Ghost of Childhood

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Sitting on the porch watching kids play in the street running in and out the warm rays of the setting sun I sketch and dream of possible paintings. The downy tufts of dandelions bring back my own days of playing in the street, running wild for no other reason than to be running. Swiping at the dandelions as we race up over the curb, nearly crashing through a hedge into forbidden territory owned by the most misunderstood dog in the neighborhood. His barks were pleas to include him in the games we played. We were warn that he would bite if we get too close, but his rope broke one afternoon and all he did was chase after the soft ball we played with. He surrendered it to the first extended hand then backed up waiting for the next hit to come his way. He was also included when we split a Hersey bar... His mistress still warned us to keep out of his yard though. 

I sketched the kids playing and thought about my friends now grown with grandkids. Like so many of my sketches, they were a mix of the kids in the street and the ghost of my lost childhood. I think of Josephine and what she might be doing in Arkansas. These good thoughts and feeling will play into the painting on my easel, even if the subject has nothing to do with what I'm sketching. Sketching enhances my senses. Though I may be drawing a tree or an old shed, once I reach the zone I need for creating, it will help with whatever I choose to paint. 

I sketch a girl leaning against a tree and suddenly I see another girl I had a crush on 60 some years ago appearing in my sketch. Tomorrow I'll look at the sketches, and some older ones, to charge the juices that will carry me through my still-life of carnations.  

Each Artist Will Tell A Different Story

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Over the tall grass, grey wood-shingled rooftops begin to appear. Blue smoke rising from wood chimneys carry the aroma of coffee down the hillside. As I approach the picket fence of the first house tired dogs come to their feet and give half hearted barks, none venture too far out from their resting place behind a pile of fresh cut firewood. Chickens hunting in the rich green grass for ticks and other bugs scamper away from  the rut-filled clay road I followed up from the valley below.

Two large women milking their goats glance my way pausing just long enough to smile as they check me out. One giggles as the other comments, as I huff and puff pass them. Two of the dogs dance closer, noses held high trying to identify me, tails wagging saying my scent is OK. 

Farther on an old tractor belching black smoke turns off the road and comes to rest in front of a fire engine red wooden house with windows framed in a deep blue green.  The village is sprinkled with brightly colored houses with picket fences dividing gardens from play areas from goat pens. There is a warmth about this village as kids voices come from the distant trees, one races beyond a wall of giant sunflowers to join the others.

I roam this village, freely sampling plums and apples as I take in the life here. Everywhere is the good country life. Three women resting against a sturdy tree laugh wildly as they feast on apples and peaches. A man leaning on a hoe in the distance drinks from a large leather pouch, his vineyard rich with grapes behind him setting off his white shirt and black trousers. 

I can go anywhere and revisit them whenever I want. I'm there thanks to the Russian artist who invites people to their village through their art. I listen to paintings as they tell me of the rich lives half a world away. Art can transcend time and space and languages. One day I will talk with the impressionist in the morning, next I'm trading ideas with NC Wyeth. Paintings take me places and tell me stories every time I take in art shows. One painting can hold many different stories. Use of color and rich, passionate strokes hold stories for all who want to listen. Each artist will tell a different story even when painting the same subject.   

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