Susan R. Kirshenbaum

art and life - both the cherries and the pits

A Busy Beginning of 2024

Susan R. KirshenbaumComment

The year began with adventures like this one – atop an old volcano in Maui – and lots of art.

Exploring the Self

I don’t really do self-portraits, but I am keenly interested in exploring identity. At the end of 2023, a friend took a photo of me on the sofa after dinner recently, which I turned into a self-portrait.

Here’s another new piece exploring my identity. It’s an addition to my ongoing series: Women and Nature. The collage contains: a drawing of a huddled pose from a session with the model Sarah, photos I shot of an Italian shop window, an embroidered ceremonial textile (with Hebrew text), and a rose image from Golden Gate Park Rose Garden. It was juried into “Patterns, Shapes, and Textures” in Jan 2024 at SFWA Gallery.

This is my interpretation of the requested self-portrait “assignment” for my drawing group.

“Inside the Shop Window” is a newly produced piece. It’s a 48w x 24h framed metal print, in an edition 1/1.

March is Women’s History Month: Three Shows

“Flirting”, a digital original collage, is my first circular piece, a requirement of the show theme. It’s a 23x23 inch metal print, in an edition 1/1.

NCWCA: 6000 Circle Project

I was invited to show a feature piece in the NCWCA March show at Arc Gallery (SF).

In collaboration with The Calling (Artists Yasmin Lambie-Simpson, Chantelle Goldthwaite, and Sheila Metcalf-Tobin), everyone was invited to participate in the international art initiative, The 6000 Circle Project. The project focuses on the circle as a symbol of balance and unity, a never-ending container of feminine energy and light. The Calling envisions 6000 circles created by a multitude of artists from around the globe. Circles created by NCWCA members and the public are exhibited in the Arc Project Gallery through April 6. NCWCA is the first WCA chapter to kick off this global 2024 exhibition. NCWCA presents a collaborative exhibition honoring the Divine Feminine ​in the Project Gallery at Arc Gallery.

The Drawing Room: Women Rising

The Drawing Room’s “Women Rising” second annual group show included two venues, on both Clement Street and Valencia Street (SF). I showed my piece “Love in Shades of Blue”.

Color is often a theme for me.

A pink coat connection.

Women in pink coats must stick together. Always a great conversation starter, this pink-coated artist next to me had another idea - she handed out hundreds of adorable arty finger puppets at the receptions!

(Sorry but I don’t know her name!)

Joseph Abbati curated the Black History Month show at Senator Scott Weiner’s office. (That’s Scott next to me plus painter friends (left) May Shei and (center) Tiffany Conway.)

SEISMIC SISTERS CURATED WOMAN-MADE

I was selected by this wonderful feminist group to take part in an exciting show in a super-cool venue, Manny’s, in the SF Mission, which was new to me.

Just after hanging my corner.

ABOUT SEISMIC SISTERS

Seismic Sisters elevates and celebrates feminist artists and activists who are shaking things up. We amplify the voices of new leaders and rebels who are shifting culture and changing the landscape. We also give space and r-e-s-p-e-c-t to longtime feminist activists who did the groundwork and are still powering on to create a more feminist future. From girls to grandmas, we need each other, feed each other, and work best together. Seismic Sisters is a mix of clubhouse, news site, and think tank where you come to get informed, inspired, and invigorated to go back out into the world. Our epicenter is San Francisco, but our influence will ripple out beyond the Bay Area.

A recent photo of Randy in his studio.

A Tribute to Randall Sexton

1958-2023

On Dec 10, 2023, Randy passed away at his Benicia art studio. Very much at the height of his artistic and teaching career, this was an unbelievable shock and tragic loss for our community. Randy’s family, friends, students, teachers, artists, art models, gallerists, curators, and the art world won’t be the same without him.

1980’s vintage “art photo” of Randy on his roof in North Beach

I will miss my long-time friend. I would travel to Benicia just to draw a model with him for a few hours. Randy was great to be around – funny, smart, generous, and insightful. I feel particularly bad for friends who were in the midst of his mentorship program, and those who planned to take his international workshops, or hoped to simply spend more time with him over a meal and a beer.

His widow, Carol Neilson, has an ongoing gofundme campaign underway and she is running a studio estate sale in Benicia on Saturdays. Let me know if you’d like to connect with her.

Clearing out Randy’s beautiful studio, his art models were invited to choose a work they’d posed for to take home.

And Springtime Arrives

Sometimes there are happy art-making accidents. This is my house.

Magnolias, daffodils, camelias, rhododendrens, oh my. Another day at my favorite place – the SF Botanical Garden.

VR of me at the current fashion-themed show at the DeYoung.

I love the DeYoung Museum. I see all of their shows. It’s also conveniently right near my home. Don’t miss the fabulous Irving Penn show on now!

This was taken at the year-end Art Explosion Open Studios in my studio (#209). I love my new studio (Sept 2023) and all of our open studio events!

WHAT’S NEXT?

A big trip! I’ll be away most of April – in Bali and Java and Singapore. This is a big year for traveling again…so I’ve pulled back a bit from my many artistic obligations and leaning into adventures!

You can still find me working away in my studio at Art Explosion, 744 Alabama Street, #209, between 19th and 20th in the Mission. Stop by (text first)! I’ll be there frequently in May, July, August, October, November, and December.

We’re having a spring open studio that I’ll have to miss for our Bali trip, but please check it out! ART EXPLOSION OPEN STUDIOS: Opening Reception: Fri April 12, 7-10pm and Open Studios: April 13-14, Sat & Sun: 12-5pm. Art Explosion Studios is an Arts Organization that provides affordable art studios in San Francisco and produces art shows for its member artists. By supplying art space and exhibition opportunities, we enable our artists to explore their talent and interact with the public in a supportive and creative environment. Artists grow and thrive here to create a dynamic art scene in San Francisco.

Of course I’m planning to curate and participate in more gallery shows toward year-end and into early 2024. Look for updates about the next an Invisibility Collective biennial group exhibition and a third iteration of our Figurative Show.

This was taken at the FOG Art and Design Fair at the beginning of the year.

Look for my updates here:  https://linktr.ee/SusanRKirshenbaum

I am most active on Instagram, so if you follow me there you can see my frequent event announcements, new work, travel and other fun pics.

Another plant and place I am in love with – Pride of Madeira and all the shades they grow in from pink to deep violet, as the bloom along the dock-front path to Fort Mason.

January at Sausalito Center for the Arts (SCA)

Opening night at SCA

Hard work, curatorial responsibilities, a new venue, lots of fresh connections, plus a couple of short vacations…were all packed into the front end of the year.

I co-curated – with fellow artist and curator Catherine Merrill – a large figurative show at SCA in January. We were their guest curators for “Third Generation: The Bay Area Figurative Movement Today”. We selected 18 Bay Area artists to exhibit both two and three-dimensional works. Each artist was invited to show five pieces of their work and each had their own portion of the gallery.

We hosted multiple exhibition-related events. We held an opening and a closing reception with food and wine and we hosted artist and author talks. Peter Steinhart, who wrote The Undressed Art, gave an enlightening talk about why we draw. He also exhibited his drawings in the show. Peter is in my long-time weekly drawing group. There was also live music and a roving art model, the actress Becky Hirschfeld, for everyone to draw.

Patterns! I’m here with my friend, the artist May Shei, in front of her wall of art and her ten foot tall watercolor scrolls!

Exhibiting artist Sandra Speidel is shown here drawing Becky Herschfeld, our model at the closing.

Mary Graham with her paper bag series of portraits.

So much preparation and planning for this show, starting in 2022 to create a smaller version we held at the SFWA Gallery in the spring of 2023. But what a powerful and fulfilling payoff – with great exposure, attendance, sales, and wonderful feedback from the community. The space looked marvelous. Thank you, SCA!

PARTICIPATING ARTISTS

Joseph Abbati, Douglas Andelin, Madelyn Covey, Jane Fisher, Mary Graham, Isidoro, Susan R. Kirshenbaum, Catherine Merrill, Stephen Namara, Diane Olivier, Sharon Paster, Fernando Reyes, Alex Rosmarin, Randall Sexton (deceased)*, May Shei, Sandra Speidel, Peter Steinhart, and Charles H. Stinson 

See the article by Jonathan Farrell:

California + News  and The Figurative Art Movement of The Bay Area isn’t Dead 

Artist and author Peter Steinhart speaking at the closing reception.

The book was for sale at the closing talk by Peter (right).

The Artists and Curators from left to right: Me, Charles H. Stinson, Peter Steinhart, Diane Olivier, Madeline Covey, Alex Rosmarin (back row), Mary Graham, Sandra Speidel, Isadoro, and Catherine Merrill. Not pictured here: Fernando Reyes, Stephen Namara, Jane Fisher, Joseph Abbati, Doug Andelin, May Shei, and Sharon Paster (and of course, Randy).

The curators and gallery director, Shiva Pakdel, speaking to attendees.

Fernando Reyes and his art wall.

Jane Fisher and her wall of paintings.

Overview of the gallery.

Overview of the gallery.

CURATOR’S STATEMENT

The Bay Area Figurative Movement never died and continues to thrive. San Francisco Bay Area artists and models founded the Models Guild in 1946, and it’s no wonder that we still have such a healthy, lively community, chock-full of dedicated talent. Some of us even flourished during COVID and sheltering-in-place, as we continued drawing, painting, and sculpting on Zoom sessions around the world. What does our figurative community look like? We are artists and models; teachers and students; our styles are anywhere from classical to pop; our techniques are everything from digital to hand-ground pigments; and our community encompasses the very experienced and the relatively new to exhibiting. This exhibition explores a full range of styles and approaches combined with skill and craft. 

A portion of Randy Sexton’s wall.

Stephen Namara’s wall.

Happy artists, curators, venue. Look for more shows I’ll be curating more at SCA in the near future!

Sharon Paster and her corner of the gallery.

An Art Tour attended our artists talks at SCA. The sculptor Charles H. Stinson is shown speaking.

Closing night party. Photo by Doug Kaye.

Maui in the Middle

We managed to sneak away on two short trips – to Maui and Mexico. We were invited to Maui so of course we couldn’t say no to a brief getaway in the middle of the figurative show. Life in Maui presents you with chickens wandering freely and giant turtles lounging on the beaches. It’s another world. A beachfront condo and good friends to hang out with, then it was just us – for a romantic getaway with a full moon.

Green sea turtles lounging in abundance.

Chickens roaming by the beach.

I almost always bring a Barbie on my trips.

Here’s my dirty, old, chopped-hair Malibu Barbie in a hand-made crochet “vacation dress” she was gifted.

ArtWeek in Mexico City

Right after the figurative show ended, followed by a week-long stint helping our friend with Randy’s art estate sale, we hopped off to Mexico City (CDMX) for their annual Artweek. Only six nights there – but it was so dense with all the various art fairs, walking the city, exploring the galleries, visiting obscure museums, and always investigating food and flea markets…not to mention constant snacking and socializing. Upon return we had a few celebrations, including mole mezcal dinner parties and a restaurant reunion with the talented Bay Area stylist and chef of Anything’s Pastable.

Anything’s Pastable

Artweek reunion in the SF Mission with Stephen Wagner and Jillian Knox.

In CDMX we hung out with some Bay Area friends and we went to my cousins house, where we watched the Super Bowl and snacked on pizza while sipping mezcal.

Stephen Wagner, art coach extraordinaire, was hanging out with us at Artweek.

An evening at an historic Mexico City restaurant and a delicious mezcal margarita.

Jack, me, and Jillian Chinn at one of the art fairs held in some beautiful ruins.

On the go through the last day of multiple art fairs and wanderings.

YES. We’re planning to return to CDMX Artweek next year! And we’ll spend more time next time.

Loved this dismembered arm petting kitty sculpture

Here’s a cool use of space – completely covered by small, delicate art.

We walked by this CDMX store-front with beautifully appointed black and white theme inside and out.

We found our delicious mole paste at a stall that also sold beans, pet food, candy, and spices in our neighborhood market.

The amazing mole and mezcal dinner (1 of 2) made upon returning home.

Suddenly, September (Part 2)

Susan R. KirshenbaumComment

Suddenly it’s my favorite month! Time for new beginnings. It’s also my birthday month and the Jewish New Year. It’s time to re-set and regenerate in this post-pandemic era we’re entering. Time snuck up on me. Summer is over? Not in California with off and on record high temps in our normally chilly SF summer/fall! But we’ve arrived at the Fall Equinox and now there’s a fresh scent in the air, a bit of rain in the clouds, and the grape vines are turning gold and red. So I’ll wrap up my springtime adventure in Italy.

“Christina in a Bed of Roses” is new in my ongoing digital original collage series. A new wide format, this is a life drawing of a model in San Francisco combined with my abstract paintings and photos. See these Golden Gate Park roses along with antique fabric and lace from a museum in Provence.

SPRINGTIME IN ITALY

I had never attended the Venice Biennale, and friends have been curious about my first experience there. You arty folks might want to plan your own trips to Venice if you haven’t yet. The good news is that there’s still time. You have until November.

When I traveled there, it was with a group of a dozen arty friends. Our first stop- of our one month trip - was into Venice, in mid-April. We also traveled through Northern Italy by bus and car, then into France. This trip was so dense, I had to break it into 3 bite-size chunks. I have far too many photos.

But, gosh, I sure do love art fairs. And I hope to return to the Biennale again some day soon. I want to see how this art fair differs from year to year. I love Venice with a passion, which I first discovered at 14 years old. That was when I wrote a poem called “The Rat and the Red Rose” (based on what floats by in the canals).

It seems I hit the Biennale the most perfect year for me - 2022 is the first year they honored and featured women artists.

NUTS AND BOLTS

Because friends asked…Here’s how the Venice Biennale works. It’s held every other year, but it’s been on hold due to Covid. Remember the videos of dolphins swimming in the Venice canals? Fake!

There are two main curated exhibition venues, plus many varied country pavilions, like The World’s Fair, with art exhibitions produced by one selected artist or a team. The Arsenal and the Castello are these main locations – but there are so many more art shows and installations throughout Venice. One ticket gets you into all these shows. All venues have food and water onsite so you don’t have to leave once you’re there. Like most art fairs, there’s quite a bit of standing, waiting, and walking. There are so many venues you can’t see it all.

I’ve included a few art reviews to peruse. I already sent a few friends recommendations compiled by my little travel group. My Venice pitch is that just because people go to see the Biennale in Venice doesn’t mean it isn’t totally worth seeing more of Venice and spending enough time for a leisurely visit. And traveling around N. Italy, as we did. Springtime (for your future trips) is an ideal season to travel to Europe. It’s still cool. All of my favorite spring flowers are blooming - and oh those shades of lilac to blue. Note my obsession with wisteria.

Wisteria and canals. Can’t get much is better than this.

A VENICE SLIDESHOW

RECOMMENDATIONS

“Curated by Cecilia Alemani, The Milk of Dreams will take place in the Central Pavilion (Giardini) and in the Arsenale. The exhibition takes its title from a book by Surrealist painter and writer Leonora Carrington, a work in which change, transformation, and otherworldly magic alter the lives and imaginations of its characters. A guiding principle of metamorphosis informs the three themes of the exhibition: the representation of bodies and their changes; the relationship between individuals and technology; and the connection between bodies and the Earth. This showcase offers an opportunity for visitors to engage with some of today’s most wide-ranging artistic perplexities.”

Excerpted from Phillips and you can see more at https://www.phillips.com/ Here’s a little compiled list of my recommendations supplemented by my travel friends:

Giardini is one of two main buildings featuring the curated show “The Milk of Dreams”. There are 28 country pavilions on its grounds.

“My favorite exhibit was from Denmark. We walked the Earth. The realism and capturing of a moment of extreme intensity stole my attention.” https://www.designboom.com/art/danish-pavilionwe-walked-the-earth-uffe-isolotto-venice-art-biennale-04-21-2022/

“The Polish Pavilion was my favorite national display.” https://labiennale.art.pl/en/

“Don’t miss Uganda and Japan”. I’m sorry to say that I missed both. See more here: https://www.labiennale.org/en/art/2022/japan and Uganda

In the exhibit of under-represented female artists, we were excited to see the works of these women: Vera Molnar (1970s) and Hannah Levy (1990s)

“I enjoyed walking through the long building at the Arsenal much more than the Giardini…I also enjoyed the various installations found around the city and worth the boat ride out to Giudecca”.

“The big building at the Arsenal was one wonder after another. The Polish pavilion was by one artist who told the story of the Roma people in a giant embroidered and appliquéd extravaganza.”

SO MUCH TO SEE

Walking around Venice to and from the expositions in the Biennale, luscious window displays lured me into shops to buy tiny treats such as malachite powdered pigment for a painter friend.

SCALE AND PERSPECTIVE

Amazing to walk underneath the life-sized horse and human body part sculptures, suspended between buildings, just to get from Point A to Point B.

This entire pavilion was lined with narrative art tapestries depicting the stories of Roma of Poland.

An ad kiosk has rare seating and promotes Venice Biennale events.

This game gives you some idea of the experience.

OA detail of one of the country pavilions made of gorgeous iridescent mosaic tile. What was inside the building was not as exciting.

Café paradise outside the Arsenal was a good place to eat cake and observe the larger-than-life sculptures of women wearing swimsuits cast in bronze.

Great concept! He is not an art piece. Or is he?

I was thrilled by these life-sized, story telling pastels and discovering the artist, Paula Rego, who just passed away.

One of the more interesting shows we came across by chance, this work was about a favorite topic of mine, invisibility.

SIMONE LEIGH: This figurative work is featured throughout the US Pavilion.

Life-size elephant in a gorgeous rotunda

IGSHAAN ADAMS: This is a ceiling to floor wall-length tapestry. “Stitched together with fragments of locally sourced wood, plastic, beads, shells, string, and rope, they are deeply linked to commodity trading and local environs in postcolonial Africa.” More here.

GABRIEL CHAILE: Enormous ceramics of objects usually seen quite small fill this huge space. By Gabriel Chaile.

This is a tiny detail of a very large embroidered wall piece.

Human signage for the Louise Nevelson show.

Ceramic inspiration in this roomful of erotically painted vignettes.

ANDRA URSUTA: Lead crystal sculptures by Andra Ursuta. Use of unusual materials were found throughout the show.

I must pay a tribute to the numerous astounding video and multimedia experiences in Venice, and among my favorites, I loved Francis Alys: The Nature of the Game, in the Belgian Pavilion, Giardini. I don’t enjoy games myself, but what a unique perspective this film lent to the idea.

NOTE: Please forgive me for not listing all of the artists’ names for work shown in the photos. My records are messy and I need to get this blog post wrapped up with my next shows underway!

Who could not take a selfie in this graphic room of profound changing text?

Hard not to enjoy this immersive experience and not to want to take part in some way.

BEYOND VENICE

Verona , where we visited family, is a picturesque little city, rich in culture and history since Roman times.

A NEW FAVORITE MUSEUM

MUSEUM SLIDESHOW: ETTORE GUATELLI

This museum is the astonishingly dense private collection, now a foundation, belonging to a lifelong teacher with a distinctive eye toward finding, organizing, and displaying objects – often no longer used or abandoned. I wrote a blog awhile back about collecting, but I had never seen anything like this! It’s located way out in the countryside, southwest of Parma. If you’re fascinated by collections and have a chance to travel to this region known for its fine cured meats and cheeses, a visit to this museum will make its out of the way location worthwhile.

At a roadside stop for famous regional foods.

Last days of Italy – Babs waves good bye on the balcony of our room, located in a beautiful old monastery in Saluzzo.

WHAT’S NEXT?

2023: Watch for details about a show I’m curating featuring Bay Area figurative artists. Now in its third generation, The Bay Area Figurative Movement lives on!

EXHIBITIONS AND EVENTS

  • Root Division: Exhibition & Art Auction/Reception: Thurs, Oct 20, 6-9pm, Oct 7-23,1131 Mission St, SF

  • SFWA Gallery: "Artist's Choice", Juried by Ashley Voss | Reception Sat., Oct 1, 2-4pm | Through Nov 4 | 647 Irving St @ 8th Ave, SF | Visit the online shop.

  • SFWA Gallery: "Botanicals", Juried by Anne Herbst | Through Sept 23 | 647 Irving St @ 8th Ave, SF | Visit the online shop.

  • Art Show International Online Gallery: Finalist Award, "4th Figurative Show, Sept-Oct 2022

    ARTSPAN OPEN STUDIOS

  • My Open Studio Receptions: Sat-Sun, Nov 5 & 6, 11-6pm | Sobel Design Bldg, 680 8th St (btw Townsend / Brannan), Suite 230, SF

  • Artspan Open Studios Exhibition/Reception: Thurs, October 20 | Oct 22-Nov 13 | SOMArts, 934 Brannan St, SF

  • SFWA Gallery Opening Reception: "Artist's Choice" & Open Studios: Oct 1, 2-4pm | Sept 27-Nov 3 | 647 Irving St @ 8th Ave, SF

  • SFWA Gallery Receptions: Open Studio 12 Exhibiting Artists: Oct 29-30, 11am-6pm | SFWA: 647 Irving St @ 8th Ave, SF

    SAVE THE DATES

  • The Bi-Annual Invisibility Collective group Show Re-Appears! Every other year our Collective – plus invited guest artists – have an exhibition at Radian Gallery (SF) in Dec-Jan. Reception Dec. 10. For more info see my website and social media posts.

  • SFWA Gala Benefit Fundraiser and Art Auction: Dec 7, 6-8:30pm, Salesforce Building - top floor with a 360 degree view. Details to follow on my website and social media posts.

ONGOING

  • See my live TV interview, Aug 17, 2022, on behalf of SFWA Gallery on KRON4 TV: LIVE! in the Bay on YouTube

  • Commissions and special orders available. Procreate workshops available. Studio visits by appointment Mon-Sat, 9-5pm.

  • Check out my ARTWEAR and various art products, including wall paper, where I am always adding new work, on the sites RedBubble and Spoonflower. We will never look alike!

  • Become my PATRON. See my art and photography that only patrons get to see. Every little bit helps. Join me on Patreon!

  • Follow me on Instagram. Not an IG user? Everything I post is shared to my Facebook art page.

    BLOG PLANS

  • See my LAST blog post "Spain: Part 1" (This is Part 2 and yes, there will be a Part 3, France)

  • Send me your personal Barbie story for an upcoming Barbie blog post and website - all part of my on-going “Barbie on the Cusp” project.

  • I’m still fascinated by collectors. Send me your collection photos (JPG format please) for possible inclusion in another blog post about this exciting topic!

Summer Begins in Spain: Part 1

Susan R. KirshenbaumComment

Spring into Summer

We Began in Italy, Slid into France, then Stayed in Spain

From the Venice Biennale in mid-April to the museums of Paris in mid-May, we traveled with a group of pals, our “travel family”. We explored obscure sites and enjoyed extravagant meals full of unusual flavors. From cheese making in Paris, to visiting odd little museums in cities and countryside, we spent our first month traveling with the group before moving onto our one-time home in Girona, Catalonia for the next month.

Part 2 and 3: These upcoming posts (in progress) will be about the first portion of our trip and feature the Biennale. In Part 1 I’m writing and showing a sampling of photos from our most recent experiences in and around Girona.

Here’s a photo of me in front of a beautiful mosaic during one of the last days of our travels with friends through Italy and France. Shot in Paris by our talented friend, Flora, this was on the Rue Jacob, in the neighborhood of Saint Germain de Pres. Scarf by Julie Paschkis.

FROM LAST TO FIRST: DAY TRIPS

Daily side trips helped us deal with the extreme heat wave in our HQ, Girona, where the temperature reached 106F plus humidity. Living in SF for decades means we are no longer used to extreme weather. Most of the time, SF’s temperature range is small, between 60-75F. I welcome the chilly summer fog today!

DAY TRIPPING

L’ESTARTIT

We took a jaunt to L’Estartit, to meet up with a friend in a chiringuito (a rough cafe with drinks and snacks right on the sand) to enjoy the end of day temperature drop and slight breeze. It’s too hot and sunny from midday into late afternoon to spend time under the sun. It’s imperative to get on the local schedule: up fairly early to do chores and shop; meals at regular times with a big lunch from 1:30-3:30 followed by an indoor siesta, then back outdoors again to the beach or in town for a pleasant evening with drinks, tapas or a light meal, and often a delicious ice cream.

In L’Estartit, a long cove beach on the Costa Brava, we met a friend at 4pm; swam at 7:30; and left at around 8:30, swinging by the grocery for supplies to have a snack at home. I bought a little kit for 5 euros consisting of cans of muscles, clams, and olives stuffed with anchovies plus a tiny bottle of Espina hot sauce. I debated about buying a bottle of cava (champagne made in Catalonia) for under 3 euros but selected a brut reserve for 6 euros.

At the beach and on the ride home, There was still plenty of light until quite late, with bold, dramatic skies and ominous rain clouds that burst every once in awhile.

Ominous cloudy sunset at L’Estartit.

The beach at L’Estartit as seen from the chiringuito.

MORE DAY TRIPS

HOSTALRIC, SANT MARTI DE LA ROCA, PALAFRUGELL, TORRELLA DE MONTGRI / PALS, LA FOSCA, SA TUNA, AND TOSSA DE MAR

It’s fun to lie on the sand and look over at the castle remains on the hillside in TOSSA DE MAR.

Walking the path along the coast at La Fosca.

A view from the window of favorite restaurant in a favorite seaside village, San Marti d’Emporda.

The beginning of the season is provides especially clear, clean water.

Yes the water really is turquoise.

Eating right next to the water in Tamariu.

First time seeing the village of Hostalric with its castle and wall plus this outdoor hand painted mural.

A BENEDICTINE MONASTERY COMPLEX

For a cooler inland trip, overlooking the sea, and from far above it, Sant Pere de Rodes is a favorite site. Built as an abbey in the 10th C., this monument complex has an unusual monastery built in the 11th C, which was abandoned and fell into decline in 1798. Fortunately it has been extensively restored since our last visit a number of years ago. Then it was a walk-in and explore kind of place. Now there’s an entry fee and gift shop…but it’s worth the trade off. It looked like so much had been excavated and made safe for exploring. The site is celebrating its anniversary, from 1022-2022. Afterward we drove down the mountain to the seaside village of El Port de la Selva for beers, mussels, and seafood fideua (noodle paella).

Stairs to one of two bell towers and a restaurant.

Fideua with alioli sauce

The Catalan Romanesque style church nave with barrel vaulting is 16 meters high.

Mussels marinera

ROMAN TARRAGONA

I’ve always wanted to see this Roman port city of Tarragona, with its intact ancient walls, Amphitheatre, Roman circus, medieval churches, and more. It’s only two hours south of Girona. Afterward we watched the Russell Crowe film “Gladiator” again, which felt just right.

There’s a lively art scene in and around Tarragona. The one indication that we saw were portside galleries and art installations.

Like many Roman sites, the Amphitheatre is overlooking the coast.

Old terminal turned into an an art gallery. The local artist showing here was American.

And arty city, this is a building-height mural in Tarragona close to the port.

Looking up the stairs to the Tarragona cathedral.

At the city’s port there’s contemporary public art and art exhibits inside of old terminals.

I love travel in the springtime! In addition to the fabulous flowers in bloom, asparagus and artichokes are in season throughout the Med.

Roasted artichokes (and fresh fish) for lunch. I ate fresh artichokes as often as possible since they were in season and so well prepared.

GIRONA’S OLD QUARTER

I’m always charmed by the Onyar River that divides the City’s Old Quarter from the less ancient part of town. The rich warm tones of the buildings are reflected in the shallow water along with the big sky, multiple foot bridges, and landmark churches. Sunsets are divine.

The Roman Wall, Passeig de la Muralla, was expanded in the 14th century and renovated to be walkable in the 21st century. Now you can walk along it and see impressive views of the city and surrounding countryside.

CONNECTING OLD & NEW

Girona is an ancient city founded by the Romans. With four rivers it is a city of bridges, eleven total. The most famous is the Pont de les Peixateries Velles, constructed by Gustave Eiffel just before the Eiffel Tower in Paris. You can walk cross the Onyar River from many parts of The Old Quarter (Roman and Medieval) into the “new” Girona. Like so many ancient cities of the world, it is surrounded by a Roman Wall with a potent history. Experts believe that some sections of the wall date as far back as the first century AD.

The River Onyar’s shallow water is filled with fish, ducks, and reflections.

The city glows at night.

Passageways abound in The Old Quarter.

The river reflects the colorful buildings lining it on both sides.

The picturesque Eiffel Bridge is a pleasant way to walk across the river.

Tiny children on bikes – the youngest cycling group I’ve ever seen. Girona is a major cycling center.

A contemporary mural adorns a a very old building.

Buckwheat crepes are Brittany style and a favorite treat in Girona at La Vedette.

L’Escabech is a tiny new restaurant with super fresh seafood made in unusual ways, and run by a very young chef.

BESALU, BISBAL, BEGUR

We visited a fascinating Ceramic Museum in La Bisbal d’Emporda, at the center of the ceramics industry in the region. The museum is located in a picturesque old ceramic factory. The history of ceramic manufacturing is well demonstrated.

Besalu is known for is magical entrance over the bridge and through the city gate. You might also see the historical mikvah by the river. Catalonia had a significant Jewish population up to around 1492.

The Ceramic Museum in Bisbal is a great way to learn about the history and production of ceramics in art and building.

In Begur we happened upon the annual flower festival with streets full of people and a festive atmosphere.

Begur is dreamy at night with views for miles.

ESPOLLA & CADAQUES WITH FRIENDS

Outdoor lunch with beautiful sunlight streaming in and fabulous food made by an artist/writer pair of French friends who live in a tiny olive oil village.

In our artist friend’s apartment building in Cadaques, there’s a beautiful stairway that leads to a spectacular rooftop view.

BABS’ TRAVELS

She’s always with me, but she takes different forms. My Barbie for Europe 2022 is a new model who is more petite in build and she has a different face and figure from the conventional Barbies. So I call her Babs…she’s so European looking, no? Her Mattel model name is “Barbie Signature Looks Doll”.

Hanging out on the steps in our Girona apartment.

Lounging on the beach in Costa Brava.

IN AND OUT OF BARCELONA

We fly or take the train in and out out of Barcelona, so we savor time with our old friends and feast our eyes on the city’s architectural details.

Such a pretty city. Nice to catch an uncrowded night there before summer tourist season returns in full force.

AROUND CADIZ

We met our good friend and fellow artist Diana Howard in Cadiz for a week long holiday. Diana lives in France and studies with the same zoom tutor that my husband studies with, who is based near Cadiz. They’ve been practicing their Spanish language skills all through the pandemic, which has paid off. Diana made a beautiful, informative blog post about our trip which you may enjoy reading here.

This excursion into the Deep South of Spain, was our second visit to this friendly, pleasant seaside city with a long history. Established by the Phoenicians for its port on the Atlantic it’s been a key trading post for centuries. On one of our last days there we toured a very old sherry bodega known as Osborne, to taste and learn the process. They’re best known for introducing the giant metal bulls throughout Spain, which became the symbol for much of Spain. The burro is the Catalan mascot. Advocates of Catalan nationalism have adopted the Catalan donkey as a response to the Toro de Osborne image widespread in other parts of Spain.

CATALONIA

The burro is the symbol of Catalonia and here’s one by the side of the road in this quaint village.

FLEA MARKETS

I adore a good market, small or large, flea or food, air conditioned, or sweltering in the sun. When the market is in a country other than my own, it’s almost always a thrill.

HEAD FOR THE HILLS

Camprodon is a picturesque inland village we’d enjoyed a few years ago. The pandemic hasn’t been kind to it. There are so many shop closures and the streets are torn up. These small places that survive on tourism have taken a big hit the last few years. The temperature is about 10 degrees cooler than the flats and that’s a good reason to explore these off the beaten path villages.

What’s Next?

MORE BLOG POSTS

Summer 2022 Blog Part 2 & 3 will feature “Italy: The Biennale" & "Travel in France", both due out soon. Read about my first experience at a Venice Biennale and my travels in N. Italy.

SUMMER ART SHOWS

I’m participating in a few shows right now, at SFWA, Being Human: The Figurative Show, juried by Diane Olivier; the August Group Show at City Art Coop Gallery (SF); and at O’Hanlon Art Center’s “Red”, online, juried by Jen Tough, (hear the recorded artists’ roundtable).

Join me for in-person receptions on Aug 5 at City Art Gallery, from 7-10pm and Aug 6 at SFWA, from 2-4pm. Visit my website home page for frequent updates.

ARTSPAN FALL OPEN STUDIOS

  • Artspan Open Studios takes place in late October - November this year. I am participating with a group at SFWA. Our Open Weekend is Oct 29-30, 11am-6pm.

  • My art studio will also be open - by appointment as usual - and on SOMA Open Studios weekend, Nov 5-6, from 11-6pm.

  • Don’t miss all of the Artspan events at SOMARTS.

    On-Going!

  • Buy or commission my art directly through my website or in-person at my SF studio by appointment (email or text me to meet).

  • My art work is available on all kinds of merchandise! Visit my online shops:

    • RedBubble (including my clothing, leggings, and cell phone cases)

    • Spoonflower (including my textiles, wallpaper, and custom soft goods)

  • Show your support for my art making. Join me on Patreon

Just Like That, 2021 Ends

Susan R. KirshenbaumComment

WAS IT A YEAR IN LIMBO? OR HELL?

According to the NYT (Limbo) & Artforum (Hell), this is how we are feeling. I am an optimist and expect a better 2022. I know. We are all hoping for a better 2022. But with the current Omicron spread, ever closer to me daily. I’m feeling this new variant spreading wildly all around me. Testing, testing. And a shortage of OTC tests available.

I find that I am not just looking back at 2021, but at two years – since the beginning of the pandemic, from early 2020 through 2021. Now I understand that year one was a major first for most of us – the first pandemic in our lifetimes. I recall that at the beginning, there was some frustration with the lack of recognition and connection with the AIDS epidemic, which for me was always too close to home, having lost so many dear friends. But I think we see things in a slightly different light these days. I thought a deadly pandemic was completely terrifying, but I imagined an end in sight. Now we know better. That’s where limbo comes in, aka Purgatory. Some might say, it’s just been Hell.

For many artists like me, 2020 was a surprisingly productive year. We felt lucky and resourceful. Even unable to go to our studios, artists set up shop in garages and spare rooms. They drew and painted on zoom sessions and outdoors. We learned to truly take advantage of online resources. We posted our art online, saw exhibitions and art collections online, and attended art talks online. We enjoyed international exchanges.

When we turned the corner into 2021, it felt like dipping a toe into water and finding it still too cold to submerge. On again, off again. Hanging a show in person. Attending an opening in person. Going to our studios – yes, I held onto mine since I’d just gotten my space in March 2020. Then the changing restrictions. Sneaking in some travel, museums, galleries, and art fairs in between surges. Intermittent panic. It seems every step forward led to two steps back and that is where the year ended.

“It’s like swimming in time.” That’s how Monica Huerta, writer for Artforum described 2021 in her article this month.

In the home of interior designer Tina Blakeney on a recent December evening. Another friend who decided to leave the Bay Area in 2021. Lots of shifting going on, including leaving-the-USA conversations.

ART IN-PERSON

I have not been quite as productive this past year. I continued to show some new pieces and work in-person at two galleries, SFWA and City Art Coop in SF. But I have enjoyed other forms of re-engagement. Most significantly, I was able to return to my art group’s life drawing sessions in-person. After a year and a half of drawing each other’s faces and hands on 2x weekly Zoom sessions, it was fantastic to see folks in their 3-d flesh. This group, run by SF artist John Goodman, has been active for decades. We finally got to know each other better due to sheltering in place requirements. But we always missed our live models – a worldly set of women (mostly) with a lot of talents and chutzpah.

I unintentionally slipped away from frequent attendance at the many Zoom drawing sessions available. But I credit the discovery of these wildly diverse life drawing events getting me through 2020 and into the first half of 2021, which was our pre-vaccination phase. Life returning to more in-person interactions again, if only for intervals, was important to me.

In 2021, there were also a number of wonderful art shows and fairs to see and to participate in. I attended a handful of art shows and events in NYC last Fall, in between surges. There have also been several great local exhibitions at Bay Area Museums. But people have been intermittently Covid-scared, and crowds were often thin or places were just shut down. For one-on-one experiences this has not been an entirely a bad thing for seeing art and talking with gallerists. Recently I was (admittedly) surprised how wonderful the collections and special exhibitions were at two excellent Honolulu museums I visited in December.

Wall-sized painting from the SFMOMA current retrospective of Joan Mitchell (through Jan 17, 2022).

The last show I saw in 2022 was the Joan Mitchell Retrospective at SFMOMA. It was totally inspiring – her bold, calligraphic strokes, sense of color, and use of paint – all spectacular. If you are near SF see it before it leaves!

Earlier in December I visited this social activism art / local artists show at Honolulu Museum of Art. These artists made so many powerful statements. Seeing this digital piece below, about wages and worth, reminded me of the Bay Area artist and participant in “Seen by Unseen”, Sawyer Rose, and her monolithic installation in the “Carrying Stones Project” about women’s work inequities.

A video installation, Wages: What are we worth? which I saw at the Honolulu Museum of Art Artists of Hawaii exhibition by Manu Mei-Singh.

This fellow in the shadows is about to retrieve coconuts from high up in the tree. He shimmied up with his spiked boots.

Looking out of the condo in Maui.

A fanciful Maui cocktail with a Hello Kitty “hang ten” transfer art right on the foam plus a fresh marigold.

Honolulu window view from the “Pink Palace”.

Here I am on a wild pink chair in the “Pink Palace.”

ONTO MIST & FABRIC

I am fascinated by the diverse substrates that artists use to apply their art. For the first time I walked through a film projected onto mist in a construction just outside of The Bishop Museum on Honolulu. It was a thrilling experience.

Artist Taiji Terasaki presents KAIMANA—an outdoor, walk-through art and film installation offering a cinematic work projected onto a dramatic, interactive mist curtain.

At the Honolulu Museum of Art I walked through an exhibition of works by Hawaiian social practice artists that included an installation (photo below) of cyanotypes of seaweed applied to sheer panels and paper. I always study the hanging and application mechanisms for art that physically connects to my work.

Artists of Hawai‘i NOW, September 2021 - January 22, 2022, Honolulu Museum of Art, Honolulu, Oahu, HI, work shown is by Gwen Arkin.

This is an explanation of the art shown above.

POETRY, NATURE, & CONSERVATION

We visited a lush, tropical nature conservancy on Maui that was home to the late, two-time U.S. poet laureate, W. S. Merwin. As a person who loves trees I appreciated seeing land being returned to its most bountiful, verdant state.

This shade of green must have been a favorite.

The fox is my totem too.

Everything was left just as it was the day that he died in 2019

Every object a thing of beauty and grace

A CHANGING VOCABULARY

The overall thrust of the art world feels different since the summer of 2020. It’s been activated. It’s finally color and gender conscious. Like the shift that came out of “The Summer of Love”, we experienced “The Summer of Rising Up, Fighting Back, and Exposing” in 2020. This activation fed into my group conversations with The Invisibility Collective, who were already energized. I sincerely hope we never go back to the same old inequities or the outdated terminology.

I’m glad that there’s a new language forming to accommodate this different thinking. I understand that it’s still in progress. The English language is wonderfully pliant and evolving. What are your pronouns? What will be the new word for Feminism? As I understand it, I must be a second-wave feminist (1960s-80’s) though I believe I have evolved to the latest version. I admittedly only recently learned that there’s a third, fourth, and possibly a fifth wave. Do you know of a better term to use other than adding “wave”? Do you call yourself a feminist? I do, quite simply, without the wave.

It’s exciting to experience an on-going focus on artists and arts administrators who have been ignored for too long. We are seeing artists of all shades, hues, ethnicities, and genders taking their places in the forefront of the art world. We’re witnessing a shift in top-level art administration, curation, exhibition, and media coverage. That said, I still see a need to make room at the top for more women. I see the need to pay more attention to women of a certain age who are all too often invisible.

This ring represents the diameter of a submarine! We were here during the week of Pearl Harbor Day.

MINIMAL TRAVEL

It’s so difficult to travel and freely see friends and socialize. A trip to Europe was put on hold. Circumstances keep changing. It takes a lot to keep up. So we give up and stay home safe. Sometimes when plans change new options open up. A trip to Hawaii popped up to round out my end of the year. What a quick thrill! The timing was just right before Omicron surged here. It turned out to be a total getaway – nice and slow, yet it passed by quickly as if it didn’t happen. Oddly, this unplanned trip coincided with a significant anniversary of mine. On Pearl Harbor Day, 39 years ago, I moved from San Francisco to Hawaii with the man who became my husband, Jack, two years later in NYC. We had not been back to Hawaii in over 20 years. It is still a magical place.

In addition to our year-end Hawaii trip, I took a few other short vacations – San Diego, Palm Springs, and NYC. It’s now year two of not leaving the country. This is unusual for me and I hope to make up for it in years to come.

Looking down from the memorial platform, above the sunken ships where victims of the bombing of Pearl Harbor are buried, there was a giant sea turtle.

TROPICAL FLORA

Everywhere in Hawaii there are seemingly impossible fruits, trees, plants, and flowers. Here’s tiny sampling of just looking around the landscape. So lush!

ENDINGS & BEGINNINGS

For those who follow and read my blog, you might recall that I had major shoulder surgery in my dominant arm back in May. That put a huge dent in all of my activities.

One outcome of the surgery was a “break up” with Pure Barre, after a seven year relationship, I decided it’s too stressful on my joints.

After 14 years of launching and running a book group, I shuttered that too. It had been slowly fading. I may start another group – or join an existing group. I’m open to recommendations for a local in-person Fiction Readers Group. I’m always looking for good fiction to read. Recommendations? Favorites of the year? What new things will 2022 bring? A refocus, for me, I hope!

“Midcentury Modern Woman” is one of my pieces that will be shown in Serenity at UCSF.

SFWA FINDS NEW PARTNERS

San Francisco Women Artists Gallery is going strong. We are beginning a new curatorial partnership with UCSF Center of Excellence for Women’s Health and I’m producing our first Serenity Exhibition. Opening on January 17th, there will be five different artists, three times a year at the Women’s Health Center in SF. I recently re-engaged with SFWA’s Board, returning to the role of Exhibitions Director. In our first exhibition, “I am Resilient”, the SFWA member artists are: Valerie Corbin, Marie Massey, Susan Proehl, and myself.

Both 2020 and 2021 were terribly hard on retail galleries, but we’re feeling good about membership, 2022 exhibition themes and jurors, and sales from the gallery and online. It’s easier than ever to buy art even if you rarely leave home.

Throughout 2021 I continued submitting work and get juried into many of our themed group exhibitions. Currently I’ve got a piece in the year-end exhibition “Artful Giving” juried by Priscilla Otani, partner of Arc Gallery (SF). In February I’ll be in SFWA’s “Fresh Perspectives” juried by Ceclia Chia, owner of Glass Rice Gallery (SF).

Exhibition Entry Opportunity Feb 2022:

Photography & Digital Art: We invite all SF Bay Area artists to submit their best work in either category or any combination of the two. JUROR: Diane Fenster, Award-Winning Photographic Artist, Curator, Member of the Adobe Photoshop Hall of Fame

Look up into the trees.

Look down into the landscape – just as is it creates a colorful, textural picture.

“A practicing Buddhist as well as a proponent of deep ecology, Merwin lived since the late 1970s on an old pineapple plantation in Hawaii which he has painstakingly restored to its original rainforest state. Merwin was once asked what social role a poet plays—if any—in America. He commented: ‘I think there’s a kind of desperate hope built into poetry now that one really wants, hopelessly, to save the world. One is trying to say everything that can be said for the things that one loves while there’s still time. I think that’s a social role, don’t you? ... We keep expressing our anger and our love, and we hope, hopelessly perhaps, that it will have some effect. But I certainly have moved beyond the despair, or the searing, dumb vision that I felt after writing The Lice; one can’t live only in despair and anger without eventually destroying the thing one is angry in defense of. The world is still here, and there are aspects of human life that are not purely destructive, and there is a need to pay attention to the things around us while they are still around us. And you know, in a way, if you don’t pay that attention, the anger is just bitterness.’

– Poetry Foundation

A victim of the rough seas.

INCLEMENT WEATHER

Travel is intense and exciting for so many reasons including unpredictable weather. In the wintertime in Hawaii there are severe tropical storms which can mean cyclones. You don’t enter the water. You stay indoors safe and warm and watch. The trees fall and the rocks slide. The power flickers.

Trees uprooted everywhere.

There isn’t much better than a sunny day of sailing, watching whales, and seeing a show of fish all around you.

Look up into the sails. Look out and see the whales. Look underwater and see coral, sea shells, and fish.

Some of my sumi ink wash drawings made during a virtual session (Zoom) in my studio. These are from one of my series underway.

Resolved for 2022

Get away every season.

Figure out my (new) master plan for my art.

Find the residency to support #2.

Re-up my language study and work on my Spanish before my next visit to Spain.

Stick to a regular art studio schedule.

Find or create an art critique group.

Find my next exercise routine.

Call, write, and visit friends more often.

Keep walking. Learn to walk alone.

Learn plant and bird names.

Always draw and paint manually (in addition to digitally).

Keep records.

Keep up my series.

CONTINUING MY SERIES

As I enter into 2022 I plan to keep up many of my series including: Barbie on the Cusp photo series, sumi ink drawing series, digital collage series (botanicals, abstracts, and more), portraits, and printing on fabric. I’d like to tackle some new artistic challenges. See samples of my work from this past year below. Stay tuned for lots more.

A year-end field trip to Old Sacramento marked our approach to another year around the globe.

Celebrate! New beginnings!

WISHING YOU A HAPPY, HEALTHY & PEACEFUL 2022

So long 2021! Good riddance.

But now we’re genuinely alarmed that we've brought Omicron with us into 2022. At the moment that I finish writing this post and hit send, it appears to be everywhere.And that puts a damper on fresh starts. Maybe we need a new year re-do, once we are out of the woods?

“Alluris in Red Swimsuit” is hanging in “Artful Giving”, the December show at SFWA Gallery.

The Collective CONTINUES

Since I founded The Invisibility Collective in 2020 we’ve lost some of our initial traction but we persevere and plan to expand in 2022. We had a thought-provoking “Seen X Unseen” Group Reunion on Zoom with artists who participated in our first exhibition at Radian Gallery (SF) in Dec 2020. It was hosted by Tony Wessling, owner of Radian. Look for a call video on our website and FB page soon.

Our conversation was in keeping with our observations on issues surrounding seeing, being seen, being heard, erasure, obliteration, ancestors, lost histories, and art that tackles social issues connected to invisibility. We discussed how our art and lives have changed from 2020 into 2021. Reunion Participants included: Mary Graham, Sophia Green, Susan R. Kirshenbaum, Rhiannon Evans McFadyen, Sawyer Rose, Samira Shaheen, Christopher Tandy, and Angela Tirrell.

I’d love to hear your thoughts on this topic! We invite guests to our monthly meetings, too, in case you’d like to participate in a call.

Artists left to right: Angela Tirrell, Lonnie Graham, Susan R. Kirshenbaum, Sophia Green, and Rhiannon Evans McFadyen. Work shown behind left to right: Sawyer Rose, Mary Graham, Lonnie Graham, and Christopher Tandy. At Radian Gallery (SF).

NCWCA

This year I became an active member of the Northern California chapter of the national organization whose mission is to create community through art, education, and social activism.

Artwork by our chapter members is on our flag for the national conference in 2022. My piece is in the center of the third row from the top.

Originally photographed at Radian wrapped in my fabric panels, I made it into a black and white self portrait for “The Naked Truth of Arts” and later these banners became my installation at Arc Gallery.

Nathalie Fabri CURATED EXHIBITIONS

I was pleased to be included in two back-to-back exhibitions organized by Nathalie Fabri. “The Naked Truth of Arts” began on Instagram with visual artists and musicians submitting black and white selfies with their Covid stories. Later the co-curators transformed the show into a physical gallery exhibition at analog gallery (SF) with live music.

Just after “The Naked Truth of Arts” exhibition I was invited into the “Intimacy Illuminated” show, another exhibition curated by Nathalie Fabri, at Arc Project Gallery. I showed the the three hot shades of my nine foot sheer chiffon figure-laden banners. They were originally produced a year earlier for “Seen X Unseen” at Radian Gallery.

Viewers were invited to interact with the banner and swish through them, feeling and be felt. A fan moves them around and a light shines through them.

She also created The Mission Kiss painted heart and art walk project, which I took part in twice.

My pieces were in “Intimacy Illuminated” at the Arc Project Gallery in Dec 2021.

CITY ART COOP GALLERY

If you’re local, you can see my work on display in-person at City Art Coop Gallery in their Back Room. The gallery is in the heart of The Mission, on Valencia Street between 19th / 20th Streets. I’m in the annual two-month show through January 2022. I’ll be showing new work in February. I’ve exhibited several times during 2021 and so I can say that I’ve fully experienced working in a retail gallery during Covid!

Here’s one of my City Art Coop Gallery walls from this year. I exhibited my show “Her Pinkness” a couple of times in 2021.

Artspan Open Studios

SF Open Studios was a different series of events again this year to accommodate Covid. I held a Studio Reception one day only and welcomed guests by appointment. The virtual aspect of exhibiting and viewing art continues to be critical as in-person opportunities keep shifting. I’m happy to report that my piece, featured in the Guide and the SOMArts exhibition, “She is a Rose” was purchased, and so I contributing to the Artspan fundraiser. But it was another difficult year to have fully open studios. Hoping for a better 2022.

Here’s a wall from the 2021 Artspan exhibition at SOMArts with my piece on the far right top.

Grace of No Age

Trying to stay focused on my art practice, I decided to disengage from my role as a “goddess” and writer for the Girona-based website Grace of No Age. I still appreciate the core concept of this international blog site which disseminates articles written by women for women about aging and menopause. Their slogan, “No Pause at Menopause” is wonderfully direct. I enjoyed part of the start of this online venture and writing for the cause. You can see my most recent article here. The site is a good resource and has just expanded to include men’s issues and male menopause.

Imagery from Hawaii: Barbie 2x, an apartment building display, red bamboo trees, and a starry sky…

The Tiger Ride at Evangeline’s Costume Mansion in Old Sacramento

YEAR OF THE TIGER

Here’s what Her World says about the upcoming year. “2022 is the Year of the Water Tiger – and in Fengshui this means it’s a year made for bold action. The Tiger is known for its power, daring, and ability to do everything on a grand scale. This is markedly different from 2021’s year of the Metal Ox, which was all about hard work and pragmatism. Think about it: in 2021 the world had to plod through months of pandemic lockdowns and WFH isolation. It wasn’t glamorous or fun, but we plodded on because we knew it was necessary…”

A VISUAL TOUR OF 2021

SEPTEMBER INTO NOVEMBER: ART SCENE/SEEN

Susan R. KirshenbaumComment

At the Sean Kelly Gallery (Chelsea, NYC) we saw this haunting exhibition by Dawoud Bey – photography and video – of his journey through old plantations and slave dwellings.

September in NYC

September is my birthday month, the start of a new season, the beginning of the school year, fall, and it is my favorite time to travel.

Talk about pent-up demand! It was my first time flying since Covid and I went “back East” to NYC. The trip was filled with food, friends, family, gardens, and art. We visited a number of alternative art venues, galleries, museums, and art fairs including The Armory Show and the Works on Paper Show.

Friends took us by car to The New York Botanical Garden in the Bronx and to Red Hook, Brooklyn for lobster rolls and alternative art at Pioneer Works.

Our stay coincided with the 20th anniversary of 9/11/11, so the humid September air was heavy with sadness. New Yorkers were so traumatized by Covid in what felt like a different way from the SF Bay Area. For many New Yorkers it had something to do with being hit first and hardest, the constant screeching of sirens, deaths literally piling up, people fleeing for less populated places to stay and ride it out, and The City emptying out.

In NYC on September 11, 2021, it was not easy to ignore the 20th anniversary of 9/11/11. There were signs of it everywhere. This was in Riverside Park.

Barbie, my frequent travel companion, was hanging out with me on our friend’s balcony.

Joyful with Kasuma: NY Botanical Garden (Bronx)

I first saw Kasuma’s work in 2019 on the Art Island in Japan, where many of her giant squash sculptures reside. Seeing her vast installations throughout the Botanical Garden was impressive and delightful.

The NY Botanical Garden is special to me since I got married there – at their Snuff Mill (aka Stone Mill) by the Bronx River, several decades ago. When I go to NYC I like to visit The Gardens. Exhibits like this one show it off in a whole new light.

“The 250-acre verdant landscape — which includes a 50-acre, old-growth forest — and the landmark Enid A. Haupt Conservatory support living collections of more than one million plants.”

I spend a lot of time locally at the SFBGin Golden Gate Park. Many of my nature photos come from my walks there.

Even the trees were all dressed up – wrapped in Kasuma’s fabric.

My Soul Blooms Forever is a greenhouse-like building where you get to stick a flower.

Reflections outside of the Mirrored Room—Illusion Inside the Heart (2020).

Dancing Pumpkin in front of the flower conservatory.

A portion of Kasuma’s Dancing Pumpkin with Barbie enjoying the installation.

In and Around Manhattan

My destination was the extensive exhibit of Cezanne’s Drawings but the crowd pleaser at MoMa was Automania.

A powerful Mural by Eduardo Kobra of Gandhi and Mother Teresa.

Little Island is one of NYC’s latest exciting outdoor excursion options and it’s right off the Highline.

NYC at night is magical.

An archetypal pretzel vendor glows in the dark.

There are so many architectural gems around town.

A visit to the Philip Gaston: On Edge exhibition at Hauser & Wirth Gallery. Many Covid-safe galleries use QR codes for self-guided, safe experiences.

When summer slides into fall, and faux flowers decorate all…loved the outdoor dining setups decorated with flowers. But I felt quite wilted in the September heat and humidity.

New York’s Jewish Museum

This gorgeous portrait resides in the permanent collection of the museum. By Kehinde Wiley, The World Stage: Israel, 2011.

Oddly I have never been to this museum. It turned out to be a wonderful treat. The exhibition that drew us there was Afterlives: Recovering the Lost Stories of Looted Art. “This exhibition traces the fascinating timelines of individual (works of art) and objects as they passed through hands and sites before, during, and after World War II, bringing forward their myriad stories.” Needless to say, it was a poignant and provocative exhibition.

This exhibit runs through January 2022: Afterlives: Recovering the Lost Stories of Looted Art.

In Red Hook

On a warm sunny day our friends picked us up in their convertible and took us for lobster rolls (all the rage in NYC), then we toured Pioneer Works and experienced an immersive art piece created by MOSES SUMNEY

“We’ve learned to speak, dance, and feel from the depositories of our screens. From social media self-documentation to advertising’s algorithmic automation, in the midst of the echo, what do we teach our technology, and what does it teach us?”

— Moses Sumney.

Movement practice videos guide you while awaiting entry.

A container-made building on the grounds of Pioneer Works.

“Presented by Pioneer Works at Red Hook Labs, technoechophenomena is an experiential, audiovisual installation by Moses Sumney that offers an extension of his artistic and musical oeuvre, exploring isolation and our emotional relationship with technology. Echophenomena is the unintentional imitation of actions. This includes the repetition of words and sounds, body movements, or thoughts picked up from external stimuli. The artist adds the prefix ‘techno-’ to the psychological term, evoking the relationship between human behavior and modern technology. Visitors enter a custom-built cubic room, and learn a series of technology-inspired gestures choreographed by the artist.

Magnificent Morgan Library

Somehow I’d never been to “The Morgan” in all my years living and visiting NYC and now I can’t recommend it enough. There’s the original part (pictured below) and a gorgeous contemporary addition with changing exhibitions.

Looking up into the original library.

The Annual Armory Show

Photographed at two pink booths in the Armory Show in my pink artwear.

Our trip to NYC was planned around The Armory Show. Arranged in the spring of 2021, we didn’t know how life would unfold in the world of Covid. I’m glad we stuck to our plan and ventured across the country to see art, friends, and family – all of which we were starving for.

This caught my eye (among many pieces). It’s a huge, complex, fascinating figurative painting.

Here’s a corner of a gallery display of 2D+3D combo art ceramics at The Armory Show.

At Sapar Contemporary Gallery we admired Dilyara Kaipova’s coat art and Faig Ahmed’s sculpture basOriental carpets (on the wall).

3-D @ Art on Paper

I brought my visiting niece and her friend to this show and they were amazed. I believe that these massive, top-shelf art fairs are a different type of art experience for many. And it wasn’t overcrowded this year and it felt rather safe! The next Art on Paper show is in spring 2022.

Enormous paper sculptures at the Art on Paper show.

More giant paper sculpture wraps the columns - created by Samuelle Green.

October in The Bay Area

Fieldtrips! We took some breaks and went to Point Reyes National Seashore, Pacifica, and Half Moon Bay, among our various road trips around the Bay Area. We found signs of fall, large birds, and enjoyed long, misty walks.

In Bolinas the beach detritus looked like a fish or a boat.

While visiting Point Reyes we stopped into this artist’s studio. Keith Hanson is known as “The Birdman of Bolinas”.

Fall Gallery Exhibitions

It was a whirlwind of art events back in SF. I wrapped up my Sept show at City Art Coop, “Her Pinkness”; launched Oct shows at SFWA “Barbie on the Cusp” (below left) and participated in Artist’s Choice (below right); helped hang the Artspan Open Studios show (see it before it closes!); delivered my work for a group show, “The Naked Truth of Arts”, brought my piece to Root Division for the exhibition/art auction; and prepped my own open studio for a reception. I attended all of the openings. Plus, I returned to my role as SFWA’s Exhibitions Director.

San Francisco Women Artists Gallery (SFWA)

Friends at the Reception for SFWA’s Member Open Studio Show in front of my “Barbie of the Cusp” series.

City Art Coop Gallery

Taken in August Reception at City Art Coop Gallery in front of “Her Pinkness”, I’ve had shows there Aug-Sept. And will show there again Dec 2021-Feb 2022. Visit me at the gallery!

“Her Pinkness II” shown in Sept at City Art Coop Gallery (SF).

SFWA’s August Abstract exhibition was juried by Philip Bewley (left). My piece (right & below) is called “Bent not Broken”, a digital original collage (Edition of 1/1) printed on metal.

Here’s a virtual in situ version of the same piece on the gallery wall above.

Artspan Open Studios Exhibition

That’s my piece (top right) that I’ll be discussing my work TODAY in an Artist’s Talk: Tues, Nov 9 from 6:30-8pm - Eventlink. Tune into this not-to-be-missed Zoom conversation with Artspan Artists.

At the SFWA Annual show, “Artist’s Choice” with my 36” square metal print “Appear / Disappear”. This was an Open Call Show juried by Alan Bamberger. With artists Usha Shukla (left) and Pam Borelli (center).

My Open Studio

The hallway gallery entry into my workspace at The Sobel Design Building awaiting guests arrivals.

Friends attending my Open Studio Reception Oct 16, 2021.

The Naked Truth of Arts

“The Naked Truth of Arts” started out at the height of the Bay Area’s sheltering in place as an Instagram exhibition with artists – both visual and sound. We all posted black and white self-portraits and told our Covid stories. Curated by Nathalie Fabri and Fabio Reis, they brought the exhibition into an analog phase in SF’s Mission District, ironically it was installed at the analog gallery. They displayed our printed photos, stories, and artwork. And they threw a real, in-person opening party complete with live music! It is also a fundraiser with cool gifts like the cards below (right).

At the physical exhibition my piece is just below the sign. It’s titled “Body Paint (Janique)”.

The show poster with all our black and white self-portraits.

Friends visiting the exhibition posing in front of photos of the artists (I’m veiled in the middle).

When you give $45 to the project founders funding campaign, you get a deck of art cards with our photos and our stories.

Field Trip: Disney Museum

The view from the museum hallway, in the Presidio overlooking the Golden Gate Bridge.

What a hidden gem this museum is! Whether you’re a fan of Disney and animation – or not, there’s so much to see, hear, and learn here. The design of the space is stunning and the views are superb. It was a perfect crisp, clear autumn day.

Looking down through the beautifully-designed main museum. We also visited the WWII special exhibition and learned so much history!

A Disney miniature city is collaged with a life drawing (in person!). Model @Shari_Putra.

Fall at the DeYoung Museum

JUDY CHICAGO

The Judy Chicago retrospective is a powerful exhibition chock-full of feminist art organized by the artist’s thematic phases. The show starts at the later stages of her life confronting death and the climate crisis and goes backward to her earliest work and feminist roots. Unfortunately she also gave a live performance with billowing orange smoke pouring out of the museum and park that didn’t go over well in SF where we are in the midst of fire season.

PATRICK KELLY

The Patrick Kelly exhibition is a tasty treat with a very sad ending. His life was cut short by AIDS at the height of a skyrocketing career as a fashion designer in the 1980s in Paris. His work is still so fresh and contemporary for its multitude of social activist messages. See it to see what I mean.

Outside the Patrick Kelly show in my artwear and new Button Lady gloves purchased at the show.

Immersed at Asian Art Museum

My most recent museum thrill was getting immersed at the Asian Art Museum in a delicious, interactive, multi-media show by teamLab: continuity.

Root Division Art Auction

Here I am at the Root Division Exhibition prior to the Auction with my piece, “Vins”. My art was submitted through Black White Projects.

What’s Next?

EXHIBITIONS & EVENTS

> SFWA Art Fundraiser Auction (online) | Nov 6 – 13 (last day is today)
>
Art Guild of Pacifica: Member Show | Oct 29-Dec 12 | Fri, Sat, Sun, 1-5pm

> ARTSPAN Open Studio:

> ARC PROJECT GALLERY: “Intimacy Illuminated" | Curated by Nathalie Fabri | In-Person Reception: Sat, Nov 20, 7-9pm | Exhibition: Nov 20-Dec 18

> City Art Coop Gallery | Dec 2021-Feb 2022 | Visit me at the Gallery Dec 13-14 & Jan 16 & 25

A new collage with GG Park twisted tress and figure drawing collaged together.

Lefty

ArtingSusan R. KirshenbaumComment
Shoulder-themed collage: composed of a poster hanging in my surgeon’s office, a digital abstract painting of mine, and a portion of a gorgeous ceramic sculpture in an art show.

Shoulder-themed collage: composed of a poster hanging in my surgeon’s office, a digital abstract painting of mine, and a portion of a gorgeous ceramic sculpture in an art show.

Okay, so it was temporary. But long enough to explore ambidextrousness and using my left hand so much more. Not exactly past tense yet. This time it’s my right side. Last time it was the left.

Have you ever had to learn to function with your non-dominant hand/arm? Because of this I haven’t been writing since my right shoulder surgery (three different issues) in early May, but now I am resting my right hand on my laptop while writing with both hands, because I’m on the road to recovery. Lucky for me that I already work so much with an iPad so I can keep making art without having to use my entire arm and body. I’ve been using this time to create more digital collages. I’m taking my existing drawings from life model sessions to use as a base and adding my photos and/or my digital abstract paintings in layers. I’ve tried making some new drawings and paintings left-handed or with my right hand (attached to my immobilized right arm), albeit, crudely. Going through my treasure chest full of drawings so I can change and refresh them has been a bit like shopping in my own closet. My archive is full of endless possibilities, especially since I attended so many Covid zoom model sessions.

Kyla is a nightlife performer/aerial ballet dancer based in Brooklyn during Covid on Zoom while live performances were on hold. Collaged with the Madrid Botanical Garden.

Kyla is a nightlife performer/aerial ballet dancer based in Brooklyn during Covid on Zoom while live performances were on hold. Collaged with the Madrid Botanical Garden.

Dieter, a member of my regular drawing group, posing here with a lovely old microscope and layered with my abstract paintings.

Dieter, a member of my regular drawing group, posing here with a lovely old microscope and layered with my abstract paintings.

I can barely use my cameras one-handed. So I have even incorporated a few photos from friends’ summer gardens (Sarah S. in Western Mass grows the best flowers). I’ve been finding ways to obliterate my original drawings to increase depth and complexity. I like the painterliness, moodiness, and mirrored or multiplied images added in. The added layers help build out my ideas and the personality of the subject.

Shout out: I love my physical therapists at Davies Medical Center (SF) and so appreciate their sincere interest in getting me drawing again.

Recent Work

A portrait of Dwight made at my Zoom drawing group – with my left hand. It was juried into SFWA’s August exhibition “Bold. Color!” in August.

A portrait of Dwight made at my Zoom drawing group – with my left hand. It was juried into SFWA’s August exhibition “Bold. Color!” in August.

Titania is a popular local model, although I’ve only drawn her on Zoom. I sold a print of this work via Instagram to a friend in the midwest.

Titania is a popular local model, although I’ve only drawn her on Zoom. I sold a print of this work via Instagram to a friend in the midwest.

This is a portrait from Zoom group out of Dublin of Izabella. I loved these virtual travel and drawing opportunities that came out of the pandemic.

This is a portrait from Zoom group out of Dublin of Izabella. I loved these virtual travel and drawing opportunities that came out of the pandemic.

A favorite due to the yummy color palette, this too will be in the SFWA August exhibition “Bold. Color!”.

A favorite due to the yummy color palette, this too will be in the SFWA August exhibition “Bold. Color!”.

A spring trip to Palm Springs, CA helped me restock my image bank with cacti for collages.

A spring trip to Palm Springs, CA helped me restock my image bank with cacti for collages.

And Men Too

Recently I was asked to show some of my male figurative work for a potential interior design project. Here are a few of my favorite male subjects.

Working on multiple versions again showing a collage with a male model and dogwood flowers (above) and abstracted, another in the same series, in situ, below.

Working on multiple versions again showing a collage with a male model and dogwood flowers (above) and abstracted, another in the same series, in situ, below.

Dwight with a mug among sunflowers in Catalonia. Virtual travel is placed in a virtual living room!

Dwight with a mug among sunflowers in Catalonia. Virtual travel is placed in a virtual living room!

dwight-sunflowers.jpeg

After many iterations I’m finally satisfied with this version.

WHAT’S NEXT & FALL PLANS

At last I’m beginning to shift gears into a semi-post-pandemic mode, and starting to make plans for the rest of the year, because it seems possible again!

Yay! An in-person opening at SFWA took place on July 10!

Yay! An in-person opening at SFWA took place on July 10!

JULY

I’m in both of these SFWA July shows, “Verdant” and “Assemblage”. Saturday was my first in-person opening since early 2020.

Two of my pieces (far left and middle) in the Artists Salon Gallery July show at SFWA.

Two of my pieces (far left and middle) in the Artists Salon Gallery July show at SFWA.

AUGUST

In August – I’ll be showing my work at City Art Co-op Gallery on Valencia St (btw 19th-20th) along the main corridor of SF’s Mission District. City Art is re-launching their website with members on it now so check back soon.

SEPTEMBER

This fall brings us another annual ArtspanSF Open Studios (Sept-Nov). So I’m fluffing up my studio for visitors and also hope to show at SFWA at the same time.

Looking forward to our first trip beyond California! We’re flying across country to NYC in September for the annual Armory Show.

OCTOBER

I’m also working on pieces for two exhibitions curated by Nathalie Fabri (Oct-Nov); The Naked Truth Project (Analog Gallery); and Intimacy Illuminated (Arc Project Gallery). Plus there are several juried and/or curated exhibitions at SFWA.

NOVEMBER

After a year-long delay, SFWA is holding our first major fundraiser at the top of Sales Force Tower (SF) on Nov 17, 2021! Details to follow.

DECEMBER

Plans are underway for an event and publication for The Invisibility Collective Nov-Dec 2021. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram. Exciting event and publication info to come.

I will once again travel to much farther away places in 2022! Most likely we’ll be going back to Spain, France, and Italy. Maybe we’ll add someplace new in Eastern Europe.

A colorful corner of the gallery section of my SoMa studio.

Fall Open Studios

Please join me at my studio in the Sobel Design Building in SoMa for a private tour of my gallery/workspace from Sept 18-Oct 30. Email me or text me for an appointment M-S, 9-5pm. I’ll have a small mix and mingle reception in my studio on a date TBD in October. Look for updates!

ArtspanSF is taking a new approach this year and there will be open studios all around SF. You can visit artists’ private studios and group spaces.

I’ll also be at SFWA the weekend of Oct 2-3 where our reception runs from 11am-5pm.

From Oct 21-Nov 21 you can see an exhibition of works by all participating artists at SomArts. There will be several additional Artspan events running throughout November.

Drawing circus artist/aerialist Bridget was my first and last in-person model session before surgery and post-vaccination.

Drawing circus artist/aerialist Bridget was my first and last in-person model session before surgery and post-vaccination.

Cherry Pits Art Merchandise

REDBUBBLE

I’ve added quite a few of my most recent artwork as repeat designs for merchandise on RedBubble. There’s an even broader range of color palettes and subject matter (still figurative). Don’t see what you want? Let me know. I can always add more!

This hot series of Amanda (#theartache) has a unique color palette – shades of purple, blue, aqua, orange, and gold.

Teal and royal blue squares and figures – a new addition to RedBubble! This is Titania.

Personally, I’ve bought and tested most of my RedBubble art merchandise – including socks, dresses, blouses, iPhone cases, notebooks, masks, coasters, postcards, and more.

I have many mask designs on RB. There are still times when you need to wear one…

I have many mask designs on RB. There are still times when you need to wear one…

Bright bold new addition of a pattern with Bridget on a circus ring – just added to RedBubble!

My friend in London just received a blanket (shown above) with my art on it. I can’t believe how fast it got to her!

SPOONFLOWER

Abstracted Figures fabric by cherry_pits on Spoonflower - custom fabric.jpeg

Spoonflower (examples above) is where you can order a wide variety of textiles with my artwork in a repeat pattern. They’ll make it for you in organic cotton, chiffon, velvet, lycra, upholstery fabric, and many more options. They’ll also make you wallpaper! Since I began working with Spoonflower in 2016, I’ve designed and made or had made - all sorts of fabrics and ready-made items, mostly soft goods. I’ve bought the fabric and made all kinds of products and I’ve bought their ready-made with my textile designs. I especially love their cotton sateen throw pillows, sturdy canvas dishtowels, placemats, cocktail napkins, and table runners – all made from my designs. I’ve tested many of them myself. The quality is excellent.

This is among my first products which I started making in 2017 with the help of a pro, who also taught me how to sew, Connie Walker-Shaw (classes at SEW on W. Portal).

The Naked Truth Project Exhibition

Black and white portrait of me draped in my artwork (assisted by Jack Ostrofsky) in Radian Gallery at our exhibition, “Seen x Unseen” in Jan 2021.

Analog Gallery (SF) will host the analog exhibition of this previously Instagram-only show of black and white photographic self-portraits made by artists with their art in Covid stories. Details to follow – check back next month for dates and description. This show is curated by Nathalie Fabri. Here’s the background from her website: “My niece in France recently participated in this project for non-essential workers. The idea is from the term « a poil » a slang term meaning naked. If the government shuts us down, they are taking everything from me…so I am left naked. This has inspired me to start a campaign in partnership with Fabio Reis, artist and musician, about all creatives, called #TheNakedTruthofArts. The naked truth is that artists and musicians have certainly been considered non-essential and have been suffering…What is your story? Maybe you have had more work because of donations and grants…tell us. Maybe you lost most of your creative income? tell us! maybe your creativity has suffered so bad from stress that it has affected your livelihood.. tell us. I invite you to take a photo of yourself and a piece of your art if you are an artist, with your instrument if you are a musician, With your creative tools if that’s what you want to show, in black and white with the idea that you are naked behind it, telling us the Naked Truth about your situation.”

Cat of “Caturday”, @newyorkcat, and @DistancedDrawing Zoom modeling session. They’re a gorgeous aerialist/nightlife performer in NYC. Combined with the Berkeley Rose Garden (above). And Cat with their ring  painting (below).

Cat of “Caturday”, @newyorkcat, and @DistancedDrawing Zoom modeling session. They’re a gorgeous aerialist/nightlife performer in NYC. Combined with the Berkeley Rose Garden (above). And Cat with their ring painting (below).

See more here: @newyorkcat / @distanceddrawing

See more here: @newyorkcat / @distanceddrawing

“Abstracted Bibi” is placed in a virtual diningroom.

“She’s a Rose” was selected by gallerist Andra Norris for “Verdant” for July at SFWA.

“She’s a Rose” was selected by gallerist Andra Norris for “Verdant” for July at SFWA.

Intimacy Illuminated at Arc Gallery

“Intimacy Illuminated: Light, Luminosity and Intimate Relations" is a Bay Area Exhibition in Arc’s Project Gallery curated by Nathalie Fabri. Through works that depict luminosity and use of light, to works that honor a feeling of intimacy between people, this exhibition explores the merging of these qualities these pandemic times.

I’m delighted to be included in “Intimacy Illuminated”! Nathalie Fabri saw my room-sized installation (below) in “Seen x Unseen”, the inaugural exhibition by The Invisibility Collective in Dec 2020-Jan 2021 at Radian Gallery (SF).

I’ll be creating a site-specific variation of my original installation. There will be a reception – so look for an update coming soon.
Runs Nov 20-Dec 18

Three of the five sheer fabric figurative panels hanging in “See Through Me”, a site-specific mixed media installation featured in “Seen x Unseen” at Radian Gallery.

Women’s Caucus for Art

I’m curious to see what this group will do. I have always been passionate about and actively engaged in women’s organizations, especially mentoring and advancing women in the arts.

Grace of No Age: It’s Not Too Late

“Woman on the Fence” depicts a figure both entering and blocked by an entryway/gate.

“Woman on the Fence” depicts a figure both entering and blocked by an entryway/gate.

See the latest article by yours truly, AKA Creative Coach and Goddess here. I neglected to mention that everything I talk about in the article is based on what I’ve done personally. See more here.

A favorite view of NYC from my last visit in May 2019.

NYC Here I Come

Each year The Armory Show takes place during spring and fall in NYC. This September I’ll be there!

For me, NYC is about visiting friends and family AND seeing a lot of art. When I lived in NYC – way back in the wild and crazy 80’s, I was working all the time. Now I am curious to see how The City is recovering from this trying year and a half. And I always look forward catching a bit of East Coast seasonality which I always miss.

Interior Designers and Art Consultants take note! Did you know that I can make my digital original art for your client’s space in almost any size or format, and print it on almost substrate? That means paper, wood, glass, fabric, metal…and more (you name it). And all types of commissions are available too.

Find all of my links in one place!

Click the button below for my website, Instagram, Facebook, Patreon, Pinterest, YouTube, RedBubble, Spoonflower, Grace of No Age, and The Invisibility Collective.