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Notes from the Road: An Artist’s Trip to the Palouse

August 28, 2012 by Iskra 4 Comments

Sage_On_Map_EasternWashingtonWeeks after returning from Eastern Washington, I can’t seem to put the map away. From the corner of my eye I see the blue of the rivers and the lakes and the pale butter of desert and wheat. The whole map seems cast in the blue of the sky. It keeps me on the road even as I stand in my kitchen looking at weather the color of concrete. I read the names of the towns and put them together, knowing I would believe these people were real if I read them in a story: Clayton Ford, Lamona St. John, Gilmer Packwood, Randle Bingen, or just plain Quincy, with no last name. I want to have a cousin named Mayfield, and I want to marry a man named Dusty, which lines up along the road to Othello right next to Hay. To look at the map, to be in the map, they infuse each other – the blue sky the same color as these meandering backroads. The names of these places are equal parts dirt and aspiration. Yes to the beat up range horse and the saddle whose rosette tooling has worn flat from years of use, and yes to the Spokane carousel whose horses bloom with gilded chinoiserie.

Palouse-Road

Here in The West, in the upper left-hand corner formerly known as The Oregon Territories, (and before that as the land of the Nez Pierce, the Quinault and the Yakima Nations), we are divided by mountains. The usual associations of the compass don’t hold; The “East” is not know for its Buddhists and pagans and barefoot Occupiers but for small towns with even smaller churches with firmly held conservative beliefs. The West curls its lip at the East and mocks its Bible-quoting politicians and lack of tender regard for restoring the gray wolf. The East would prefer not to sponsor seawalls and fancy underground freeways and weddings in which both the bride and the groom are named Meg. And yet for all its smug urban insularity, people of the West regard the East with nostalgia and they carry a certain ache for its rural beauty. Out there is the land. No matter how thick the condominiums or how constipating the traffic or how high the price of a double latte vente with vanilla on the west side, the land is out there just over the pass saying: we have space and sky here for you. It’s saved for you and in the bank: beauty.

Every few years I make the pilgrimage across the Cascade mountains, to see if that space is still there or if I imagined it. This August I went with two artist friends to stay on a farm outside the farming town of Pomeroy and look after a herd of goats. It was delicious to be with companions who live to stop and to look. We packed a week of lunch, and checked our brakes for the long steep slope down the other side of the mountains.

HAYBALES-FOR-SALE
A clear sans serif always gets the message across.
Turn_Right_Road_Signage
Directional Signage. This is not Canada.

After a bit, beyond the too-big fruit stand that is now the only fruit stand, in the town of Thorp whose name seems too short and where the massive marquee offers “Antiques | Fruit” which just makes us think of raisins; after that bleak stretch where we think we’re not anywhere at all, we do reach The Road. Here finally is the ribbon of hills. The folding and unfolding waves of gold and green pivoting into creekbeads and scree and broken down things. Shimmering asphalt, blazing hairpins, the river, the barges, the Falls. White butterflies in pine trees. And a sudden leap into science fiction. When did the land become a wind factory? I turned my back and the Germans came and put these white giants, these three-armed industrial starfish on every horizon. What would Ray Bradbury think? Would he lie down beneath them in their protective mote of gravel and toast them with a glass of dandelion wine?

Two_Barns_PalouseThe_Road_PalouseThe_Old-Fashioned_WindmillThe_SciFi_Windmills_of_The_Palouse

Each windmill earns a farmer $10 thousand dollars a year. Each windmill powers 350 houses. Put that up against an idea,– a relic of an idea — of “landscape” or “natural beauty.” You’ll lose. And so we go farther east, to where the migration hasn’t taken hold, practicality and beauty are in harmony, and the highest best use of land is wheat and peas and these are just coincidentally lovely. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Photography, Recent Posts, Road Trips, Travel Tagged With: Artist journal of the Palouse, Artist Roadtrip, Blue Mountain Artisans Guild, Eastern Washington Landscape trip, Jennifer Carrasco, Mary Flerchinger, notes from the road, Palouse journal, Paula Gill, Pomeroy Washington, road signs, road trip journal, Steptoe Butte, the East-West Divide, visit to a goat farm, visit to Steptoe Butte, writing about the west

Street Study for John Cage

June 13, 2012 by Iskra Leave a Comment

Today I saw a link on my Facebook page to the wonderful Rules of John Cage. Thanks to who ever posted and re-posted and re-posted and to Merce Cunningham who had it on his wall. I attended Cornish School for a brief but powerful two years in the early seventies, when Cage’s influence could still be felt. Reading Silence in the school library changed my life forever. Today I am reading these rules and laughing, and also wondering if I truly agree with Rule 8. When I compose a “page” it seems to me analyzing and creating are simultaneous. Or tandem, or perhaps a relay race where you hand the baton back and forth.

TheRules-JohnCage
The Rules (John Cage)
Street-Study-For-John-Cage
Composition for John Cage, digital collage, © Iskra Johnson

Filed Under: Photocollage, Recent Posts Tagged With: Collage inspired by John Cage, John Cage and Cornish, John Cage Rules, Ode to John Cage

Sinking into Green: First Visit to Bloedel Reserve

June 4, 2012 by Iskra 1 Comment

Sometimes you just go away and lie down with the leaves. Into the woods, the dells, the gracious otherworldly beauty of the Bloedel Reserve. These are a few of the several hundred pictures I took today. More about this enchanted place soon.

Blades

Intersection

ThePrimroseDellPhotos © Iskra Johnson

Filed Under: Photography, Recent Posts Tagged With: A first visit to Bloedel Reserve, Bloedel, the green refuge

The Hunting Blind

April 26, 2012 by Iskra 1 Comment

I recently visited a neighbor who collects decoys. Row upon row of scuffed and splintered ducks sat mutely in the pale light of morning.  Their once bright colors had faded to lovely tans and mauves and teal. They reminded me of a rain-cast weekend in the Quinault when I came across my first antique decoys at the lodge there. I felt when I touched them like I had stepped deep into the 1930’s, smelling damp wood and gunpowder of another time. These drawings are two from a set that looks at the mystery of the marsh, the real and the unreal. From the standpoint of stylization it is always an interesting question: how do you draw an unnatural object in natural settings? You can see more from this sequence in the gallery Drawings in Dust 2

HuntingBlind_Drawing
Hunting Blind, powdered pigment and charcoal dust, 8 1/2" x 10 1/2"
Cygnet_charcoal_dust_pigment_drawing
Cygnet, charcoal dust and powdered pigment, 13" x 21"

 

Filed Under: Drawing, Recent Posts Tagged With: decoy drawing, drawing the marsh, target drawing

“100 Objects” Part Two: Art as Devotional Practice

April 23, 2012 by Iskra Leave a Comment

I have slowly been working my way through “A History of the World in 100 Objects” (see previous post.) I have given up the idea of dutiful chronological study and instead I choose chapters at random. Last night I landed on “Gold Coins of Kumaragupta” and found a passage on Hindu worship that struck me on multiple levels:

Hindus will see a deity, on the whole, as God present. God can manifest anywhere, so the physical manifestation of the image is considered to be a great aid in gaining the presence of God. By going to the temple, you see this image that is the presence. Or you can have the image in your own home — Hindus will invite God to come into this deity-form, they will wake god up in the morning with an offering of sweets. The deity wil have been put to bed in a bed the night before, raised up, it will be bathed in warm water, ghee, honey, yoghurt, and then dressed in handmade dresses — usually made of silk — and garlanded with beautiful flowers and then set up for worship for the day. It’s a very interesting process of practicing the presence of God.

–Shaunaka Rishi Das, Hindu cleric and Director of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies

There is a wonderful poignance to this image of bathing the deity, of feeding it sweets, of dressing it — such tenderness. It made me think, where do I practice this in my own life? And do I practice this in my work?

In the process of designing the new and revised version of my website I have been going through my archives and deciding what to add in, keep or delete. After sleeping on the passage above, I remembered a series I had done a long time ago which reflects this same devotional impulse, although not in a Hindu frame of reference. For about a year I painted hundreds of small studies of African fetish figures. I used books on African sculpture as my reference, and did my studies the way I would practice kanji, repeating them over and over again, on different papers and with different paints and inks, trying to allow the “figure” to become part of me. The practice became a mobius of energy between myself and the ritual object. The koan was “what is the self?”

Devotional-Figures
Devotional Figures, watercolor on paper, Iskra johnson

The figures fell into fifteen or twenty different tribal archetypes including a woman holding her head, her body or her baby, a figure holding a mirror, a figure holding a drum, and a recurring double figure, two conjoined in various ways. The paintings’ very smallness helped me to keep the practice devotional. I wasn’t creating anything for a “wall.” But I was inviting the gods into my house. It is good to remember to open that door.

Statue-Studies
Statue Studies, gouache on paper, © Iskra Johnson
Muse
Muse, watercolor on paper, ©Iskra Johnson

 

Filed Under: Object Lessons: Essays and images inspired by "A History of the World in 100 Objects.", Recent Posts, The Spiritual in Art Tagged With: devotional art, fetish paintings, paintings from sculpture

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