A slice of summer

Posted by on Aug 11, 2022 in Horse Island | 2 comments

peach and Maine blueberry pie by Jamie Hogan

This summer has been fast and furious. But fruitful!

I attended my first Illustration Institute event of this season in late July, a workshop with illustrator-in-residence, Carin Berger. It was held at the TEIA, the most breezy spot for gathering makers.

Carin’s fellow Faison Resident James Ransome was also participating!

James Ransome, illustrator and Illustration Institute co-founder, Nancy Gibson Nash at the TEIA on Peaks Island. Maine

Carin made a wonderful presentation about artists and their collections, the food for inspiration found in artist studios, and she shared her exquisite picture books and process. We each were given a small shallow box in which to create a collage of any kind. Plenty of ephemera fluttered in the sea breezes!

Kirsten Cappy, Executive Director of I’m Your Neighbor Books, found a vintage textbook she couldn’t resist dissecting.

Kirsten Cappy photo © Jamie Hogan

My memory box became an anniversary gift for my husband, Marty. The first four years of our marriage we lived in San Francisco. Maps, stamps, tickets, moons, all momentos of our chapters together.

collage box by Jamie Hogan

We departed a couple of days later for a getaway, celebrating our 34th anniversary. Time flies when you share it with a soulmate who likes cake!

illustration © Jamie Hogan

We spent our anniversary in Franconia Notch, hiking to Artists Bluff. I grew up in the White Mountains of New Hampshire and it felt good to touch home base.

Marty Braun and Jamie Hogan near Echo Lake State Park, New Hampshire

I made a quick sketch from the summit. A steep trail called for some slow looking, and making the moment last!

sketch by Jamie Hogan

These mountains inspired an illustration that will soon appear in The Milky Way by Gunnel Larsdotter, to be published by Fulton Books this fall.

illustration by Jamie Hogan from THE MILKY WAY by Gunnel Larsdotter

The realms of night skies have beckoned me always. I am delighted to be in a group exhibition, Seeds of LIght, at Zero Station Gallery in Portland, Maine.

photo of Glimmer Cove © Jamie Hogan

I’m in the company of incredible artists who share this passion for cosmic dust and nebulas. Please go visit!

Meanwhile I continue to work on two book projects. Here’s a sneak peek from Oh, Chickadee! by Jennifer Jacobson. This non-fiction picture book all about chickadees will be published by McSea Books in 2023. I drew one of my favorite buildings on Peaks, a small red barn right around the corner from the Illustration Institute guest houses.

illustration by Jamie Hogan from OH, CHICKADEE! by Jennifer Jacobson

Marty and I attended a stellar presentation by James Ransome on August 4 at the Portland Public Library.

James Ransome, award winning illustrator presenting at Portland Public Library

I love when we learn all the background: where he grew up, how he found art in the local pharmacy (comics for sale), his high school art teacher in New Jersey who encouraged him. Art takes A LOT of support. He shared his early work from high school, and his first illustration jobs. His award-winning author wife, Lesa Cline Ransome, read their book, Before She Was Harriet. Their four children “keep me in my studio” he said. Jerry Pinkney was a mentor for ten years, and James told us he likes to “entertain the eye and think like a filmmaker.”

What a gift to meet them!

Lesa and James Ransome photo © Jamie Hogan

Up next was the wedding of my beloved nephew, Garrett Sanborn, to his beautiful bride, Marlee Huston. I made this drawing for them, after learning he proposed during a kayak paddle on a lake in Maine. Yes, those are little sparkly gems stuck on the drawing!

A proposal pastel © Jamie Hogan

Their ceremony was August 6 under sunny skies at the magical Wanderwood Farm in Nobleboro, Maine. What a joyful day! Every detail was thoughtful, delicious, and I still get weepy savoring it.

Garrett Sanborn weds Marlee Huston at Wanderwood Farm photo © Jamie Hogan

But wait, there’s more! Our daughter, Daisy Braun, has installed another exhibit of her incredible sculptures at the Wells Reserve Gallery in Wells, Maine. Her show, being the current, will have a reception tonight, August 11, from 5 – 7 pm. Details HERE.

Daisy Braun making sculptures in Ted Haykal’s studio on Peaks Island, Maine photo © Marty Braun

A former island neighbor, architect Dick Reed, provided astute assistance with the installation. These works are bouyant, made of reed, ribbon, and string, yet they require careful handling and suspension from multiple points.

Daisy Braun and Dick Reed install sculptures at Wells Reserve Gallery photo © Marty Braun

Meanwhile, I am part of a new group show, Islands. My neighbor, Danielle Madore, has bravely created a daring place for art and conversation at the Crow’s Nest Gallery on Island Avenue. Please stop in this Sunday, 1 – 4 pm.

I am showing a series of gouache paintings I began late last year, after a woodsy walk with Robert Vandersteenhoven, island sculptor and mushroom master. Somini Sengupta in the New York Times says fungi are “agents of reincarnation.” I can tell this topic will provide inspiration for a long time.

mixed media painting by Jamie Hogan

Big exhale. So much going on. More to come! I hope you will enjoy the full moon rise tonight, August 11. We hope to catch a glimpse on the ferry ride returning from the Wells Galery reception. May all the powers of nature and art fill you with the same sacred awe that it does me. Enjoy this slice of summer, and gobble it up. My niece, Cristel Hamilton, read a poem at her brother’s wedding, Mary Oliver’s Don’t Hesitate.

Don’t let joy be a crumb!

2 Comments

  1. Commentyou caught all the special moments of summer. Breathe deeply indded❤️

  2. Wonderful happenings up where you are. So glad you share with all of us!

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