days on end until it kind of hurts. And then the art burts out and some of it stinks and much of it makes no sense but we remember that the making matters and the truth is in the living and we have to go on living.
    So we do.
    Thank goodness, meanwhile, for poets, for painters, for Cezanne's Apples , for my wonderful husband and for good mail lately. And because Mark asked nicely a while back, below is a glimpse of my coffee shop show...


    That's about it for now my friends, we march on...
    Rachael

    Posted at 11:31 pm by balduffington

    halide
    April 8, 2006   03:54 PM PDT
     
    rachel,
    btw, spendid artwork. let me see. i want...
    anyway, your thoughts on "time" are pretty much synchronized with the rest of us.
    u r a true artist.
    mark
    March 2, 2006   09:20 PM PST
     
    it looks even better than i thought it would! beautiful! YAY starbucks and double YAY! Rachael!. And a good and thoughtful (timely!) post...i'm going to blog a link to it, should be required reading. Life is too short. and that description about time and making is classic and oh so well understood by many of us.
    Toni
    March 2, 2006   07:07 AM PST
     
    Ooh Rachael, that looks so good! I wish I was there to see it in person. I would have a house full of buffdanzas all over again!

    Hogan got a joke master for Christmas which is a little electronic toy that tells jokes when you push his nose so we have quite a repertoire of knock knock jokes but my favorite is a poem:

    Peanut sitting on a railroad track, not one word did he mutter. Then the train came flying by - Toot! Toot! Peanut butter.

    I asked Hogan which is his favorite and this is what he said:

    What's black & white, black & white, black & white? It's a penguin rolling down a hill.

    Even funnier than the jokes themselves is having him tell you one then imitating the canned laughter when he's finished.

    Miss you, Tonio
     

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