WINTER SALUTATIONS! January 9, 2021 As the temperatures drop and the sun begins its slow trek back toward the north, I just want to check in with you. As you may know, I am not a fan of winter, but I have learned to love the winter light with its long deep shadows which add drama and dimension to our Mojave landscape. With this new year, I wish to spread some hope - and I am sharing an excerpt from my article recently published in our local newspaper, the Hi-Desert Star. "We reflect on our past and must have hope for the future. What are artists to do in 2021? I suggest you be kind to yourself and pat yourself on the back when you make small progress. Keep creating. Work small. Create several times a week rather than forcing a huge project! Watch your health— sleep, exercise, a healthy diet, and spiritual nurturing are crucial! Follow the Covid essentials of social distancing and mask wearing Kindle new interests. Learn new skills. Teach-share what you know. Reach out, locally and globally. We are not only missing hugs and contact with others. Artists miss the tactile elements. It is not easy to see the depth of brushstrokes, the thickness of paint, the characteristics of a medium, or even to know the size of a work. Ask questions! Interact with artists online or with old fashioned devices, a note or phone call. I received a Covid collection of cards this summer and I treasure them. My Esty business specializes in notecards and paper items with a personal touch and a French flair. You have heard enough about Zoom! Yet, a virtual meeting over a meal contains the elements of breaking bread with another. If spirituality is part of your life, cultivate those connections. I meet weekly with women for Bible study and prayer and to provide encouragement. Keep a journal or diary which includes gratitude. During 2020, meditative hands-on activities such sewing masks, remodeling our rental (lots of scraping, sanding and painting) and making meals became important to me—connecting to the lives of ancestors. I often ponder how they lived with simple items. As we begin a new year and confront the unknown, how do we inspire others and remain motivated? Despite my love/hate relationship with social media, I maintain my accounts to promote new art and to communicate. I give myself breaks. Social media is not an obligation; it can be an opportunity! This year I found it important to embrace the USPS! When I requested package pickups, I left 3x5 notecards saying #usps or #IloveUSPS. My carrier picked them up! At Christmas, when I gave her a calendar, I learned she loves the French Impressionists! Another positive connection as a result of Covid! We must develop skills such as patience, resilience, and openness, especially to the unexpected. Keep your life sane! Create home comfort centers. Typically, artists collect a lot of stuff. Neaten up! Clear out! Read for information or imagination! Place chairs, tables or baskets with your needs conveniently: pencils, colored markers, notepads, journals, inspirational books, Kleenex…. Savor the seasons. Study changing light and its effect on your painting or other art forms Find ways to help others. Give back! I gifted my France Sketchbook calendars and Zoom classes. I hope we, as creative thinkers, can turn problems into opportunity, peace of mind, satisfaction, and contentment during 2021! I was reminded of Henry David Thoreau’s words in Walden. May we take note: I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived… I wanted to live deep and suck out all the marrow of life, to live so sturdily and Spartan-like as to put to rout all that was not life, to cut a broad swath and shave close, to drive life into a corner, and reduce it to its lowest terms, and, if it proved to be mean, why then to get the whole and genuine meanness of it, and publish its meanness to the world; or if it were sublime, to know it by experience, and be able to give a true account of it in my next excursion. — Henry David Thoreau, Walden." Please, dear friends, stay safe this year. I thank you for your interest in the arts and wish you joy with your own creative projects. And please, tell me what you are doing! Post a comment below! Inspired by all of you, ~Janis Link to complete page More information available: Zoom Art Classes, available artwork, my Etsy shop: French Press (which is offering my 2021 calendars this month at 25% off) Mom's Wingback Chair, watercolor, Janis Commentz (available on cards)
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