Friday, December 24, 2010

I wish I had taken a picture of the final product...but this is the collab piece I did with Anders. When I saw what he had done I knew immediately what I would do. It just spoke of carousel horses to me. Weird, I know.


Not sure how good these will come across on the computer. This is also in Ballookey's book.


This is one of the pieces I did for Ballookey's book. And this is what my dining room table looks like when I am working on a Moley.

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Merry Christmas!


Caught up in the whirlwind of this holiday season I realized I did not mail out moley! It will be out in Monday's mail!
Hope everyone has a fabulous holiday season!
This is the first Christmas without my mother-in-law and our dog and cat. It will be tough for sure!

Friday, December 17, 2010

Anders' Moly ships to Ash today.

Not overly happy with these two pages. Things just didn't turn out how I envisioned them. I did the narrative with black in the squares first, then I thought I'd put some color on the top, but once I did that the story kinda got lost. I tried to salvage the idea by adding grey ... but I'm not sure I did. Not my best execution here.

OCD kicking in here. My hand was sore after finishing this up last night.
:)

My 1/2 page left for Ash.

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Andrea's book - off to Michelle

My, it's taken me a while, but Andrea's book is finally on it's way to Michelle. I posted a sneak peak back in September of this first drawing of my grandmother, mother and I. I finally finished it off with a photo of my great-grandmother.

When I originally started this book, my husband's aunt went into the hospital for about the fourth time in the last few months. Each time she went in, she came back a bit weaker and weaker, and at 91 years old, I was deeply concerned about her well-being. I originally thought to make this drawing about her, but then I changed my mind, realizing that I've never done a drawing of my own family members.



After doing this drawing, I got utterly swamped by what were supposed to be out-of-town house guests. They ended up canceling on me at the last minute, but I spent most of October doing renovations on our house to get it ready, only to find I needn't have rushed. Even though the houseguests never materialized, near the end of the month of October, my husband and I met one of our musical heroes in a whirlwind weekend full of missed sleep, concerts, old old friends not seen in decades, new friends just met and lots of drinking and dancing all around.

Then, my husband's aunt passed away on October 30th. Even though I expected it, we were still greatly saddened by her going. We live in her house and have seen all the remnants of her great wild life.

In the mean time, my own mother went into the hospital for a relatively mild problem. She had some minor surgery, and after five days, she went home. I was concerned about her anyway, because she has a history of not seeking out medical help. Even though she was a Registered Nurse in her day, she had what I thought was a foolish affinity for all kinds of new-age nonsense and routinely rejected sound medical science. I was afraid that one of these times, she'd put off seeking medical help until it was far too late, and that would be the end of her.

I had already started the drawing for the next piece in Andrea's book, and it felt more appropriate than ever.

On November 20th, I finally got a break from the aunt's funeral preparations and aftermath and I finally finished the skulls shown above.

At 5:30 am the next day, my sister called me in tears because we had lost our mother. When I saw the completed drawings in the book still open on my desk, I couldn't believe the subject matter I'd chosen for Andrea's book.

So I went to Colorado to help my dad & sis' cope with all that funeral stuff again. I had already done a drawing for the next two pages in Andrea's book, but as I was flying back home to California, I had a whole new idea and so this entry was very last minute.

I'm not sure if I actually believe the above sentiments, but it captures the emotional essence of my trip back home to deal with my mother's passing pretty accurately.

And lastly, what I had been planning all along for the collaboration page: My husband's aunt collected an incredible number of stamps over her career as a bookkeeper for Union Pacific railroad, and then later at some engineering company. In both occupations, she sorted the inbound mail from an astonishing number of countries and compulsively saved all the stamps.

I've personally only spared one huge box of stamps. Her sister took the other boxes and books and sold them to a stamp dealer - which is probably good considering the inordinate amount of time I spend looking at them any time I start going through them. I can't keep this hoard around forever, though, so in going through them I'm setting aside only my favorites. The rest are designated for use in art projects.

I included several large blocks of stamps still stuck to corners of envelopes for Michelle or whoever might like to use them in some way.

I think the wallpapered page looks pretty cool, and I suspect I'll do this again. ;)


Thursday, December 9, 2010

Ack! I got a book last night, hooray!

Here is my collab page with Willie, kinda. He did the left side, I did the right. My what different styles we have, no? I wish I could do minimal sometimes, but my OCD kicks in and I just keep adding and adding and adding. Ha-ha, ho-ho, he-he. The blue is masking tape Willie had used to tape up the bubble wrap he used to protect Anders' Moly.