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You are here: Home / Archives for Painting

My House Is Not A Tree: Art, Shamanism & The Demon Flicker

August 1, 2013 by Iskra 4 Comments

Awhile back I had a Flicker on the side of my house. By the wording of that sentence you may know that I mean attached as though with adhesive, firmly anchored, determined, and loud. A Flicker is a bird that thinks your house is either A) a piece of wood that he can bore into and coax ants into or B) a dead tree or soon to be dead tree that already has ants and other insects living in it rent free — insects which the Flicker plans to have for breakfast, between 4 and 5 AM.

On a fine spring morning you may find yourself barefoot in your bathrobe with a garden hose, screaming and spraying into the eaves as the protected and very handsome bird looks over his shoulder at you and says, “Huh.” If you are me, you start painting pictures to explain the situation — to the bird.

 House Is No A Tree
My House is Not A Tree  © Iskra Johnson

This went on for quite awhile. I tried a lot of different approaches to organizing the message. Some were direct, some were oblique.

Flicker 2
Flicker 2, © Iskra Johnson
House Carpenter
House Carpenter © Iskra Johnson

I grew in a strange way quite fond of him. I assumed he was a him. When he attacked the gutters I nicknamed him Donald Rumsfeld, remember him?

Flicker: Getting To Know You
Flicker: Getting To Know You, © Iskra Johnson

Flicker In Yellow Tree

I tried reversing him, and I gave him a very fine tree with lots of bark. And finally I did this painting, the last in the series, which may have been the one that finally got the message across, because he went away and I have never been bothered since:

Flicker 3
Flicker 3 © Iskra Johnson

I recently was approached by someone who also had a bird attached to her house, and she took possession of this painting to see what powers it might have. I requested that my patron sign an indemnification agreement, as I cannot guarantee that this kind of magic will work twice. And it occurs to me tonight as I look around the studio and into the eaves that I may have broken a rule of art and magic, as now my bird is gone, and perhaps along with it the protective spell. Tomorrow morning, if you see a woman in her bathrobe spraying a garden hose into the sky and shouting in some strangled and incomprehensible language, that will be me.

 

Filed Under: Painting, Recent Posts, Uncategorized Tagged With: art and shamanism, house and Bird Painting, house carpenter, Northern Flicker Painting

Finding the Fourth Leaf

May 31, 2013 by Iskra Leave a Comment

Four Leaf Clover Painting
Four Leaf Clover Painting, Acrylic on Canvas, 4″ x 4″, © Iskra Johnson

One of the advantages of growing up on a farm is that you spend a lot of time being just a few feet tall and eye-level with the field. Later, but slowly, you grow a bit and look down, and all the tops of things come into view. Your sense of wonder at that age is matter-of-fact and practical, scaled for harvest. Everything fits in your fist or your back pocket or between your teeth. If you develop the habit of looking down, soon you find four-leaf clovers everywhere.

For years if I opened books from my shelf at random, in particular, books like Black Beauty, or The Wind in the Willows, clovers would scatter onto the floor. The knack of finding them stayed with me for years, and then one day I forgot about it. I gave books away, whole shelves full, without remembering to open them first. My luck, I would have to say, was not exceptional, and there were times I would look around me and feel that some intangible thing was missing. Who knows how the fourth leaf, of grace, comes into one’s life? Last week I visited Fernwoodsy, a magical place of dappled light and bees and meadow. And for just a moment I looked down…..

Pressed Four Leaf Clover

Filed Under: Painting, Recent Posts Tagged With: Fernwoodsy, finding luck, fourleaf clover, painting as talisman, painting of four leaf clover, shamrock painting, the fourth leaf

Blue Sky in Seattle,Listening to Charles Lloyd on KBCS Caravan

May 17, 2011 by Iskra

This morning, with blue sky coming up through the mists outside the studio window, I am listening to Charles Lloyd on KBCS. Thank you John Gilbreath for the Caravan. Every morning from nine to noon I am in a groove sublime. This piece by Lloyd takes me to a time when the world seemed bright, and everything possible:

Baroque_Morning_Charles_Lloyd

 
 Baroque Morning, printing ink on paper, from Sleep Studies

Filed Under: Music, Painting Tagged With: art inspired by music, blue sky in Seattle, KBCS the Caravan with John Gilbreath, Listening to Charles Lloyd

At Sea

March 2, 2011 by Iskra 1 Comment

This morning I woke up with the sea on my mind. A memorial was held this week for the intrepid sailing couple from Seattle, Phyllis Macay and Bob Riggle. They were killed by Somali pirates, an unthinkable and yet now-common occurrence in our new/old world in which any nightmarish thing you could dream of is probably happening right now.

I did this image several years ago in commemoration of the Indonesian tsunami. I have always loved the origami paper boat, and I did a series called  “Rescue” juxtaposing the fragility of  paper with the inexorable power of the sea. “At Sea” emerged with an unexpected martial feeling. The paper boat sits in puzzle piece lock-up with what could be the tail of a military transport plane. The foreground image may be in the act of rescue, or it may be on attack. And that is very much how the world feels to me this morning. The lock-up of war and peace is inextricable, relentless, eternal. We make our fragile boats, place them on the water, and head towards the light at the curve of the horizon, regardless of what happens next.

Blue-Origami
At Sea, printing ink on prepared ground,© Iskra Johnson

Filed Under: Current Affairs, Painting Tagged With: art about the sea, art about war, blue painting, iskra political art, origami boat, painting of origami, paper boat painting, Somali pirates

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