Saturday, June 14, 2014

PORTRAIT OF GWENAELLE GLOTIN ARTIST

Uniball pen, watercolor on Canson paper 11" x 15".  Gwenaelle Glotin is a fellow SBS klassmate and artist from Amsterdam.  Previously posted on SBS site.

Friday, June 13, 2014

PORTRAIT OF ELIZABETH FLANAGAN ARTIST

Uniball pen, watercolor on Canson paper 11" x 15".  Elizabeth Flanagan SBS artist and Klassmate. Previously posted on SBS site.

Thursday, June 12, 2014

PORTRAIT OF JENNIFER RANGER

This portrait is 18"x 24" charcoal on paper of my good friend Vincent Ranger's daughter Jennifer.  It is in his collection.

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

PORTRAIT OF SUSANNE PINTURA

11" x 15" watercolor on Canson paper.  This is a portrait taken from a photograph posted by SBS klassmate Susanne Pintura.

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

PAINTED LADY RED AND GREEN SAN FRANCISCO

Uniball pen and watercolor in 8 1/4" x 11" Moleskine sketchbook.  Posted in SBS. (From photograph).

Monday, June 9, 2014

LAWRENCE FERLINGHETTI LOOKS OUT AT CITY LIGHTS

He has owned and operated City Lights Bookstore in San Francisco for over 60 years.  Now in his 90's he still paints, writes and live life to the fullest.  Here is a short video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G963q31ZgBI

Sunday, June 8, 2014

DRAWING MY DREAMS

In this dream I'm sitting in a bar with James Joyce and two bored angels. I told him I had to read Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man in school, and that I knew June 16th is the day Ulysses took place but I have never read it. Already he is looking around to find someone else to talk to. I'm just another pest who thinks they can come up to someone they don't know and start jabbering away. I see that I'm losing him. So then I drop the bomb. "Hey man," I said, "I've tried to read Finnegan's Wake but let's face it, it's utter crap". With that he turns to me and says "What do you expect? Don't you see my fingers?" I look at his left hand and sure enough, his fingers are melting and rolling down the bar to the floor! I rush to try and somehow scoop up the liquid fingers to save them but I wake up.

Ok...According to scientific research everyone dreams.  But you have to take steps to remember your dreams because they are ephemeral.  Even an intense dream that seems "real" when you wake up at 4:00am can be lost by 6:00am when you get out of bed.  For me the key to remembering my dreams is to keep a small pad of paper and pencil on the nightstand on my side of our bed.  When I wake up from a dream and am still foggy headed I just lean over and jot down single words about the dream.  Then later when I get up and start my day I take this sheet of paper and start writing in my special dream journal everything I remember using the sheet of paper to jog my memory.  You would be astonished by how much comes back to you using this method.  It pours out.  Then if it is a particularly vivid dream, has a special quality or imagery begging to be rendered I try to draw a scene which shows it clearly.  If time permits I draw it right away.  Often I get up early and get at it, but if not I at least have the bedside paper to refresh my memory. Like anything else you have to commit to this practice and develop the habit.

If this is all new for you I recommend you check the library or bookstore for books on dream work.  I started with:
 The Dream Sourcebook by Phyllis Koch-Sheras, Phd. & Amy Lemley 
also very good is:
The Complete Dram Book by Gillian Holloway, Phd

As I got into it I studied Lucid Dreams by Keith Harary,Phd and Pamela Weintraub.  Studying this helps one have more control and active participation in your dream state.

This field of study led me to the realization that dream practice held great potential for my spiritual journey.I reached a point where I tended not to focus on the meaning of my dreams but on the mysterious processes that  underlie the whole of our existence, not only our dreaming life. These days I am slowly working through the book The Tibetan Yogas of Dream and Sleep by Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche. 

As I make progress I will report more in future blog post.  Feel free to comment or ask questions.