Sunday, 01 August 2010
Life events....
Saturday, 06 March 2010 22:01
I have not posted in a long while due to many life events.  My mother died in July of last year and then 3 months later I was in the hospital for an emergency surgery.  It's been a trying time to say the least, but life is starting to settle again and I am back working full force. 

I miss my mom very much.  When you lose someone you love, life as you knew it is changed forever. I miss video chatting with my mom.  I miss her telling me she was grateful I was her daughter.  I miss her sweetness and gentle spirit.  The deep compassion I possess is due to my mothers influence to care deeply and feel for others.  I am eternally grateful she was my mother.

mom
 
Digital Artist, Bruce Bayard: Climate Change Projects
Tuesday, 29 September 2009 12:34

I am honored to introduce a local artist's work on climate change.  Please read Bruce Bayard's article on what inspired these amazing projects.

The Jefferson Nature Center and Madrona Arts have recently and separately chosen to engage southern Oregon and northern California artists to raise awareness of their programs. I am happy to have been a participant in both organizations' efforts in bringing to light climate change effects on the Rogue and Klamath River Basins.

The Jefferson Nature Center created a project called Shifting Patterns: Preparing for Unsettled Days in which 16 area artists read and interpreted a climate change report by National Center for Conservation Science and Policy (NCCSP) for the Rogue River Basin. Each artist read the report and responded in their chosen medium. Since my artwork for the last 9 years has been created on a computer using electronic collage techniques, I chose to create a panoramic view of my own back yard, Grizzly Peak, as a long horizontal narrative for the difficult changes this valley faces in the next 50 to 100 years.

divided-landscape-ark

This piece is titled
DIVIDED LANDSCAPE: ARK and is a direct reference to Noah's Ark from the biblical story. As I listened to the scientific presentation of the NCCSP report, the notion that we would be wise to prepare for upcoming disasters became my main inspiration. While it is easy for me to be pessimistic about our chances of thriving in the face of what lies ahead for the human race over the next century, I tried to insert the possibility that things would be OK; a cautious optimism. Reading the art from left to right shows a disjointed landscape moving to an extremely chaotic one, then into a period of relative wholeness and harmony.

divided-landscape-arc

The same narrative direction plays in a companion piece called
DIVIDED LANDSCAPE: ARC that I did for Madrona Arts.

Madrona Arts primary mission is to raise awareness of ecological restoration through the arts and one program towards that goal was Klamath River: Freeing the Waters. Artists were asked to create art of a place within the Klamath River Basin, given the knowledge that Native American tribes, farmers, politicians and activists were discussing the possibility of removing 4 hydroelectric dams along the river. For this project I chose a spot along Spring Creek north of Chiloquin, Oregon.

The photos that comprise this piece were taken in a “moving panorama” where I walked alongside the creek and snapped frame after frame, instead of a more typical panorama where the series of side-by-side images are taken from one point of view. This multiple vantage point process gives the distinct sense of the chaos and divisiveness of the creek's flow. Emphasizing the picture frame edges, I overlayed charts and graphs and other man-made patterns that further disrupt the flow. Then at the right, instead of showing the remaining photo panels, it fades out, with a cello replacing the creek. The story is not yet complete, and can be written in many ways. It will be an awesome project to watch as the river heals itself and the land when fish can return to their original spawning grounds.

It has been a wonderful opportunity to create art in response to the major environmental issues that are shaping our current history, our culture and our lives.

Bruce Bayard
Artist

 
Green Vegans
Friday, 21 August 2009 23:42
logo

I recently had the pleasure of working with some very dynamic folks who are creating a new organization, Green Vegans.  

Co-founder, Will Anderson, is the mastermind behind this project and is a brilliant soul.  Although no one has found the answer to world peace per se', Will has the formula and has outlined it beautifully!  This organization has the potential to guide other non-profits who are fighting for animals and the earth to greater achievements.  He challenges everyone to make the connection between social and ecological issues, animal and human rights.  It was an honor to design their identity and I look forward to helping them with other design projects as well.  Be on the lookout for this powerful organization!
 
China print vendors
Friday, 01 May 2009 14:32
Well, I have worked with my 5th, and hopefully last, China print vendor.  A few of my clients have wanted their products produced in China and have allowed the vendor to produce the printed material.  All instances have been incredibly frustrating.  The language barrier alone contributes to their lack of understanding for what is requested and the final product is mediocre at best. If quality is on the top of your list for your project, I would not recommend using a print vendor in China. You really do get what you pay for.
 
Walking into the mountain with Lola
Sunday, 01 February 2009 21:16
p1000683I have been living in Oregon for 9 years and the beauty still never ceases to amaze me. I took our newly adopted dog, Lola, for a walk up my street the other day which leads up into the mountain. This is no lightweight walk. It is a 3 hour round trip walk that is consistently at an incline on the way up.  I was reminded how accessible beauty is for me and I was flooded with gratitude. I used to walk my dog Stella up our road with me regularly.  Since she died, I just could not bring myself to go up there again. Losing her left a huge void for a long time. I took her everywhere with me. Now, nearly 2 years have passed and I finally mustered the courage to face my feelings. All in all, Lola and I did great and I was surprised by the comfort I felt as opposed to the grief that I was expecting.
 
Pelicans Dying
Saturday, 17 January 2009 15:06

pelicanI don't watch TV and I shelter myself from the news 99.9% of the time.  I am simply too sensitive to be subjected to the onslaught of horrible reports.  For some reason today, I visited a local news source only to read of some sad news.  What a surprise!

Over 480 Pelicans have been found disoriented, starving, sick and wandering in the roads, people's backyards and even in the desert in Arizona!  Wildlife experts are trying to determine if it is due to the severe climate change or domoic acid, a toxin associated with algae blooms that can accumulate in shellfish.  Either way, it's incredibly sad.  These amazing birds made a comeback after near extinction in the 70's due to DDT.

Whether it's from the neurotoxin or weather, this reminds me of how fragile life on this planet is and how we have such an immense responsibility to care for all who inhabit it. In my humble opinion, other life forces would do much better if humanity were wiped out.  We do so much damage. 

Other creatures amaze me.  Personally, I think living on earth could be a paradise.  It is so incredibly beautiful.  Nature moves me to tears sometimes.  However, selfishness and greed have motivated mankind to do some horrible things.  Hell, I can't even take a walk up my beautiful road, which leads up into the mountain, without seeing couches, tables, beds and the like discarded into the forest by people trying save a few bucks at the dump.

What will it take for us to wake up?

 
Welcome!
Sunday, 28 December 2008 02:51

Well, since I added Joomla to my web design repertoire, I decided to redesign my own site using this technology.  So, voilà....here it is!

vfaOn the project home front, I just finished a website for a grassroots animal rights group in Pennsylvania, Voices for Animals.  The site turned out great and they are thrilled.  I have been in the movement for 20 years, but the cruelty never ceases to amaze me.  Working out the photo galleries was brutal, but they are very powerful and I hope they instill compassion in all who view them.

I am also designing packaging for a vegan soy chocolate company.  This has been such a fun project and will be added to my portfolio soon!