Interview with artist Victoria Veedall

I’m discovering quite a few gallery exhibiting artists with BFA’s and residencies in their background turning to Etsy or other online retail art sites like the more upscale 1000 Markets. These artists may still be in the gallery and museum system, but for smaller works they’re using online retailers and can often supplement their ‘straight’ income through these means. You’re probably all familiar with the Daily Painters or Painting a Day sites, but most are traditional representational painters who rarely vary their subject matter.

I met Victoria Veedall on Etsy, where I’m selling smaller works as well. I was searching out painters to put in a Treasury; a promotional tool that members can use to showcase their ‘favorites’.

Victoria’s work caught my eye with its subtle references to Turner, vivid and almost technicolor palette, and loose interpretation of landscape. She has a BFA in painting, trained at the private L’Ecole Albert Defois in France and went to grad school at NYU. She’s been an artist in residence twice at the Vermont Studio Center, in 2001 and 2008, a 2004 Kamiyama Artist in Residence at Tokushima Prefecture in Japan and in 2002 she was in residence at the Chitraniketan Residency in Kerala, India. Our interview was conducted via email.

fd You seem to create series of works; is this typically the way in which you work? I also noticed that many of your paintings are quite small. Do you have a preference for size or does it influence how you work?

VV I enjoy working in a variety of sizes from 4 x 5 inches to 48” x 60 inches.  You can see some of the large paintings on my website. Going from big to small and back and forth between sizes keeps me challenged.  Typically the smaller paintings are made first as a sort of “note” about a place or idea/feeling and then I re-work them into larger paintings.  I like to modify  an idea over and over – in different sizes and color relationships each one seeks to evoke a different feeling.

 

Temple Walk    2007 oil on canvas, 38 x 40 inches

 

fd Can you discuss your current work and thought processes. What is the context of your work, and your ideologies as a painter? 

VV As I begin a new series, I look through my photos and/or small paintings to pick images that interest me. Some images I will manipulate in Photoshop changing the colors or using filters. I like experimenting with Photoshop. I use the photos as a source of inspiration, not to copy directly.  When I am ready to start painting I begin with a loose under-painting and build up the surface through successive layering and glazing.  I react to subsequent layers until an image emerges.  I never know exactly what the painting will look like in the end. My preferred medium is oil on canvas, wood panel or paper.  I work with brushes and palette knives.  I like to think that I am creating abstractions of the landscape that transcend the traditional sense of landscape painting. By dissolving the landscape, leaving only what I consider to be the essence of nature, it becomes more alluring.  I continually examine the effects of light and form in the natural world.

fd Your work reminds me a little of Childe Hassam, mixed up with Turner, Albert Pinkham Ryder and Wolf Kahn. Who are some of your influences? 

VV My work is often compared to Turner.  I wasn’t really interested in Turner until so many people mentioned the similarities that I thought I should take a look.  I guess Turner was always in the background after having studied him in art history.  I think Wolf Kahn is a master with his use color.

First Light   2009 oil on canvas, 48 x 48 inches 

 

Days End   2008 oil on canvas, 48 x 48 inches 

fd Do you work spontaneously or is there a set time that you devote to the paintings on a daily/weekly basis?

VV I believe in having set studio hours.  I think of painting as a full time job.  My studio hours are Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday 10-4.  I, also, spend a fare amount of time on marketing and promotion of my work.  I have to have goals to work towards. 

fd How do you stay current, or is that important to you. Do you visit galleries and museums on a regular basis, or travel to view art and cultural events?

VV I do go to as many exhibitions as possible in San Francisco at museums and galleries.  I also look at art when on vacation or when visiting relatives in Houston, my hometown, or New York City with my in-laws.   I subscribe to several art magazines: ArtNews, Art Week, Art in America. 

fd Some artists suggest that the studio is too private for them, that they require a social forum for their work. Does networking with other artists and developing community have much bearing on your life as an artist and if so, how does it inform your work and process? 

VV I actually prefer to spend all of my time in the studio.  However, I do think it is important to be a part of a community and I am in a couple of artist groups.  One is a critique group for woman artists and the other is a drawing group where we give ourselves assignments to complete each month and then talk about them at monthly meetings.  In both groups we share different opportunities, etc. I do enjoy the camaraderie of other artists.

fd You have a BFA, have been artist in residence at the esteemed Vermont Studio Center and have exhibited widely around the world. Yet you choose to sell your work at Etsy, the online ‘handmade’ shopping retailer. Can you explain what led you to the site and how you promote your work? Have online sales been successful or do you sell better in galleries?

VV A friend of mine suggested I try Etsy.  She had been a member for a year and had some sales.  After doing a lot of research on Etsy and looking at countless shops, I decided to showcase my smaller works.  I thought they would be more in line price wise with other artists.  I sold well the first week and then it dropped off.  I think it takes quite a bit of work like relisting and adding new pieces continuously.   So far galleries and art consultants have been better for sales for me.  However, I have not been with Etsy very long so I will definitely give it time and try to make it a success.

PR Perspective   2009 oil on canvas, 18 x 18 inches

fd What are some of your long term goals for your painting career?

VV Gosh I have so many!  Here are just a few:

First I would like to have a larger studio with great light.  Second I would love to be exhibiting and selling so much that I would need an assistant to help out with office work and marketing.  Third, would be an artist in residence at Yaddo.

 

Yellow Dawn   2007 oil on canvas, 36 x 36 inches 

 

Victoria Veedall’s work can be found on her own website and at her Etsy shop, below:

www.veedell.com 

http://www.etsy.com/shop.php?user_id=6554047

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New paintings of Umbria and Strawberry season

My gardens are fruity- the apple trees still have tiny apples that haven’t yet been decimated by worms or copper rust, the strawberry beds are producing faster than I can pick them. And I’ve been eating asparagus every week since April. The bunnies ate the tops off all of the snowpeas, but left me one plant. So much for the eco-friendly gardener. I’m almost ready for a Hunter Thompson showdown.

 

I’m also working on a couple of peony paintings…

 

The following paintings were begun while I was in Italy at a residency in 2007. After a year or so of not being content with the first piece, I finally finished it last week. The second work is a view from the same locale and I had photos and sketches that I used as reference.

 I drove with the resident artist to a spot just outside the medieval town of Montecastello, to paint this seemingly abandoned house in an olive grove with mountains in the distance. The weather that day in early September was quickly changing, winds came up and a storm threatened to blow down my plein-air easel. But I kept going. 

These are both available in my EShop here.

Umbrian House, oil on wood panel 14.5″x18″ 2007-09

 

Umbrian House on the Hill, oil on canvas board 12″x16″ 2009

 

original painting on site-

 

and the real thing-

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Interview with Tom Zarrilli

This is the second in a monthly series of artist interviews.

I met the artist Tom Zarrilli during my early years in Atlanta. I knew him from openings at alternative galleries and music clubs like 688 and TV Dinners, where he was the manager. These are now defunct, but at the time were as ubiquitous in Atlanta as bands like the Hampton Grease Band, Thermos Greenwood, and Darryl Rhoades’ satirical HahaVishnu Orchestra. I exhibited in 1985 at Clark Brown’s Blue Rat Gallery, where Tom’s current wife, Cindy (Varnes) Zarrilli, was involved at the time. 

His recent exhibits have included a large installation, ‘A Year in the Yards of Clutter and the Driveways of Divestment’ at Atlanta’s Contemporary Arts Center, and his four state inventory of Makeshift Memorials.

I reconnected with Tom via Facebook and asked him about his work.

A Year in the Yards of Clutter, installation – Atlanta Contemporary Arts Center 2006 

fd: Tom, I met you back in the early 1980’s through mutual friends; artists and musicians involved in Atlanta’s video and club scene. You were road manager for the group ‘Now Explosion’ and a manager at TV Dinners, a downtown club that featured mounted wall monitors playing looped experimental art videos. Can you tell us about your early background and how you got involved in both photography and yard sale or ‘found’ art. 

TZ When I was growing up in the Canal Zone, I began my interest in photography shooting whatever seemed fascinating to me.  I used a Ziess Ikon my father had purchased on the black market in post war Germany. I found out early if you shoot a lot and on a regular basis you’ll come up with some great images.  

Some of my childhood pictures made their way into an installation I did last year entitled “I Still Dream of the Canal Zone”.  In college, I took art history courses as well as drawing classes, but never considered myself talented enough to pursue a degree in the arts. I really never met any real working artists until I was an adult.  I did little photography as a young adult, thinking this was better done by people with better gear and training.  But I did fall in with a bohemian art crowd in the 70’s. 

Teens with Booze, from ‘I Still Dream of the Canal Zone’ 2008.

Mother reads Paper, from ‘I Still Dream of the Canal Zone’ 2008.

After college I did a found music show on WRFG and wrote a music column for Creative Loafing.  I started a comedy ensemble in the late 70’s that played around Atlanta for a few years.  While I had no formal background in theatre, comedy made me realize that I was an artist and that one of the most important aspects of art was entertainment.  I later became very involved with the punk/new wave music scene in Atlanta and operated and managed several nightclubs. I began billing myself as a performance artist instead of a comedian. One of my shows was called “Tom Zarrilli’s Night of Self Indulgence”.  It consisted of a monologue, some sketches and stunts like putting roaches on an overhead projector. In that era a lot of visual artists and art students were interested in music which was quite different than the previous progressive rock scene.  I realized then that ideas were just as important as talent.  My interest in photography was reborn in the late 1980’s when I bought a better camera, took courses and learned some dark room skills.  

fd: Your ‘Makeshift Memorials Series’ features memorial crosses in various parts of the country. Can you discuss the inspiration for these and how you view the series in your overall genre.

I was always intrigued by random encounters with dramatic and disturbing visuals.  I also viewed roadside memorials as a form of naïve art. People who erect them do so out of a sense of loss. They are personally created visual constructs made by people who would never normally make any sort of visual display. It’s interesting now that there are companies who create ready-made roadside memorials for those who feel their own crafts and styling is lacking.  It’s like buying a store-decorated cake instead of making one yourself. 

I also have a fear of driving and these grim reminders are very haunting to me.   When I was camping near Chimayo, while photographing many wonderfully beautiful memorials, I was visited in a dream by the deceased spirits who were honored by these memorials.  I’m not into psychic phenomenon, but it was a disturbing night with the dream accented by gunshots and incessantly barking dogs. 

Pepper Cross, from ‘Makeshift Memorials’ 2005

fd: Who are some of your influences, whether they’re painters, sculptors, musicians, poets or ‘none of the above’?  

Man Ray, Duchamp, Jeff Koons, the late Atlanta artist King Thaxton.  They all had a certain sense of humor about their work. I appreciate Joseph Cornell for his attention to detail. As for photographers, I appreciate the dedication of Margaret Bourke White and Gordon Parks to their art.  I was also influenced early on by the films of Bruce Conner and the monologues of Spalding Gray.

Drunken Gnomes, from ‘Visions of the Yards of Clutter’ 2006

The Disco Bed, from ‘Visions of the Yards of Clutter’ 2006

fd Do you work spontaneously or is there a set time that you dedicate to collecting these pieces for your series – on a daily/weekly basis? 

I work whenever I find the time. I do most of my writing and planning in the early morning.  I’m easily distracted and that’s a problem for me. I need to go on a retreat.

fd: How do you stay current, or is that important to you. Do you visit galleries and museums on a regular basis, or travel to view art and cultural events?

A good idea never gets old, but I am always looking for new techniques and presentation methods. I do visit museums and galleries on a regular basis but I also have a love of historical buildings, miracle sites and roadside attractions. 

Octo Mater, 2009

Requests for Intercession – Mendoza, Argentina 2005

fd: Some artists suggest that the studio is too private for them, that they require a social forum for their work. Does networking with other artists and developing community have much bearing on your life as an artist and if so, how does it inform your work and process?

 I’m a very social person. Social networking sites and listservs are an important adjunct to my social life. At first I found my involvement and others’ involvement in them to be on the shallow side since there is no face to face contact.  The Artnews listserv in Atlanta is a great vehicle for finding solutions to issues other artists and myself may be having with technique and presentation. It’s also a barometer of how some local artists feel about the current art scene and the politics and economics that surround it.

fd: Exhibiting online or in galleries – I know that you have a few websites devoted to showing your work, including a blog on yard sales. Can you talk about where you’re currently exhibiting and whether a traditional gallery model fits (or not) with your work?

Initially I saw it as the same difference between a live music club and hearing music on the radio. The latter was a good medium for finding out about music, but lacked depth and the experience of being exposed to live music as an audience member. 

Websites and online galleries are a great and inexpensive way to showcase your work, but lack the experience of seeing the work first hand and full size. This is especially true with large 3D pieces.

There is no way a tactile and interactive installation can be replicated in an online gallery.  It’s the difference between going on a carnival ride and watching a film of one. But it would be challenging to try to replicate this experience. Managing the websites I have is time consuming, and sometimes does not convey the full effects of what I do – but it is the best tool for promotion, especially since print media is dying so fast.

fd: Any immediate plans for exhibits and/or the next series of work?

 At present I have a major outdoor installation planned for the fall at Agnes Scott College. I tentatively have a solo show scheduled at an arts center in Atlanta in 2010 that I hope to have new photography in, which will be perhaps a variation of the yard sale series. I am also revisiting the Makeshift Memorials series with some new images that I hope to have published in an online academic journal. I would love to do a photographic series on miracle sites, if I can afford the extensive travel required…there are not a lot of miracles happening in Georgia.

Spectacles for Tourists 2009 – from ‘All Small Redux‘ at Agnes Scott College’s Dalton Gallery.

Visit Tom’s Yardsale Addict blog, and the Tomzarts site. See his youtube page for more videos, including archival footage of a young RuPaul and members of the band Now Explosion.

Promenade – Pictures at a Yard Sale. 

 

Special thanks to Phil Elie for posting the Ginsberg clips on youtube. You can view his own charmingly surreal videos here.

 

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Goats, cheese and history

My Historic Commission (West Whiteland township) hosted a regional meeting last night for the Chester County Historic Preservation Network (CCHPN) to meet other members of historic districts in our region, and discuss tactics for preservation. 

Highlights – the 1840 former manor house that once hosted fox hunts, was the historic residence of our host, refreshments included local artisan cheeses and wines. For your viewing pleasure, clips of Shellbark Hollow Farm‘s goats. This farm produces fresh chevre from their Nubian goat herd and is right in West Chester. Pete Demchur was wise enough to have bought the land 25 years ago and his sister Donna helps manage the retail side of the business. Excellent cheeses, adorable goats.

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Dogwoods and Chopin

Another new painting, they seem to be coming as fast and furious as all the seedlings, with the warm weather.

Dogwoods, oil on canvas board 10″x8″ 2009.

To go with it, the brilliant Evgeny Kissin playing Chopin’s Waltz in E Minor. Kissin has been playing Chopin since he was a child. A friend once told me that Mr. C put her to sleep, oblivious of the music’s poetic genius.

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A couple of new paintings for spring

The colors outside are intoxicating. My current work seems to be more free and less angular, maybe it’s the softness of spring.  

The first painting was created from a sketch of my backyard in early morning. Later while painting in the studio I was listening to John Prine‘s ‘My Darlin’ Hometown’, from his most recent (2005) CD, ‘Fair & Square’. That prompted me to steal a title from him……with apologies. I love all types of music and Prine falls into the mix for his humor, sensitivity to the human condition and just plain good song-writing. Here’s a review of his recent performance in Carmel, CA.

Bruised Orange, oil on canvas board 14″x11″  2009 

 

Pink Field, oil on canvas board 8″x10″ 2009

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Artist, patron and critical seeing

There are many artists in the online shops where I’ve been selling my own paintings, who offer to do commissions. My early background was spent studying and producing portraiture and there was even a stint in the late 1970’s when I traveled to various cities to sketch ‘caricatures’ at sprawling automobile conferences. I couldn’t do exaggerated caricatures to save my life, but some of my better portrait sketches were created at those behemoth and noisy gatherings. During my early days of exhibiting, a gallerist complained that she couldn’t sell ‘those green’ paintings and asked me to change my palette, my style and everything else at the time that was making my painting my own. I can readily say that I won’t be joining the willing online ranks.

Meyer Shapiro debunks the theory about early artists having to specifically conform to a patron’s desires in his 1994 book ‘Theory and Philosophy of Art: Style, Artist, and Society’.  The relationship dramatically changed from Greek and Roman times, when almost every work of art was made to order for a purpose, to the Renaissance and beyond, when art became ‘art for art’s sake’. Or in other words, art for enjoyment. Meyer suggests that the artist and even artists’ guilds had more power than has been commonly thought. He talks about monk-artists not being paid but producing spontaneous ‘products of delight’ and ‘often unconstrained by the religious natue of the objects in which these were expressed.’

And in spite of the surviving contracts that show many artists were commissioned by wealthy and powerful individuals or corporate groups, ‘this dependence on an order did not mean…that the patron specified precisely the end product’. He rightly speculates that an artist couldn’t say for himself how a work would turn out and our interpretation of these relationships and the end product has incorrectly been supposed to be less autonomous than they actually were.

Even so, there were patrons who demanded adherence to their own standards. ‘When Nicholas Poussin’s patron, Chatelou, complained in 1647 that the picture Poussin had done for him pleased him less than a painting the same artist had created for another patron, Poussin replied: this is what you asked for.’

Times haven’t changed so much in the modern corporate world, when designers are forced to create by committee consensus, always resulting in the most mediocre of ideas and decisions.

‘Paintings and sculptures, let us observe, are the last hand-made objects within our culture. Almost everything else is produced industrially, in mass and through a high division of labor. Few people are fortunate enough to make something that represents themselves, that issues entirely from their hands and mind, and to which they can affix their names. . .’  This paragraph, reprinted from Marshall Berman‘s rapturous essay on Shapiro, states what we artists intimately know and why it’s so difficult to give up the freedom to create, either for a patron or a job or whatever constricts a heartfelt outpouring of immediate response to the world. Berman himself writes the following as one distillation of Shapiro’s definition of modern art: ‘…this very loneliness gives modern artists the power to see through their culture, a culture based on class and lies.’

Shapiro at 89, on the ‘Theory and Philosophy of Art’ book jacket cover. 

Shapiro: ‘Modern art is a liberator of human feeling from social and cultural repressions, a breakthrough to the self’s deepest unconscious sources, and an ongoing force for transparency, gaiety and joy in modern life…Modern art, in both production and consumption, is intensely private and individualized.’  Berman goes on to align Shapiro’s theories with the young Karl Marx’s ‘Alienated Labor’, presenting ‘an indictment of contemporary life’. 

Shapiro: ‘What is most important is that the practical activity by which we live is not satisfying: we cannot give it full loyalty, and its rewards do not compensate for the frustrations and emptiness that arise from the lack of spontaneity and personal identifications in work: the individual is deformed by it, only rarely does it permit him to grow.

. . . All these qualities of painting may be regarded as a means of affirming the individual in opposition to the contrary qualities of the ordinary experience of working and doing.’

From Berman’s essay: ‘He (Shapiro) compares the experience of a work of art as a whole to a mystic’s experience of oneness with God: both experiences may lead to ecstasy, but both leave a great deal out. “We do not see all of a work when we see it as a whole.” Instead of wholeness, he says, we should aspire to fullness; instead of zaps of ecstasy, we should aim for a sensibility that he calls “critical seeing”:

Shapiro: ‘Critical seeing, aware of the incompleteness of perception, is explorative….It takes into account others’ seeing, it is a collective and cooperative seeing and welcome comparison of different perceptions and judgments.’

That sentence, for me, does not describe a committee consensus or a reliance on the notions of an audience or patron, but instead is a continuation of Andre Malraux’s claim in his magnificent ‘Voices of Silence’, that all artists are aware of the whole of art history before their time. Art as history infiltrates our psyches and we can’t completely deny or resist the implications.

Berman suggests that Shapiro is telling us not just how to visit a museum, but how to live our lives more fully, including moments of ‘sudden revelation’. Berman’s own definition of  modernism is eloquent and timely: 

‘To be modern… is to experience personal and social life as a maelstrom, to find one’s world and oneself in perpetual disintegration and renewal, trouble and anguish, ambiguity and contradiction: to be part of a universe in which all that is solid melts into air. To be a modernist is to make oneself somehow at home in the maelstrom, to make its rhythms one’s own, to move within its currents in search of the forms of reality, of beauty, of freedom, of justice, that its fervid and perilous flow allows.’

And finally, Shapiro quoted from his New York Times 1996 obituary. “Our concern with the work of art, however touched by vanity or greed, is a homage beyond self-interest,” he continued. “Through it we surmount, if only at rare moments, the limitations of our striving, possessive selves and, as an old poet says, ‘into glory peep.’ ”

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May

May here in southeastern PA and the Brandywine Valley is an explosion of Pepto-Bismol pinks, lilacs and acid greens. Even with the deluge of rain we’ve had, the trees are blooming and the birds sing their hearts out. I wanted to title this something French, since I’ve been listening to Jacky Terrasson’s ‘A Paris…’, but I restrained myself. 

I’m also featured today on the blog, Spotlight on Handmade.  

May, oil on canvas board 12″x9″ 2009

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Interview with Constance Humphries

This is the first in a monthly series of artist interviews.

I met the painter Constance Humphries online at 1000 Markets, where she recently opened a new market called Dialogue, featuring contemporary abstract work. She lives in Asheville, NC and exhibits widely. Visit her blog here.

I think you are right     Oil on canvas 12″ x 12″ 2009

 

fd What does painting mean to you?

As is implied by the question, painting is defined differently for different painters. For me, painting is not the creation of illusion or a means of delivering a message. Instead it is the physical result of my participation in an event that occurs when I interact with a two-dimensional  picture plane in present time. It is about being present, paying attention and creating something that could only exist in that moment. It is endlessly fascinating.

fd Can you discuss your work and thought processes.

Drawing is the primary element in my work. It gives me direct access to my impulses through the immediacy and personal quality of mark-making. The practice of drawing from life loosely informs the actual drawing that comprises the paintings, while conceptually, the work explores life’s inter-dependencies.
The process of creating the work is such that it develops organically. Working intuitively and spontaneously, which allows the subconscious and imagination to take over, each mark suggests others until the work is completed. This is balanced with a slow and careful development of layers that results in a work that is simultaneously formal, random, constrained, loose, deliberate and instinctual. 

fd How would you describe your current series and do you have any ideologies as a painter? What is the context of your work?  

While attempting to avoid labels, groups or affiliations, I suppose the context of this work is a contemporary approach to abstract expressionism. I very much believe in the tenets of that movement and believe that it was interrupted and not fully developed. I have a natural tendency toward improvisation and in finding meaning rather than pronouncing it. I believe truth is found not in thinking but in being present, being in conversation with life. 

She’s lucky not to have one     Oil on canvas 36″ x 36″ 2009

 

fd Who are some of your influences, whether they’re painters, sculptors, poets or ‘none of the above’?

 Painters: Cy Twombly, Joan Mitchell, Brice Marden, John Lees Musicians: Hank Mobley, John Coltrane, Miles Davis, Arvo Parte, Philip Glass, John Adams, Steve Reich

fd Do you work spontaneously or is there a set time that you devote to the paintings on a daily/weekly basis?  

I have a set schedule. For me, just as any practice requires discipline, so it is with painting. 

fd Do you visit galleries and museums on a regular basis, or travel to view art and cultural events?   Yes, I visit galleries and museums, go to see/hear jazz and classical music and attend and modern/contemporary dance performances. My travels always include these. I also read art theory and criticism on a regular basis and try to keep up online. 

fd Does networking with other artists and developing community have much bearing on your life as an artist and if so, how does it inform your work and process? 

Many of my friends are artists, musicians or other creative types. I am drawn to them as they are to me out of interest in each others art and processes. For me, it is important to have a network of people who understand why I do what I do, why I work so hard. They understand me and encourage me when I forget what I am doing and give me the opportunity to do the same. However, with regard to my work and my process, other people have little to no bearing.

fd What are some of your long term goals for your painting career?

I want to paint as much as I can. I would love to have the exhibitions, accolades, and sales that come with success, but the painting itself is the most important thing to me, as I don’t know how to be happy without doing it. Painting is a completely integrated part of my life. My approach is to let the career develop as it will. All the career advancements that come my way have done so because of relationships I have built with others out of genuine interest. I am not in some big hurry to get somewhere. I will have the career that I have. I do the things I do in a natural way. I take what comes and don’t try to force outcomes. That’s not to say that I am not proactive as I am very disciplined in my approach. I just know that things will happen without me setting the agenda.

I say boy     Oil on canvas 36″ x 36″ 2009

For more about Humphries’ work, visit her 1000 Markets shop here. Web: http://www.constancehumphries.com Blog: http://www.steplikeagiant.com Twitter: http://twitter.com/constanceh LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/constancehumphries

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Apple Tree in bloom

Everything outside is pink, white and acid green. I planted two apple trees 3 years ago and the Liberty has done well. I hope to get at least a dozen apples this year. In bloom, it’s like a new baby. 

Apple Tree, oil on canvas board, 14″x11″ 2009

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