Enriching Our Lives: Passing Down Timeless Heirlooms of Locally Created Art
I was thinking over how , in the past , even people without significant incomes seemed determined to save up for locally created art, as objects of both decoration and pleasure ; as valuable heirlooms intended to be passed down from one person to another through time.
And it surprises me that now we seem so intent upon ensuring the purchase of fashionable clothing, the next iPad, or yet another enjoyable dinner out.
Instead of investing in both the artist and the artwork produced in our time and in our towns. Much of which is extraordinarily affordable.
With places like Michael's and Marshall's full of frames containing non-art, I sometimes fear that our entire population will slowly receive no art history education, no time for creating art in our schools, no Liberal Arts college education - because everyone thinks that if they major in business, they have the greatest possibility of having the best jobs, (point taken , but statistically inaccurate) the most money and the most things to own.
And maybe, like Socrates long ago lamenting the poor manners of the young, I too am finding myself cantankerous, after a life filled with the depth and breadth of an attendance at a high school of the arts, and a remarkable Liberal Arts college education.
We find ourselves in this age of cookie-cutter pseudo art, where even artistic expression by children and young people is viewed dismissively as invalid cute expressions, versus anything valuable,
I find myself wanting to remind people of the pleasure of finding $30 to purchase an inspiring beautiful watercolor, to bring home , place in just the right spot, and begin the intriguing process of living with one another.
Or the deep delight of slowly paying off a $200 piece of art such as the one below, by Lenore Grubinger. Reflecting her summer days and nights by a wooded pond, replete with its sounds and smells, it's wildlife and sunrises-all that experience imbued in a beautiful work of art.
Which will grace my walls in my life for as long as I live, and then will be handed down to my children and their children or others, with pleasure and appreciation.
Talk about an investment. What an experience! To take part in being the caretaker of a creation, and experience the deep loveliness of knowing that it will live many many many places, far longer than we will.
I myself have paintings my grandmother bought from her artist friends - small oil paintings of the White Mountains, and gardens. Over 100 years old, these are heirlooms,to be relished for years to come.
I also have a small collection of fine photographs bartered or purchased from local photographers, much of it already given to my children.
When my older son was married in Maui, I had to be talked out of trying to safely lug an enormous framed photograph to and from, that was their wedding gift- which he and his bride-to-be had chosen from the work of a local photographer, and that I saved for with excitement over the previous year.
I already have my eye on a distant friend's painting and another work of art, as there are many momentous times in your kid's life , and the special gift of a piece of art need not be relegated solely to the overly revered event of marriage.
Local Fine Art is a precious thing, and I hope we as a population remember that, even when money is tight, saving for some greatly appreciated creation changes your days and your nights.
I love that so many local painters and potters understand this wise yearning, and so create small affordable paintings and pots that can come blossom in our lives.
A most gorgeous small painting , with a carefully selected Mat and frame, can be placed in just the right place in home or office, to have tea with, or feel the day come to an end in the company of.
Experience crushing anguish with its comfort and complexity ,or spend a quiet morning moment discovering the new way it's colors transform as light shifts through a nearby window.
All of this fills and enriches our daily lives. In a way that, like reading aloud and other ventures, is becoming all but forgotten.
A large or small piece of art we are inexplicably drawn to becomes a presence in our lives. much like the manner in which we come to know a person or beloved meadow or night sky.
Please pay no heed to our current culture . Let me prod our collective memory to remind us -of our capacity to own, live contentedly with, and then pass along irreplaceable creations.
I was thinking over how , in the past , even people without significant incomes seemed determined to save up for locally created art, as objects of both decoration and pleasure ; as valuable heirlooms intended to be passed down from one person to another through time.
And it surprises me that now we seem so intent upon ensuring the purchase of fashionable clothing, the next iPad, or yet another enjoyable dinner out.
Instead of investing in both the artist and the artwork produced in our time and in our towns. Much of which is extraordinarily affordable.
With places like Michael's and Marshall's full of frames containing non-art, I sometimes fear that our entire population will slowly receive no art history education, no time for creating art in our schools, no Liberal Arts college education - because everyone thinks that if they major in business, they have the greatest possibility of having the best jobs, (point taken , but statistically inaccurate) the most money and the most things to own.
And maybe, like Socrates long ago lamenting the poor manners of the young, I too am finding myself cantankerous, after a life filled with the depth and breadth of an attendance at a high school of the arts, and a remarkable Liberal Arts college education.
We find ourselves in this age of cookie-cutter pseudo art, where even artistic expression by children and young people is viewed dismissively as invalid cute expressions, versus anything valuable,
I find myself wanting to remind people of the pleasure of finding $30 to purchase an inspiring beautiful watercolor, to bring home , place in just the right spot, and begin the intriguing process of living with one another.
Or the deep delight of slowly paying off a $200 piece of art such as the one below, by Lenore Grubinger. Reflecting her summer days and nights by a wooded pond, replete with its sounds and smells, it's wildlife and sunrises-all that experience imbued in a beautiful work of art.
Which will grace my walls in my life for as long as I live, and then will be handed down to my children and their children or others, with pleasure and appreciation.
Talk about an investment. What an experience! To take part in being the caretaker of a creation, and experience the deep loveliness of knowing that it will live many many many places, far longer than we will.
I myself have paintings my grandmother bought from her artist friends - small oil paintings of the White Mountains, and gardens. Over 100 years old, these are heirlooms,to be relished for years to come.
I also have a small collection of fine photographs bartered or purchased from local photographers, much of it already given to my children.
When my older son was married in Maui, I had to be talked out of trying to safely lug an enormous framed photograph to and from, that was their wedding gift- which he and his bride-to-be had chosen from the work of a local photographer, and that I saved for with excitement over the previous year.
I already have my eye on a distant friend's painting and another work of art, as there are many momentous times in your kid's life , and the special gift of a piece of art need not be relegated solely to the overly revered event of marriage.
Local Fine Art is a precious thing, and I hope we as a population remember that, even when money is tight, saving for some greatly appreciated creation changes your days and your nights.
I love that so many local painters and potters understand this wise yearning, and so create small affordable paintings and pots that can come blossom in our lives.
A most gorgeous small painting , with a carefully selected Mat and frame, can be placed in just the right place in home or office, to have tea with, or feel the day come to an end in the company of.
Experience crushing anguish with its comfort and complexity ,or spend a quiet morning moment discovering the new way it's colors transform as light shifts through a nearby window.
All of this fills and enriches our daily lives. In a way that, like reading aloud and other ventures, is becoming all but forgotten.
A large or small piece of art we are inexplicably drawn to becomes a presence in our lives. much like the manner in which we come to know a person or beloved meadow or night sky.
Please pay no heed to our current culture . Let me prod our collective memory to remind us -of our capacity to own, live contentedly with, and then pass along irreplaceable creations.
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