30 x 30 at the Portland Public Library
At the invitation of Portland Public Library’s Program Manager, Rachel Harkness, a group of Maine artists created panel art that included a scene in a library. She said, “Portland Public Library aims to highlight the work and importance of this art (and literary) form through our partnership with the Maine Comic Arts Festival. Exhibiting work by artists at the same size and shape, displayed identically lets the viewer see just how wide ranging and diverse comic art can be.” While I don’t consider myself a comic artist per se, I was happy to contribute a panel with...
Read MoreMoody Point Creative Retreat
A retreat, even one that’s two nights away, can be quite nourishing. I traveled to Wells Beach, Maine last week with Kirsten Cappy to step away from our usual, thanks to the generosity of Lyn Smith‘s family. Each of us starting new picture book projects was the main goal. We arrived under foul weather, but that didn’t stop us from walking to the shore where Lyn got a windy weather report from Kirsten. Back at the Cottage, a little blue bedroom became my work and dream space. I found a nature journal by Lyn’s son, Eric, from when he was 9. It proved the best prompt as...
Read MoreSex and Other Disturbances
Last night we saw Sex and Other Disturbances by Marisa Smith. When I read the script over a year ago, I had other thoughts for a poster besides that 3 letter word. The play touches many topics: marriage, aging, infidelity, female bonds, betrayal. Anney Giobbe plays Sarah, desperate for attention as the wife of Alan, an accountant preoccupied with environmental collapse, and mother of an off-stage teenager. She meets a sexy younger man in acting class, Niko, who becomes the catalyst for her changing identity. She visits his Tribeca apartment, loaded with plants, like an exotic jungle, or...
Read MoreSea Star Splash in So Po
Thanks to Kim Campbell at the lovely South Portland Public Library, my recent book, Ana and the Sea Star, got a sweet splash last Saturday. I brought shells for touching. We, too, found a sea star once, but it had already dried up. It became the model I drew from when illustrating the book. After I read the story by R. Lynne Roelfs, kids drew sea critters and colored sea stars. I drew a rather unremarkable mermaid on a big pad, but the kids didn’t care, they wanted to add to it and draw, too! …like this adorable mermaid… A vigorous scribble can be really fun. My Maine...
Read MorePicture Book Finale!
I couldn’t have asked for a more satisfying ending to my story at Maine College of Art than the Picture Book course that just wrapped up last week. I wrote about the first half of the semester HERE, and the second half really picked up speed. After a snowy spring break, I returned to class with props for a life drawing session meant to warm us all UP. Students volunteered to model. Meet Queen Veronica. Drawing with my students is better than spring! The sheer variety of results is a delight. This sketch is by Aric. This one’s mine. My teaching assistant Liz Long’s sketch...
Read MoreThe Niceties
The Niceties is a sharply relevant play by Eleanor Burgess now in it’s final performances at Portland Stage Company. Thanks to a busy April, I didn’t see it til Friday night. I gathered a group of educators, mostly at the college level, to see the train wreck that transpires between a white female history professor at an elite university and her black student. When I read the script, I knew it would be one of the most compelling productions of the current season. The dialogue is fast-paced and urgent. The divides are many: of race, age, privilege, class. While gender may unite...
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