<< October 2007 >>
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
 01 02 03 04 05 06
07 08 09 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31



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!
<
br>

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.






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!








    Archived months (opens to the first entry of that month, there's a handy calendar in the top left corner above)
    November 28
    October 2008
    September 2008
    June- August 2008
    May 2008
    April 2008
    March 08
    January- February 08
    November- December 2007
    September- October 2007
    July- August 2007
    June 2007
    May 2007
    April 2007
    January, February, March 2007 December 2006
    November 2006
    October 2006
    September 2006
    August 2006
    July 2006
    June 2006
    May 2006
    April 2006
    March 2006
    February 2006
    January 2006
    December 2005
    November 2005
    October 2005
    September 2005
    August 2005
    July 2005
    June 2005
    May 2005
    April 2005
    March 2005
    February 2005
    January 2005
    December 2004
    November 2004
    October 2004



  • If you want to be updated on this weblog Enter your email here:



    rss feed



    Friday, October 12, 2007
    Street painting and rock and roll shows

    I've been awarded another opportunity to paint a traffic signal box, only I have to do that before the weather gets too cold. The paint won't adhere to the metal boxes unless it is over 55 degrees out. I'll be crossing my fingers for sun and warmth beacuse it's a pretty wild and wonderful thing to paint on the street in my neighborhood.

    Somehow (well I know how) my life has become a mad-scramble of busy as I work full time, take graduate classes, try to draw and paint some and still maintain a relatively regular schedule of eating and sleeping. But this week I managed to get to a rock and roll show to see Amos Lee and Elvis Costello (aparently there is an orthodontist in Michigan with an Elvis Costello room...) and Bob Dylan. I brought along my sketchbook and will try to upload a couple of the images (only a few drawings managed to have some of the energy of the show).

    I'll share more stories and images as I get a better handle on the pace of my life, all I know is that I am drawing, thinking, reading and writing with a more directed energy than I have had in a while, even if there's less time to do all that I want to do.

    take care,
    Rachael



    Posted at 07:29 pm by balduffington
    comment?  

    Thursday, October 04, 2007
    elizabeth gilbert was in my town last night, here's why I'd join her army



    Last night, Elizabeth Gilbert, the writer of Eat Play Love was in Rochester to give a talk through Writers and Books. It seems like every woman in town was there. I feel a bit shallow for getting so obsessed with the boots she was wearing, but the truth of it is that they were/are big, confident, high healed, Italian leather, made for causing trouble, speaking your mind, and being smart and sexy boots. She owned the stage, worked the corwd and read us a witty little, well writtten story about Rose who drove the bus filled with her old lovers. I took notes and have to share them in hopes you'll read her book, watch her on Oprah tomorrow and go on your own adventures.

    Mine, are pretty pedrestian but no less fabulous, for being in flat shoes solidly on upstate new york ground....










    alright then, stay out of trouble,
    Rachael


    Posted at 06:33 pm by balduffington
    Comments (2)  

    Tuesday, October 02, 2007
    finished projects and projects just begun

    So I haven't written much here but I've been writing a lot for the classes I started taking, for work, for my own sanity. I haven't been painting much but I have been doing some drawing. Priya's comment on the last entry is a good push to put some pictures up but we broke our digital camera and I can't find the scanner. Excuses, excuses.

    I do at least have (thanks to John Boutet) some pictures of the traffic signal boxes I recently painted.





    I have also just begun to get obsessed with an artist, Hugh Pearce Botts , now mostly forgotten but whose work mostly lives in the museum I work at. Botts it seems was a sketch-hunter, a WPA printmaker and a coffee pot patent holder. He's gone now but I'll get a chance to see his sketchbook on Thursday and I suppose, if I'm lucky, someone will someday say that about me.

    Life is short, I'm off to live it.
    thanks for looking, reading, and sharing car crash stories. I like to think I'm done crashing into the world, hope so at least...

    Rachael

    Posted at 10:26 pm by balduffington
    Comments (5)  

    Saturday, September 15, 2007
    learning from being dumb; crashing into reality

    Well sometimes the world is easy to bump into. Today I learned an important lesson about distractions. I crashed my car into another car because I was not paying enough attention. Nobody was hurt. My car was totaled and his was mucked up in the front a little. My freedom of travel will be reigned in a bit (it's OK I like the bus) and the following things were shocked back into me:
  • People are more often kind and forgiving than not. The gentleman I hit didn't scream at me for being such a knucklehead, a total stranger stopped his car in the middle of a busy intersection to help, and all along the process people were nice. Over and over I heard, "that's why they call it an accident".
  • Accepting responsibility and taking the consequences of your actions is incredibly important, free-ing, and swallowing pride is good sometimes. I'll be paying a ticket for running a red.
  • We move too fast in this world. Sometimes the world will slow us down.
  • This happens too often. Would that I looked a little more carefully at the road and thought less about the things I had to do.
  • The sculptures of John Chamberlain will never look the same.
  • True friends are the ones who pick you up and dust you off. Thanks Kerry, thanks John.

    Drive safely and know that I will too, once I'm ready to buckle in again. Mercifully no one was hurt. No one was hurt. Phew. No one was hurt.

    Rachael
  • Posted at 10:23 pm by balduffington
    Comments (5)  

    Tuesday, September 11, 2007
    theoretical physics for artists, Janna Levin

    Janna Levin talked tonight in Rochester. Though I don't speak theoretical physics and cosmology seems overwhelming, her language, her passion, her knowledge, her ideas were thoroughly accessible and thrilling. I'll try to scan and put up some of my lecture notes but for now, enjoy her interview on the Stephen Colbert Report. Part 1 of Janna Levin on the Colbert Report


    Part 2

    Part 3

    Rachael

    Posted at 11:08 pm by balduffington
    comment?  

    Next Page