It is getting to be one of those hot, dusty, Davis Friday afternoons. This being a University town the weekend after graduation exercises, the pace of activity has ratcheted down somewhat since last week. Most of the parents and out-of-town guests have departed, many with their exhausted but proud and happy students in tow. Since we host the most well-known agricultural school on the Pacific Rim, we get to see families from all over the globe. We draw from all parts of Asia, Africa, and Europe.
Many students stay over the summer months, and those who do are taking a break. I see co-eds in summer dresses strolling downtown in two's and three's as they shop or wander over to the Tea List behind our studio for afternoon refreshment. With the break, they have time to relax and linger. The owner, Nahid, has fresh lilies and white linen tablecloths on her patio tables. It's quite elegant in the cool, shady courtyard.
I'm looking forward to these next two months of summer, to the summer classes I'm teaching and the social atmosphere of people coming together to make art. My own belief in the spiritual connection to art dictates that art must in some way be renewing and refreshing to the spirit. I know from experience and I have had many folks tell me that, through the practice of art, they are more in touch with their own soul. It is true.
Artmaking is a summer vacation for a busy person's soul. I am happy to be your travel agent! Why not join
me on 3rd and 4th Fridays throughout the summer* for a relaxing time of painting and convivial company at Art-is-Davis, 222 D Street, Davis, CA. I'm here with all the materials you need, 6:00 to 9:00 pm. Bring a snack and your favorite beverage, and a friend! Make the Davis summer a bit less hot and dusty.
*Except Aug. 22nd. Price: $30 per person; No Reservations Required
Friday, June 20, 2014
Tuesday, June 10, 2014
There is generally plenty of road dust on the highway of a person's spiritual journey. Among many other things, one makes abbreviated fits and starts in directions off of the highway from time to time and, while they can be instructive and reveal unexpected blessings, they also can lead to dead ends. In such cases, one sometimes finds oneself backing up over deeply rutted one-way tracks in search of the road that leads back to the highway. Arriving coughing and scratchy-eyed back on track, one consults the GPS and tries again.
Over the span of my lifetime of seeking spiritual and creative meaning, which to me are ever and inexorably connected, there have been any number of really interesting but not always healthy side roads. One detour took me down the path of an oddly toxic and narrow church which was sadly poisoned by its insistence upon independence from its mainline parent, becoming exclusionary and fearful as it resisted the influence of the greater denominational connection.
A tough thing about toxic churches is that, superficially at least, they appear to be all about loving care and inclusion and until one gets under the surface it's hard to tell whether they are truly welcoming to all. They might appear to treat all comers equally but exclude groups such as those who are financially disadvantaged, those who are of other cultures, or those who do not align politically with the majority of the parishioners.
I was employed by such a church for the last two years of my professional ministry and the message I received was harmful and not-so-subtle. I wasn't of the majority political view, I wasn't conservative enough, I wasn't a Biblical literalist, and I wasn't welcome.
When I left I was confused, angry, and in terrible spiritual pain. The body of Christ is supposed to embrace, not reject. The church is supposed to accept a human with all their fallibility and foibles...at least, that's what the handbook, the New Testament, says. Why did it matter whom I'd voted for in the last election? What difference did it make whether I didn't agree with the war in Iraq? And, on a spiritual note, why would I assert things I could not justify or believe?
I learned that backing down the dusty road and bouncing over the bumps and through the ruts would take some doing. Recovery from a church-bruising is a hard thing, and must be intentionally worked at in order to be successful. I can't even now say that my recovery is complete, but here are some things I know.
The gifts of God's love and acceptance become manifest first through loving and accepting people, no matter what church (or no church at all) is involved. If a person is a follower of Jesus, chances are that deep down where it matters most, they don't give a flying rip whom you voted for in the last election.
When you are around such people, peacefulness and cooperation tend to abound. Folks actively seek out ways to find consensus rather than conflict. They support one another's creativity and expression, since they are not threatened. Patience, gentleness, joy, and sharing have a place in interactions and decisions. They become the peaceful community that people can become when they are operating at their best.
I had experienced the Walk to Emmaus, the Protestant version of the Catholic Cursillo retreat, about twenty years ago while still living in Salt Lake City, and had all but forgotten that particular off-ramp on the highway of my spiritual journey. This past weekend, I once again had the deep joy and privilege of being a part of the Emmaus weekend pilgrimage. The work was challenging, the hours were very long, and the whole immersion stretched me. BUT, what a healing stretching, just like yoga and massage and healing touch all rolled into one, happening in my brain and heart and soul.
It was the culmination of the last five years' intentional spiritual recovery work, as a member of an accepting and reconciling congregation of welcoming people, so many of whom have become dear and deep friends. It was like standing in the middle of the spring at Lourdes and being bathed in sunlight and cool water all at once. It was new friends and deepening established friendships. It was being supported and being privileged to lovingly support others.
And there was beauty. I learned that providing and creating beauty truly is a way of loving out loud, something I have long suspected. It is true,I know undeniably, that being the purveyor of that which is beautiful is a valid and honorable and sometimes even a sacred thing to be. Artists are perhaps the most sensitive of all souls to ugliness and squalor, and to the wretchedness that eats the soul with loneliness when denied the ability to create beauty.
What a miraculous thing it is to come back onto the highway which leads to home, healthy and renewed!
When I left I didn't know what this particular 3-day sojourn would reveal or dredge up or celebrate, but I am grateful to have found love, laughter, song, tears, and joy on the Walk to Emmaus. Maybe it's having found friends; maybe it's having found that One Friend on the road.
Over the span of my lifetime of seeking spiritual and creative meaning, which to me are ever and inexorably connected, there have been any number of really interesting but not always healthy side roads. One detour took me down the path of an oddly toxic and narrow church which was sadly poisoned by its insistence upon independence from its mainline parent, becoming exclusionary and fearful as it resisted the influence of the greater denominational connection.
A tough thing about toxic churches is that, superficially at least, they appear to be all about loving care and inclusion and until one gets under the surface it's hard to tell whether they are truly welcoming to all. They might appear to treat all comers equally but exclude groups such as those who are financially disadvantaged, those who are of other cultures, or those who do not align politically with the majority of the parishioners.
I was employed by such a church for the last two years of my professional ministry and the message I received was harmful and not-so-subtle. I wasn't of the majority political view, I wasn't conservative enough, I wasn't a Biblical literalist, and I wasn't welcome.
When I left I was confused, angry, and in terrible spiritual pain. The body of Christ is supposed to embrace, not reject. The church is supposed to accept a human with all their fallibility and foibles...at least, that's what the handbook, the New Testament, says. Why did it matter whom I'd voted for in the last election? What difference did it make whether I didn't agree with the war in Iraq? And, on a spiritual note, why would I assert things I could not justify or believe?
I learned that backing down the dusty road and bouncing over the bumps and through the ruts would take some doing. Recovery from a church-bruising is a hard thing, and must be intentionally worked at in order to be successful. I can't even now say that my recovery is complete, but here are some things I know.
The gifts of God's love and acceptance become manifest first through loving and accepting people, no matter what church (or no church at all) is involved. If a person is a follower of Jesus, chances are that deep down where it matters most, they don't give a flying rip whom you voted for in the last election.
When you are around such people, peacefulness and cooperation tend to abound. Folks actively seek out ways to find consensus rather than conflict. They support one another's creativity and expression, since they are not threatened. Patience, gentleness, joy, and sharing have a place in interactions and decisions. They become the peaceful community that people can become when they are operating at their best.
I had experienced the Walk to Emmaus, the Protestant version of the Catholic Cursillo retreat, about twenty years ago while still living in Salt Lake City, and had all but forgotten that particular off-ramp on the highway of my spiritual journey. This past weekend, I once again had the deep joy and privilege of being a part of the Emmaus weekend pilgrimage. The work was challenging, the hours were very long, and the whole immersion stretched me. BUT, what a healing stretching, just like yoga and massage and healing touch all rolled into one, happening in my brain and heart and soul.
It was the culmination of the last five years' intentional spiritual recovery work, as a member of an accepting and reconciling congregation of welcoming people, so many of whom have become dear and deep friends. It was like standing in the middle of the spring at Lourdes and being bathed in sunlight and cool water all at once. It was new friends and deepening established friendships. It was being supported and being privileged to lovingly support others.
And there was beauty. I learned that providing and creating beauty truly is a way of loving out loud, something I have long suspected. It is true,I know undeniably, that being the purveyor of that which is beautiful is a valid and honorable and sometimes even a sacred thing to be. Artists are perhaps the most sensitive of all souls to ugliness and squalor, and to the wretchedness that eats the soul with loneliness when denied the ability to create beauty.
What a miraculous thing it is to come back onto the highway which leads to home, healthy and renewed!
When I left I didn't know what this particular 3-day sojourn would reveal or dredge up or celebrate, but I am grateful to have found love, laughter, song, tears, and joy on the Walk to Emmaus. Maybe it's having found friends; maybe it's having found that One Friend on the road.
Thursday, June 5, 2014
On Retreat
I am on a spiritual retreat to renew and refresh myself through the the work of building community. I may have much to write after the retreat, or I may have nothing. We shall see. In the meantime, be thoughtful.
Sunday, March 9, 2014
Lest you think I've been lying around doing nothing, I just thought I'd write a line or two summarizing what's been happening over the last few weeks. Far from kicking back with my paws over my eyes, I've dug in deep to my art practice. Be careful what you pray for, because sometimes the Universe just serves it up, and keeps on giving. I'm astounded. It's an embarrassment of riches, and here are the high spots:
Art is Davis is the new art cooperative downtown Davis, located at 222 D Street, between the Mustard Seed restaurant and the Pence Gallery. It was started the end of last summer by Seana Burke and Marieke DeWaard. They were joined in the co-op by Joanne Andresen and Jan Castle Walker. I'm excited to say I now have studio space in the gallery along with these very talented artists. My first Davis Art About in the gallery is THIS FRIDAY, March 14th. And, there's more...
Beginning on Friday, March 21, I am offering a weekly Friday evening Painting for Relaxation series. This will include instruction in acrylic painting at whatever level the student is, including never having picked up a paintbrush. Emphasis will be on gaining confidence and just letting go and inviting the creative process to take hold. All materials are provided, including an encouraging environment. I see it as a time to kick back, enjoy music and a beverage, and let the stresses of the work week melt away.
Also, beginning on Sunday, April 6, Seana Burke and I will offer the perfect introduction to plein aire art. It's Spring Sketching and Painting, and will take the student from the basics of sketching here in town using our charming Davis downtown, building skills week-by-week until you can execute an acrylic painting from a site you've sketched. Painting materials are provided. The class will meet for 4 sessions.
I'll also be in the gallery several times a week if you just want to stop by and say hi. Check in with me here, on Facebook at Quicksilver Art and Spirit,,on e-mail at dori.marshall@gmail.com, or on Twitter @Quicksilver1953.
Yes, I'm still teaching Grumbacher Art classes at Michaels, 2175 Bronze Star Drive, Woodland CA where fun new children's curriculum has been added to the popular adult beginners and intermediate classes. I will continue to teach every Wednesday afternoon (4:00 pm) and evening (6:30 pm) and several weekend days including some Saturdays. My schedule will be posted on Facebook, on my art page, Quicksilver Art and Spirit.. You can also look for these classes on Michaels.com.
I'm still hosting Sketch Sunday Davis at Monticello Seasonal Cuisine on the second Sunday morning each month. It's a refreshing time of brunch with fresh, local food and live music. The art and food are both local, and the sketches done on site are available at affordable prices.
Lastly, there are the things I am grateful to be able to do to feed my soul...life with my family and friends, school and my unstoppable Artist's Way group of creative traveling companions.
Whew! I think I'll follow Brodie's example and stretch out with my paws over my eyes. Daylight savings started today and I have a feeling I'll be up early tomorrow!
Art is Davis is the new art cooperative downtown Davis, located at 222 D Street, between the Mustard Seed restaurant and the Pence Gallery. It was started the end of last summer by Seana Burke and Marieke DeWaard. They were joined in the co-op by Joanne Andresen and Jan Castle Walker. I'm excited to say I now have studio space in the gallery along with these very talented artists. My first Davis Art About in the gallery is THIS FRIDAY, March 14th. And, there's more...
Beginning on Friday, March 21, I am offering a weekly Friday evening Painting for Relaxation series. This will include instruction in acrylic painting at whatever level the student is, including never having picked up a paintbrush. Emphasis will be on gaining confidence and just letting go and inviting the creative process to take hold. All materials are provided, including an encouraging environment. I see it as a time to kick back, enjoy music and a beverage, and let the stresses of the work week melt away.
Also, beginning on Sunday, April 6, Seana Burke and I will offer the perfect introduction to plein aire art. It's Spring Sketching and Painting, and will take the student from the basics of sketching here in town using our charming Davis downtown, building skills week-by-week until you can execute an acrylic painting from a site you've sketched. Painting materials are provided. The class will meet for 4 sessions.
I'll also be in the gallery several times a week if you just want to stop by and say hi. Check in with me here, on Facebook at Quicksilver Art and Spirit,,on e-mail at dori.marshall@gmail.com, or on Twitter @Quicksilver1953.
Yes, I'm still teaching Grumbacher Art classes at Michaels, 2175 Bronze Star Drive, Woodland CA where fun new children's curriculum has been added to the popular adult beginners and intermediate classes. I will continue to teach every Wednesday afternoon (4:00 pm) and evening (6:30 pm) and several weekend days including some Saturdays. My schedule will be posted on Facebook, on my art page, Quicksilver Art and Spirit.. You can also look for these classes on Michaels.com.
I'm still hosting Sketch Sunday Davis at Monticello Seasonal Cuisine on the second Sunday morning each month. It's a refreshing time of brunch with fresh, local food and live music. The art and food are both local, and the sketches done on site are available at affordable prices.
Lastly, there are the things I am grateful to be able to do to feed my soul...life with my family and friends, school and my unstoppable Artist's Way group of creative traveling companions.
Whew! I think I'll follow Brodie's example and stretch out with my paws over my eyes. Daylight savings started today and I have a feeling I'll be up early tomorrow!
Thursday, February 6, 2014
It's the Scopes Monkey Trial of Our Century, and the Century Ain't Even That Old Yet
Until I read this article I had thought it was all right to totally ignore this debate. After all, in my mind there is no inconsistency in being Christian and also having a healthy respect for and belief in science. In fact, I've been quipping lately that Bill Nye won because he made bow ties cool before Doctor Who said they were, and Ken Ham lost because his biggest clobber was to say "It's in the Bible" as if that made something a scientific fact.
Now I'm less comfortable as I wonder why we Christians think it's okay to dump the responsibility for defending our religion from crackpottery on the scientists. This article does a good job of encouraging all Christians to think through how we tell our story in the context of the science which the vast majority embrace.
Now I'm less comfortable as I wonder why we Christians think it's okay to dump the responsibility for defending our religion from crackpottery on the scientists. This article does a good job of encouraging all Christians to think through how we tell our story in the context of the science which the vast majority embrace.
Maybe it's timely for the many of us who take the Bible seriously but not literally to include ways of talking about our beliefs in a way that communicates our wonder at the created, evolved world as well as our sense that what has been learned through millenia of scientific inquiry serves to expand our ideas about God, not diminish them.
I'm glad to have seen Elizabeth Stoker's story. It's a long-ish read, but it's shorter than the Nye/Ham debate. Photo Credit: ABC News
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
Drawing New Life: A Civilized Way to Begin the New Year
It used to be that the practice of drawing was taught
in schools, just as a natural part of education. It was considered as natural, in fact, as
reading, arithmetic, and writing. Yet,
most people I ask about Art (notice the capital A) in their lives usually
respond by saying, “Oh, I don’t do Art.
I can’t draw.” Sadly, this is
often due to one of two reasons. The
first is that they have been the victims of judgmental educators who themselves
may not have been compassionately or encouragingly taught, ending up therefore
as demanding and rigid teachers unable to adapt to the unique needs of each
learner. This is a damn sad and sorry
state, for every child has the innate desire to perceive and represent her/his
world on paper with crayon or pencil. The second reason a person may think that
s/he can’t draw is that they have never learned to see in such a way that they
can represent their world on that paper with crayon or pencil in any kind of
way that meets their own expectations, said expectations having been created by
artists such as Durer, Rembrandt, or Leonardo.
Well. There is hope for those
suffering from both critical childhood instructors AND unrealistic expectations,
for learning to draw is merely learning a skill set which is no more
complicated or magical than cooking or auto mechanics. Besides, incorporating drawing as a life
skill is every bit as civilized as becoming a good reader or writer…and as
uplifting as nourishing the spirit by the regular practice of prayer.
For an eight week period beginning February 4th,
I will be teaching Drawing New Life…a fine
way to experience new life. Read about it here:
YOU ARE
INVITED TO ATTEND THE NEW YOLOCANVAS
ART CONNECTIONS WORKSHOP SERIES,
“DRAWING NEW LIFE”
WHEN: Tuesdays
from 1-3 p.m. February 4, 11, 18, 25,
March 4, 11, 18, 25
WHERE: CESAR CHAVEZ PLAZA COMMUNITY ROOM,
1220
OLIVE DRIVE, IN DAVIS
In
addition to drawing and sketching exercises inside, if weather permits we will
go outside with sketchbooks to sketch from nature.
TEACHERS:
DORI MARSHALL AND MARILYN MOYLE
CLASS FEE
IS $10 PER CLASS. Basic materials
provided.
TO SIGN
UP FOR THE SERIES CALL:
Dori
Marshall (530) 219-5221 or e-mail
Dori.marshall@gmail.com
YoloCANVAS
is a program of Davis Community Meals
THE FEE CAN BE WAIVED FOR LOW INCOME STUDENTS
AND MENTAL HEALTH CLIENTS.
Monday, October 14, 2013
Doing the New Thing
"Magic Sticks"
It will soon be Halloween, I realize. Halloween once meant diving into boxes of decorations and costume parts and pieces accumulated over years: Masks, fake blood, face paint, plastic fingernails, Happy Meal buckets, even packages of (very messy) phony cobwebs to string around the front windows and porch. It meant fighting off the temptation to swipe "fun-size" candy bars out of the stash purchased for trick-or-treaters. It used to involve my sewing machine, as in when I once sewed a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle shell for my older son, Michaelangelo. (Just kidding. His real name is Jonathan. We only called him Mikey for fun.) Pumpkin carving (eww) and playing scary music out the front windows.
We used to offer a Fall Festival at my home church, where the kids could wear their costumes, play games, eat creepy treats like Worms in Dirt and Hand-Maid Punch. We'd have quasi-carnival games like a cake walk and decorated pumpkin cookies. Everyone was guaranteed a stomachache the next day, and everyone had a ball. My favorite thing to do was to dress up as a gypsy, "Madame Fortuna Casserole" and tell fortunes with a bagful of polished stones and crystals and a pack of tarot cards. Everyone knew it was bogus but making up fortunes was a lot of storytelling fun.
In my new life as a working artist, I realize that the most fun came from making something amazing using the resources that were readily available to us. Fruit juice frozen inside rubber gloves became the ice cubes floating in Hand-Made Punch. Crushed chocolate cookies and candy worms topped pudding cups for the Worms in Dirt. Pretty pictures on tarot cards inspired fanciful predictions for aspiring ballerinas and astronauts.
Artists everywhere have helped build culture, historicizing society using the resources that are available to them. Often artist's images are the first mirrors held up to trends and paradigm shifts in politics, religion, values. Sometimes however, art is art because artists find ordinary things and are compelled to do something extraordinary with those things. Great chefs do it with food. Designers use bricks and mortar. Storytellers do it with a handful of sticks. Magic sticks. And paper.
Anyway. Now that I am a crone and full of the wisdom and experience of my age, I have a lot of time that won't be spent sewing TMNT shells or painting Darth Maul faces on little kids. So I have more time for my Magic Sticks.
It's a good thing it's almost Halloween. It's a good season to make magic.
Join me on October 20th
10:00 AM to 2:00 PM
at
Monticello Seasonal Cuisine
630 G Street
Davis, CA 95616
for
FRESH FOOD and FRESH ART!
Labels:
art,
art collecting,
food art,
magic,
seasonal,
sketching,
story-telling
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