It’s that time again when everyone recaps the past
year. You hear everything from "who the person of the year" is to the best of and
the worst of. I can’t help but to play
along while sharing my personal experiences. Hopefully it will help me with my
biographers when they need to fill the pages between me inventing the Internet
and making yellow the new black on the runways. With the help of Facebook's
timeline app, I was able to glance back at the year and figure out why I'm 10
pounds heavier this January. My timeline is a montage of food, beverages,
places, family and the occasional new piece of art.
One would think that with being an artist there would
be more than the occasional piece of art. It’s not that I wasn't producing art;
it was more that I was exercising my creativity and my desire to make things.
Actually last year as I sat in a room of 20 artists “confessing” what our true
resolutions were and how we wanted to better ourselves and what we wanted to
accomplish in the year, I thought to myself, then said aloud, "I want to make my
house a home. I want to create a place in which my kids will always want to
come back." There I said it, my commitment had nothing to do with making more or
better art; it had to do with living life and by the end of the year a majority
of it fell into place.
I could not have done this without others wanting to
enjoy and celebrate their own lives. At the beginning of the year I was blessed
with many commissions that supported me and kept me busy throughout the year.
One client wanted to reward herself and remind herself that she had survived breast
cancer the previous year. Another client wanted to pass on a passion for art by
creating a special birthday present. Still another client fell in love with the
lushness of encaustic and wanted a portrait to give to her husband as a gift.
These patrons and others like them celebrated special moments with art that I
created. How could I not fulfill my own commitment!
So I began with a hammer and some nails, the tape
measure that I later figured out how to read and a level that I swore was
level. With the help of a friend I built the most magnificent shed. My
intention for the shed was to store the contents that now fill my basement.
This was the first step in refinishing my basement, so that when the kids do come
back, we can have a cozy “French resistance mixed with a 1920s speakeasy flare”
bar to hang out in. This has yet to be built but I'm working on it. The stuff
is moved out and the shed is filled to the brim. As with all projects, if
you're going to do “this” well then you might as well do “that”, all while
doing the main “thing”. Three months later, I'm on to the front yard making
brick paths. I find so much solace in laying bricks and in building stonewalls.
It is like figuring out a puzzle that is life-size and potentially holding up
something. The brick path starts at the front door and nicely curves around the
side of the house fading into the ground where it shall resume and continue
this year. Yet 30 feet to the south of this brick path, a new stone path and
patio was built. I proudly made a somewhat perfect circle out of stones and
placed our newfound antique iron patio set on top. Determined to finish one
project before 2013, I graded the soil and seeded it. There are reports of
grass before the first snowfall.
I can't finish the chronicle of my previous year
without mentioning the other “C” words: Carouge, Canada and Cuba. These once
again fulfill my mission by year’s completion. To ensure that my kids like me
and want to come back home, I so diligently worked on last year. I took my
oldest daughter on a father-daughter excursion to Carouge, Switzerland. A week
in Switzerland eating chocolates and singing through the hills had solidified
the notion that I am the best dad and that she will be coming home later in
life. I now had to convince my other two kids that waited patiently at home.
This year we chose Canada as our family vacation, not because it was an election
year and everyone threatened to move there. I chose it because of Montreal, which
was the closest we’d get to a European city feel without having to purchase
five plane tickets. As always it was eight days of wandering, eating and
allowing the surplus of time to make the memories. The last “C” was a curveball
that wasn't even a thought entering into January 1, 2012, Cuba. Opportunity
knocked and patrons joined in my Kickstarter moment that ended the year with me
in Cuba and began this year with a few Cuba inspired art shows.
By the time 2012 ended I had finished all my paintings.
Some were already hanging and others were under the Christmas tree. I had
documented some peoples’ memories brining a smile to their walls. In return
I confirmed my “confession” by committing to it, then ventured out to countless
countries.
All I can hope for this year is that it not be too demanding.
Maybe have more dinners and drinks, drawing and maybe Denmark with just enough dinero
to distribute.
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