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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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    Monday, September 06, 2004
    fricktastic

    The Frick Collection used to be a favorite of mine. The air is a little rareified no doubt but the paintings are impressive . This precious stuff can inform about painting, about how to create a work of art that has holding power, about story, and definitely about man, nature and God (these as the principal subjects).

    A pale beauty, tall and quiet, elegant and swathed in cottons certainly evokes the 19th century European ideal of Japan.

    And then there's everyman.

    So, well, I scrub the floors, I read my books, I draw and I look. there are worse things to do.

    Take care,
    Rachael

    Posted at 09:29 pm by balduffington
    comment?  

    Sunday, September 05, 2004
    frog hospitals remembered (a little story)

    Tonight in the big bookstore I noticed there were used book racks. I browsed 'em looking for Donald Barthleme stories or picture books or something about women in the nineteenth century. A woman with a nose ring and a white tank top stood next to me, looking too. She and I chatted a little about our search for a perfect, cheap book.

    Maybe 10 minutes later, I found it! This was a book I had loved when I read it a few years ago. And I offered it up to my new friend, who I sincerely hope headed home to read it.

    When I googled the author, I discovered that she ( Lorrie Moore ) grew up in good old Wing's Falls . How else would she know the power of Storytown? Why all of those close friendships we had in highschool linger on? Why it matters how we tell a story?

    And before you tell me that Horsehearts is an unbelievable name for a town, I present Horseheads , not far from Elmira.

    more soon, studio gets cleaner, weekend marches away...

    take care,
    Rachael

    by the way I did find the Barthelme story I was looking for, about Colby

    Posted at 11:12 pm by balduffington
    Comments (3)  

    cleaning and connecting

    My nose stung for an hour, and it took some time to scrub the dirt of me, but I'm happy to report that the first layer of grime is out of the small room in the carriage house behind our apartment. The little room that will soon (after a couple more layers are scrubbed away, the walls are painted and a good ventilation system is figured out) be my studio. I need a place to be messy. A quiet room. All of the reading I've done lately about drawing and all of the artwork I've been looking at has me geared to begin some big drawings...or some small paintings...or some of both.

    It's funny how my process has changed and is changing, and how much writing is playing into the way I make art. I don't know how much to speak about it now but in a few weeks I'll start some writing classes at a wonderful local literary center and frankly I am excited to begin further connecting myself to my community, connecting my words to my images, and connecting to other ideas.

    Ok, more soon but if you'd like a good laugh we enjoyed Harold & Kumar at the cheap theater last night. Goofy and amusing.

    take care,
    Rachael

    Posted at 05:23 pm by balduffington
    comment?  

    Friday, September 03, 2004
    Small things in Buffalo and my new library card

    Funny how language, how poetry can sink into my brain and how magic coincidences can color a day, a week or an hour. This is an orange day, as I sit in the public library, at a big wooden table all to myself with light streaming in from every corner. I got my library card today, just about 20 minutes ago. I’m still glowing in the girft of a card that lets me access books (like My Perfect Life by Lynda Barry and Saul Steinberg’s Reflections and Shadows ), and magazines (like School Arts and American Craft ) and a ton of other resources. Libraries and the abiility to vote and the existence of free pre-kindergarten programs and school lunches are among some of the things I love about America.

    You haven’t heard much from me this week because along with the turning of leaves (amazing how long it takes me to walk home when I am stopping and stopping to look), and the avoiding of radio speeches (we haven’t had a tv for years but the hate of the campaigns still sneaks into my house), I’ve been wrapped up tight in the book The God of Small Things by Arundahati Roy. I borrowed the book from my mother’s house and found myself enchanted by the language, fascinated by the details, passionate for Estha and Rahel, Ammu and Velutha, worried about Sophie Mol…I finished the book last night and wiped tears aside, went to bed, woke up and put on my orange pants to match the sun.

    As I rode my bike downtown this morning I noticed a sign on a local bookstore, Buffalo is reading The God of Small Things. And next week Arundhati Roy will be in Buffalo speaking and listening and reading and encouraging peace. And it is so encouraging!

    It also thrilled me to see and read about these lush food still lives at the Met. Thrilled me to be able to go paint outside today, that's what I'm up to.

    take good care and more soon...
    Rachael

    Posted at 02:57 pm by balduffington
    comment?  

    Sunday, August 29, 2004
    spend a rainy afternoon in a coffee shop with a laptop and discover

    (Southern politics, guys who play chess and surf the web, notes on the imagery in taxi driver, Harvey Ellis, Buffingtons and lots of coffee)
    Among the stuff in my head today is this article my friend Lisa sent around the Atlanta art news listserve. John Sims is planning to lynch a confederate flag and while that is a powerful gesture I wonder how much the exhibit, the hoopla, the media, and the us vs. them point of the debate can help. It is reassuring to know that there are artists tackling tough symbols and loaded imagery, but is the art ready to move the dialogue forward towards solution or does it just inflame the anger? More thoughts deeply brewed are here at this Gwendolyn Shaw review on Africana and then the angry (smells racist to me) other side here. I dunno, I want to avoid judging a show miles away. I'm in a different world now. Not in Atlanta anymore and instead I'm in this coffee shop...


    I don't know these guys but that doesn't matter. It's a comfy, often crowed hub of talkers and folks on thier mac-tops...


    In fact the more I look around this town, the more I learn about the fertile present and rich history of thinkers and creators. It wasn't just George Eastman, but also guys like Harvey Ellis whose Night Study is a striking little painting (in the collection of the Memorial Art Gallery. I'm taken in by the work and history of this painter and designer who used to live in Rochester. As I read his story I found myself amazed to find a Buffington. That's my maiden name and the name of my father's family from around Montana and I really doubt there is any connection to Leroy S. but it is always a kick to encounter a Buffington...

    This chatty, we're all in here together out of the rain atmosphere is so strikingly different from the isolation/ crazy-as-norm world of Travis Bickle (we saw Taxi Driver) last night that I am encouraged to brave the rain and head home to finish a little watercolor I've been playing with to sort out clarity and crazy intersect. Oh, I'll just go and paint it. The sun is out and I'm a little over-coffee-shopped...

    see ya,
    Rachael

    Posted at 03:46 pm by balduffington
    Comments (1)  

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