Time's end??An oldie but goody. Dali. I think of the image of the melting clock, can't seem to get it out of my head. Must have significance for me. Love Salvatore. He's my kind of guy.
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Time's end??An oldie but goody. Dali. I think of the image of the melting clock, can't seem to get it out of my head. Must have significance for me. Love Salvatore. He's my kind of guy.
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Don't think so as clock not disappearing, just changing, evolving. Into? Something else. Gosh, I'm losing my vocabulary.Time's end??![]()
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I cheated & looked up this painting by Salvadore & found:Don't think so as clock not disappearing, just changing, evolving. Into? Something else. Gosh, I'm losing my vocabulary.
I seem to remember that Mary Cassatt preferred painting servants with their children because they seemed more natural than the more privileged.My favorite of Mary Cassatt's paintings of children with mothers
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Interesting, Babs. I learned something new, thanks to you~I seem to remember that Mary Cassatt preferred painting servants with their children because they seemed more natural than the more privileged.
I found that interesting too!Interesting, Babs. I learned something new, thanks to you~![]()
She looks like Kristi Noem. The one who shot her dog.
I agree.You have the most esquisite taste @RadishRose. Everything you display I love.
1566!!!!!!
Wild, isn't it?1566!!!!!!
Mark, can you please show some of your wife's work? Thank you.Went to a couple of open studios in the Northbay with my wife Lia today, starting with Marjory. Marjory recently turned 90 and has been a painter but has dabbled in much else as well including making a huge organic garden/orchard and studying a branch of hinduism. My wife, seated in her walker, is 'only' 82 and is a weaver with an international reputation. They talked a lot about what will become of their work after they buy the farm. Marjory's husband died recently and they are trying to sell her house so she can move into an adult retirement community something she has long wanted to do but her husband never wanted to leave their weird old house on the hill (which I agreed with).
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Here are a couple of the many paintings she is looking to make arrangements for in her small studio.
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Mark, can you please show some of your wife's work? Thank you.
These are spectacular and very unusual. Thank you so much for sharing!Sure. Here she is with my niece and a piece she wove of her.
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And another of a larger weaving based on the same photo at a museum show.
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A show that was given for her and her colleague and friend Carole Beadle work when they retired in 2016, after 42 years teaching at CCA in Lia's case and somewhat longer for Carole.![]()
There are also a number of interviews or presentations about here work online, like this one from a 2012 show in Houston:then there is one from 2009 of a Wyoming exhibition of larger scale pieces she had woven at a factory:
Finally here is one I took at a retrospective show held locally for us at the Richmond Art Center. I like it because it is framed by two of my garden design friends who just happened to be wearing the perfect outfits to merge with her piece.
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I saved her site for Sunday reading:>)Oops thought I’d responded already. Here is a photo I took this of one of Lia’s pieces at show at the Richmond Art Center in 2018.
Lots of work, articles and videos at her website: Lia Cook