Friday, March 31, 2017

Last day of March -- One overwhelming month!

Feeling thoughtful
Self portrait sketch
Black marker on Fringe drawing paper
9 1/2 x 5 3/4 inches
Barbara Muir © 2017

What with health issues in the family, what's going on
in the world, and daily worrying news this month has
required a team of cheerleaders, both outside in the
world and inside in my heart.  I do think I'm lucky
because I have those cheerleaders in my friends.  And
I thank you. Everyone I know is going through hard
times in some ways, but working so hard at being optimistic.

And then I listened to a show on CBC tonight about
a girl trying to escape from war torn Syria to Sweden
with her fiancé, but he drowned when the
smugglers running the boats, got angry with the
refugees and rammed their boat drowning 500 people.
This young woman was handed two stranger's babies,
and somehow survived and was rescued holding
the babies, wearing only a child's flotation device
herself.

She is now studying in Sweden where she wanted
 to be with her fiancĂ©, and she is being treated well.
 But she hates the label "refugee." She says no one would
voluntarily leave a peaceful homeland. No one would take
such desperate chances unless they absolutely had no other
choice.

Have an enjoying-your-own-life day.

Thursday, March 30, 2017

Drawing and thoughts on seeing

Cold day outside at the mall
Black marker on Fringe drawing paper
9 1/2 x 5 3/4 inches
Barbara Muir © 2017
Here's another little drawing of the man outside the bookstore
a couple of weekends ago.  What I like about this one is
that the man is in his world, and the woman walking by is
in hers, and they are oblivious to the other person's
existence.  

Super late, super tired.  Big shopping malls are a fascinating
subject for an artist, because everyone has an agenda, and
the rest of the world is backdrop.  Most of us don't see each
other, like the man and woman passing each other on a sidewalk
by the parking lot. (The square thing in front is a mailbox).

I painted today too, and think I've resolved something
that was bothering me.  But this is it for tonight.

Have an enjoying what you notice day.

Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Slow dancing with spring

Happy Morning in Port Philip
iPad drawing
8 x 10 inches
Barbara Muir © 2017
Thank goodness for my friends out there, and here
in Toronto, who keep me on track on positive
thinking.  It is the secret to life. Stay happy,
and whenever possible move on. If the negative
insists on being in your path, cross the street.

I am also indebted to Stephen Colbert and Jimmy
Fallon, whose humour frames the strange changes
the world is going through in an easier to take light.  

I did this iPad drawing the other day, and it was waiting
for me tonight when I came home from teaching my
evening class.  No time for painting today. I love the
pure, glorious colour that bounces out of my old iPad,
and begs me to upgrade to the latest iPad with the fancy
pencil, so I can have even more fun with this
drawing habit.  I do keep thinking of the amazing
show of Hockney's iPad drawings I saw in a gallery
in New York a couple of years ago.  Mind blowing.
Hockney is one of my art gods.  At the time there
was a Degas show on at the MoMA and it was
fascinating how both artists pieced together paper
to make larger images.

Have an all ready for spring day.

Tuesday, March 28, 2017

More from the hospital -- on a beautiful day

Thinking about the crossword puzzle
Black marker on Fringe drawing paper
9 1/2 x 5 3/4 inches
Barbara Muir © 2017
Strange to be spending time in a hospital with
relatives on a joyous, sunny spring day -- with
tulip leaves poking up in the garden.  But a blessing
in a way because in this vibrant city you get a
picture of how many people are sitting waiting in
hospitals for tests or surgeries worrying about
their lives.  Many, many people.  And in Canada
we are so lucky that all of these tests, treatments,
 and operations are free.
Worried Dad, Sick little girl
Black marker on Fringe drawing paper
9 1/2 x 5 3/4 inches
Barbara Muir © 2017
Waiting for Mom
Black marker on Fringe drawing paper
9 1/2 x 5 3/4 inches
Barbara Muir © 2017

I did a few drawings sitting in several waiting
rooms, and am grateful to my family who
are there for each other, to my friends for the
sweet card left in the door, and even to my
country for making this care available to
everyone.
In this together
Black marker on Fringe drawing paper
9 1/2 x 5 3/4 inches
Barbara Muir © 2017
Trying to read and text
Black marker on Fringe drawing paper
9 1/2 x 5 3/4 inches
Barbara Muir © 2017
Early morning -- the good nurse
Black marker on Fringe drawing paper
9 1/2 x 5 3/4 inches
Barbara Muir © 2017
Thank you to all of you who support the work I do. 

Thursday, March 23, 2017

Steffie Wallace told me to -- and short blog break


Happy fields by the sea
iPad drawing
8 x 10
Barbara Muir © 2017
My dear friend Steffie Wallace is a fantastic artist from
Australia, and she's also written a novel called The
August Months.  I met Steffie at the Florence Biennale,
and I just love her work -- very moody, misty, brilliant
landscapes -- all about light.

So when I posted an iPad drawing last night, and Steffie
suggested I do a series, I thought maybe I'll do at least
one more, and pop it up here for you tonight.

I am going to take a few days off the blog.  I've got
a bad cold I think I picked up from one of the
sweetest very young people I know.  And I need
to concentrate on painting and thinking for a short
break.  I may miss you too much to stop, but I do
need to prepare for a show in May!  More news about
that coming up.  Meanwhile be good to yourself.

Have a dreaming-of-glorious-adventures day.

Wednesday, March 22, 2017

Always on -- (really?) Or have I ever been tireder!


Clouds at play
iPad drawing
8 x 10
Barbara Muir © 2017
Tonight after teaching I have to admit I am super
tired.  Knock down, drag out, tired.  But as artists
who blog -- not okay.  Right?  We should be on.
And of course talking to you makes me feel
a million times better about the sapped energy,
the new cold threatening to become full fledged.

I get all happy and motivated and feel my energy
coming back and it's almost like I can feel you
out there sending me inspiration, and so much
kindness, and wonderful opportunities.

So.  To hell with tiredness.  Here's a little
something different -- a landscape from my
iPad, drawn with my finger.  My iPad is old,
and unreliable, and shuts down in a minute for no
reason, fully charged.  But wow, try drawing on
it -- in the ultra low tech way of dragging your
finger over the surface -- and the thing is fun.
Thanks for reviving me.

Have a having fun making your art day.
P.S.  I know it should be "more tired",
not "tireder".  Yes I do.

Tuesday, March 21, 2017

Winter nostalgia -- (just a little).


Winter at the beach
(work in progress)
Acrylic on cradled birch panel
8 x 8 inches
Barbara Muir © 2017
Today's painting is of the beach in winter,
 at Port Stanley on Lake Erie.  Sometimes there
is a miraculous day, when there is no snow, and
we just need to see that beach so badly, that we
leave Toronto, even though it's late in the day, and
it's quite a ride.  This view might be our reward.

If it is warm enough to walk on the beach all
bundled up, and the need for that view is intense
we might make the trip, have maybe half an hour
before darkness ends the view, and still feel entirely
rewarded, renewed, refreshed.

Have a getting to the beach day.

Monday, March 20, 2017

Happy International Day of Happiness!

I'd like that please!
Acrylic on watercolour paper
4 1/2 x 6 1/2 inches
Barbara Muir © 

I love the thought of an International Day of Happiness,
and have been holding onto that idea, and returning
to it all day.  Today has been a full day, on many fronts
-- both work and family worries.  Thinking about happiness
I went searching for a painting that I don't think if I've shown
to you yet, and here it is.

It's a painting of my son Sam when he was younger, and
appropriate for the first day of spring.  It was cold
today, but the sound of the birds singing filled the air --
a sound we've missed all winter.  Clearly in this painting
my son is sitting on our back porch,  in what looks
like spring -- holding a piece of fruit. And a lovely cardinal
has come to investigate.

We do have cardinals coming to our bird feeder and they
are a gorgeous sight.

Happy International Day of Happiness, and Happy Spring.
Let's keep the happy thoughts coming.  They are the best.

Have an enjoying-the-new-spring day.

Sunday, March 19, 2017

Sunday Party Day -- and Belated Pie for Pi Day

Stand Back for the Pie
Acrylic on canvas
24 x 24 inches
Barbara Muir © 
Today we had our lovely little family party to celebrate St. Patrick's
Day a couple of days late. We had brunch to suit both work
schedules and our youngest member's nap time.  Steven made
French toast, and we enjoyed party sandwiches from a local deli,
bagels, cream cheese, coffee, cherry pie and ice cream.

It was a sweet time, and I saw this painting that seemed to
capture that feeling yesterday at Yang's Flowers on Avenue Rd.
 It is still for sale if you'd like it, write me here.  But the point
is that it seemed the perfect painting to celebrate both spring,
a party feeling and the delicious bakery pie we served.

Have an enjoying family parties day. 

Saturday, March 18, 2017

In a state of wonder

The tide's in
(almost finished)
Acrylic on cradled birch panel
8 x 8 inches
Barbara Muir © 2017
It is a bit wintry today, though much warmer.  Quite a
wonderful day despite the grey skies, and for me in
addition to going to the market and seeing our friends
there, there was this.

I worked on this painting of clouds in Nova Scotia near
where we stay in Pugwash.  And I know that looking at
this scene I would be in a state of wonder, and have
to stop the car, get out and stare.  Which is what we artists are
here for -- to drink in what we see, interpret it in our
own way, and give it back to you.  So I hope you enjoy
it, and I also hope you get to travel to Nova Scotia in
the summer yourself, and delight in all that it has to
offer.  I miss it.

Have a travelling in your mind day.

Friday, March 17, 2017

Happy St. Patrick's Day -- It's a fine day

It's a fine day sweetheart
Acrylic on cradled birch panel
8 x 10 inches
Barbara Muir © 2017
Happy St. Patrick's Day.  The shamrock decorations are up,
and we put a touch of green colouring in the last of
the good wine we had with dinner.  The dog sported a bow,
and we sang some good old Irish tunes.  But the party
will happen when the family can get together.  It has been
a thing for us since we bought the boys green treats one year --
tradition.  Even though Steven is Dutch, and my Irish relatives
were really French from France.  Still I love the day.
Sally gets a St. Patrick's Day treat
for wearing her green bow, and trying very
hard to sing Danny boy!
Here's a little painting that is almost finished.  I love the clouds
that fly miles and miles wide across Nova Scotia -- like massive
sculptures of the most beautiful kind.

Have a loving-your-family's-traditions day.

Thursday, March 16, 2017

Tense, worried, crazy -- Relax

Better bring the laundry in Bob
Acrylic on cradled birch panel
8 x 10 inches
Barbara Muir © 2017
It was a bit of a day I'd say for getting nervous,
tense, worried.  I was thinking myself into dead
ends and corners on many fronts and then I
watched this little message from Oprah from a
few years ago -- and hey she hit the nail on
the head.  (Click on her name to watch it).
So I just started painting, and kept on working on
my larger work, and on some smaller pieces.

I got the message, and thought.  "You know what
girl -- if the painting needs more work -- it's a
painting and you can do it!"

Thank you to my wonderful friends, and major
wishes of good health and happiness to all
the friends who have boosted my art in the
last year, pumped me up, shown me the
lovely light that is always there to see.

Have a starting-to-relax day.

Wednesday, March 15, 2017

More from one of my best models

Thinking
Acrylic on canvas
24 x 36 inches
Barbara Muir ©
My brother and I share some similar interests.
We both went to OCAD, and we both write.  In
fact we've worked on many writing projects
together. But my brother -- a super artist, and
photographer himself is also good at sitting
for portraits.

So when my brother heard today, that I'd like a
photo of another portrait I did of him, because
I was teaching tonight, and was not quite ready
to take a break from blogging.  He searched out
this painting,  photographed it, and sent the images
to me.

This one really shows the influence of my art
training -- that push towards something a little
darker, more sinister.  A less forbidding person than
my brother would be hard to imagine, but here
using the primary colours I loved at the time, and
relying on an intense inherited Muir expression,
the actor in my brother pulled it off, and I captured
it.  I love this painting, for all that it evokes -- a
time, a place and the exuberance of painting a
very good and helpful model.  Thank you Andrew.

Have an enjoying the work you've done day.

Tuesday, March 14, 2017

Snow, Sleet, Snow -- and a Favourite

Shorelines Gatineau River
Acrylic on canvas
12 x 12 inches
Barbara Muir ©
We have been wonderfully spoiled by climate
change this winter, and also worried, because
until today it only snowed twice in the whole winter.
I had to look for my boots, because I've only needed
boots -- not shoes -- two times in an entire winter.
Yes Toronto is in Canada, and yes this is not normal
Not even a little bit.

But hey.  Today it snowed all day, and whether that
in any way makes up for a snow free winter for the
many crops that grow all around this city, and to
the south of us in the peach, and apple orchards
along the lake, I don't know.

I'm still working on my landscape, and I am still
thinking of slowing down on the blog soon.  But the
last time I said that some of my friends said that they
look forward to it every day!  Hi there, you make me
very happy reading my thoughts every day. So I'm posting
this painting of my brother -- the painting is a favourite
of mine.    My brother lives on the shore of the Gatineau
in Chelsea, Quebec and is lucky to look at a spectacular
landscape out of his living room windows every day!
But snow -- now in Chelsea they really
have had a snow packed winter.  And every roof had
about three feet of snow covering when we were there
 in February.

In every spare moment I'm reading a great book --
On Beauty by Zadie Smith. It feels like a long
and quite delightful conversation.

Have a enjoying your favourites day

Monday, March 13, 2017

Painting all day -- and drawing with Emily


Sketch of my Niece
Charcoal on Fringe drawing paper
9 1/2 x 5 3/4 inches
Barbara Muir © 2017
I was working today on a landscape that is coming
along in slow, slow steps.  It will be beautiful -- is
already arresting -- but it may take a few more days,
or even a week until it's cooked.  Does this happen
to you?

This afternoon I was drawing with my son's girlfriend,
Emily.  She loved the little portrait of my niece I
posted and then didn't post the other night, so I will
post it again now. My niece is exceptionally beautiful,
and I didn't think I quite captured her, but as Emily pointed
out a drawing is not just the subject.  I would like to do a
perfect drawing, but I need some tools I don't have to
finish the drawing.  And that will come.

 Man in jacket
Black marker on Fringe drawing paper
9 1/2 x 5 3/4 inches
Barbara Muir © 2017
Meanwhile I'm also showing you another drawing of
a man I saw out the window of a bookstore on
Saturday when it was below zero.  He intrigued me
with his coffee cup, and shopping bag, and phone.
Maybe he was waiting for someone, but I would
like to do another drawing of this, even perhaps a
little action series.  Those are my thoughts for today.
Random.  The impulse to draw is a bit random,
because we artists want to draw what we see. That
is -- everything.  And I know that's too much.

Have a capturing the random day.

Sunday, March 12, 2017

Time shift -- shaking it up


Cottage Flowers
Acrylic on canvas
24 x 24 inches
Barbara Muir © 2017
Today is the dreaded day our clocks move forward.
I say that because everyone's world rocks around
what time of day it is, and I had coffee late in the
day yesterday. That meant I was up too late.
And add to that another hour so it was even
later --just plain cruel.

On the bright side (and OMG it was a gorgeously
sunny day).  The time changes because we are moving
towards spring.  And that is a delicious idea.
So hurray for spring! Here is a painting I have looked
at for years and wanted to change.

The problem was that I didn't like the colour of the
shadows on the table, and the table itself.  Today
after a scary power outage around dinner time, (yes
just when we were cooking), I knew exactly what to
do.  Miraculous eh?  The lights came on in the house,
and in my brain at the same time.  Another reason
to be happy.

So I love it now, and I hope you like it too!

Have a saving-the -day-and-saving-the-art day!

Saturday, March 11, 2017

10 Reasons The Internet is Super for Creativity



Okay I admit that I've looked at Facebook today, checked my
blog, and read some email.  But I can't get behind the idea
that the Internet is harming creativity.  Really?  Let's check
this out.

1. Before the Internet, artists were restricted in large part
to being alone, and working alone.  If you were
painting in that ancient time, do you remember how
isolated you felt? 

2. The Internet through all the social media sites, through
blogs like mine,  connects artists to artists all over the 
world.  When you are working on a piece and post it,
people comment on how well you're doing.  
You never had support like that in the far back past.

3. Seeing work from all over the world, adds to, it does not
detract from our creativity.  New ideas and new ways
of working pop up every day on favourite artists' sites,
and many of them post how-to videos, photos of how
their studios are organized.  I have learned so much!
I admit that if you have no sense of time you could
perhaps lose days just looking at what people do.
But even that would be a productive use of an artist's
time.

4. Being public as an artist puts pressure on us to
produce.  Less creative than before the Internet?
I hardly think so.  Nothing is more of a push to
get going with new work, finish old work, do the
work period, than knowing people are waiting to
see what you are doing.  We all can have an
audience now if we want it.  And I don't get the
idea of creating art in a vacuum and not sharing it
with the world.  Sharing it to me seems to be one
of the reasons for creating work.

5. Speaking of being noticed -- how would I have
been found by Howard Wolinsky, the Chicago
Journalist (and fantastic photographer)
if I didn't have a web presence (a blog)?  And
how would his YouTube interviews with me 
get picked up by the Oprah Winfrey show if
I didn't have a blog?  Marvellous and miraculous
opportunities open up for artists because of the 
Internet.  Oh and the reason I was noticed --
I was working on a then new form of Internet
communication -- Skype. 

6. And perhaps even more exciting are the
invitations to take part in International shows that
might never have come my way, if my work 
wasn't out there, visible, online.  How 
wonderful to get the chance to show in New York 
City, the Louvre, in Paris, or The Florence Biennale, 
in Italy and meet artists whose work you admire face 
to face. How lovely to visit cities you have always
wanted to see, and to make new friends there. 

7.  Let's not forget one of the reasons for producing
art if you are a professional artist -- sales.  We work
in one of the few professions in the world which
is supposed to be above discussions of money.
It's true.  I can't tell you how many artists have told
me that either they don't sell their work, or they
don't care about sales.  Either those artists are
independently wealthy (and I have met many
such artists) or they've bought (pardon my wording)
the myth that artists should be above concerns
about cash.  Not true.  The Internet can bring
artists sales from anywhere and anyone.  And it does.

8. Having an Internet presence gives artists a quick
and easy record of what they've done, and if they
write a blog, like I do, they've also got fast access
to what they were thinking creating a certain piece
of work, what their worries were, what methods
they used, and valuable insight into what their 
ideas and goals were in the past,  and how they've
changed and grown.

9.  Proof of creativity is an incredible advantage of 
the Internet.  Since I started this little blog in 2008
I've written 1840 blogs.  Say I get down (and everybody
including artists has their down days) -- that number
alone should help me see that I haven't been 
completely idle, I've been creative.  And that's just the blog,
and what about other social media.  Plus I am
getting close to 300,000 hits (or people looking at
and reading my blog.)  That is quite a lot more
attention than I would have had working alone in
my little studio, and it is encouraging.  Oddly enough
we artists are doing a peculiar thing -- making something
out of nothing.  Many of us are as insecure as all get
out about it.  The proof that people notice is a great
boon to our spirits, our productivity, and I believe
our mental health.,

10.  It just gets better.  There is so much I haven't
mentioned -- all the supportive people we can meet
who conduct seminars we can access online, both paid and
unpaid to learn about the technical, financial, 
theoretical -- every aspect of art and creativity.  TED
Talks, Alyson Stanfield, please add to this list in the
comments, I have to go and paint soon.  Plus there is
a code of honour -- certainly in the art blog world.
We only comment on work we like.  So all of our
comments are positive.  And in my experience as a 
teacher -- believe me that has a magical effect.
It is not bad for creativity for people to earn 
praise -- quite the opposite.  Think about it.
Which friend makes you want to continue with
(anything), the one who criticizes every single 
thing you do, or the one who notices what you're
doing well.  I pick the latter, and I know you would
too.  

That's it for today folks.  Hurray for the Internet
and the boost to creativity everywhere.

(This blog post is a work in process.  Even that
is possible.  Set your clocks back and I'll add to
this tomorrow).

Have an enjoying the Internet day.

Friday, March 10, 2017

Something you may not know


Flowers for my father
pencil crayon on paper
21 1/2 x 26 inches
Barbara Muir ©
Although it isn't my objective now as a painter
I was trained at the Ontario College of Art
and Design in Toronto as a classical artist.
How we drew, how we painted -- in most
classes was in the shadow of Michelangelo,
Rembrandt, Vermeer, you name it.  We barely
reached the influence of the Impressionists.
Oh we did, but I only stayed for two and half
years, and then left to study art at another
university, and ended up getting an English
Literature degree.

I did this drawing when I was doing mainly
flower painting, and the style definitely reflects
my training. Now I like high key colour, and
lots of abstraction.  This drawing was a tribute to
my father's passion for flowers, which he passed on
to me.
Flowers for my father
pencil crayon on paper
(almost full view)
21 1/2 x 26 inches
Barbara Muir ©
The piece has been staring at me for weeks,wondering when
I would show it to you.  Photographing it was a bit of
a challenge because it's framed, and everything reflects
off the glass. So I've done a close up, and an almost full image of
the drawing.  The flowers are in a jug, sitting on a
table cloth my parents purchased in Madeira, Portugal --
a place my mother and father loved, and visited often for holidays.

It's the end of the week, and time to enjoy the weekend.
I hope these flowers urge you to go and get some of
your own.

Have an enjoying-your-older-work day.

Thursday, March 9, 2017

Summoning summer in my mind

Weather's coming in darling
Acryllic on canvas
8 x 8 inches
Barbara Muir © 2017
Apparently the brain is susceptible to word clues, so that
if I read, "She could feel the sun's heat flooding the room,
and hear the waves rolling in on the beach," I will
experience those sensations in my brain.

Good.  Because we are about to get the coldest weather
we've had all winter, which cruelly will last all through
March break!  We've had super strong winds, and now
freezing cold.  The cashiers in the supermarket say,
"well it's been so nice all winter, I guess we can't
complain."

No.  But we can imagine something else.  Here's
a little painting of summer, inspired in part
by an artist whose work I love -- Nancy Boynton
Hartley.

Have a thinking-summer-words day.

Wednesday, March 8, 2017

Tulips for International Women's Day

Cat in the window
Coloured pencil and black marker
 on Fringe drawing paper
9 1/2 x 5 3/4 inches
Barbara Muir © 2017
I feel lucky that whatever positive genes my parents
gave me worked today.  Three cheers for women
around the world!  I hope your day was good.  And
thank you to my women friends who helped me
see the bright side of everything today.  Also thank
you to my students who sent men to the board to
do the writing work, because it should be their
day off.  Funny.

This little drawing of tulips is for you.  I see one or
two things I might change, but I am happy with it so far.
And thank you to the men in my life, who helped me,
made dinner for me, and were wonderful and funny
today.  I am a super lucky woman, and person, and
a feminist if you were wondering.

Have an appreciating-your-friends day.

Tuesday, March 7, 2017

National Cereal Day -- here's my favourite breakfast!

Served to perfection
Acrylic on canvas
10 x 10 inches
Barbara Muir © 2013
I was driving home from buying some groceries
when I heard that today was National Cereal Day.  Great
I thought, because I knew I wouldn't have time today
to do any new work, but I thought this painting
would be perfect.

My favourite breakfast (and I'm not sure it's cereal)
is oatmeal that I make in a pot.  I love the way
hotels serve oatmeal with berries.  When you stay in
a hotel that understand the beauty of a room service
breakfast, it's hard to imagine anything more
romantic.

For Valentine's Day, belated because of health
issues in my family, I had breakfast overlooking
the Byward Market in Ottawa.  The waiter
set up the table.  There were real silver utensils,
and beautifully pressed cloth napkins (white),
with a white tablecloth.  Large water glasses
filled with ice, and of course a hearty full
classic breakfast for my husband.
The Byward Market Ottawa
Barbara Muir © 2017
The Market was iced in snow about two feet
thick, and even that looked romantic.

Have an enjoying-National-Cereal-Day day.

Monday, March 6, 2017

The significance of portraits


Woman with her cats
Acrylic on canvas with gold leaf
36 x 24 inches
Barbara Muir © 
I am a portrait painter for sure.  I also paint
still life, and landscape and scenes with people,
but I started with portraits, and they are still a
major love of mine.

Today a collector called me to tell me that one
of the cats in the portrait I did of her with
her pets had died.  She said it made her
feel better seeing his portrait on the wall.  This
touched me profoundly.

I remember working on the painting so well -- the
woman was in the most beautiful blouse, and her
cats were arranged behind her shoulders and on
on her lap.  I took lots of photos with the cats
in the pose, then the subject came and posed for
me in my studio, and we used pillows to pose
instead of the cats.

The cats were big fluffy beauties, and I really wanted
to get them right.  The cat behind her shoulder died
a couple of weeks ago I'm sorry to say.  My photo
of the painting, taken when I had barely begun blogging,
is not so great, but I am proud of the work nonetheless,
and glad that it's given my client something to comfort her
at this sad time.

Have a loving-the-portraits-you-buy day.

Sunday, March 5, 2017

To the Gallery -- after searching for Sunday markets -- super!

Woman drinking tea
Black marker on Fringe drawing paper
9 1/2 x 5 3/4 inches
Barbara Muir © 2017

Today we'd planned to go market shopping.  But when we showed
up at the market  the advertised market event was nowhere
to be found.

It was a freezing cold, but beautiful sunny day, so we headed out
for lunch and then a brief tour of the Art Gallery of Ontario.
That was a delightful way to spend the afternoon.  I got to see the
Tom Thomsons and look at them in a brand new way.  I knew that
he stylized his paintings, but I saw techniques I've never noticed
before and I have stared at his work dozens of times.

Top the day off with a captivating sunset, and a huge hawk circling
the hydro towers as we drove home, and it was a perfect
day.

Have a loving-the-new-things-life-presents day.
The woman in this drawing is enjoying the delicious tea
they serve at the gallery.

Saturday, March 4, 2017

Hooked on you -- and the man again

A man
Line drawing -- black marker on bond paper
8 1/2 x 11 inches
Barbara Muir © 
Whoeee -- it is the coldest it's been all winter here and
everyone is in shock.  That feeling goes along with the
strange feeling of having to go out and buy sunscreen
because it was eye-blindingly sunny today. We all
feel a bit like we've been smothering under a grey
blanket for all of January and February (but it was
warmer under there) and all of a sudden -- brilliant
light!  We love it, but we're unprepared.

So it has been the kind of day a Saturday should be --
super busy with market shopping, and then having
dinner with friends.  I am still working on larger
paintings, but I wanted to blog all the same.  

Plus I decided tonight that I have not said enough about
how much I appreciate what Stephen Colbert has
continued to do opening his show, to lighten my
mood on the depressing state of the world -- 
especially the one he has to wake up to and present
as comedy  (a tragi-comedy of errors) every week 
night.  

I like the loose quality of this sketch from the year 
I was on the Oprah Winfrey show Skype sketching her.  
And I know my underlying reason for drawing Colbert 
so many times, aside from the fact that I could freeze frame 
his show on my iMac and draw gestures -- was that I wanted
to be invited to be on his program too  -- The Stephen Colbert
show.  Now I enjoy watching him on The Late Show,
and am more than content to simply enjoy his superb
humour.

Have an enjoying-humour-in-your-life day. 

Friday, March 3, 2017

Taking a break and dreaming of Florence


Dreaming of Florence
Charcoal on bond paper
18 x 24 inches
Barbara Muir © 2009

Our winter which has been kind and reasonable
took a plunge into the super cold weather we
normally expect in January and February, but
have been sweetly seduced out of expecting
this year.

We were having some work done on our
kitchen today, the ceiling painted, which is a good
excuse to edit things on the high shelves, and
a good excuse to escape into thoughts of where
it would be nice to be.  I do love Florence,
and found this drawing I did of one of my
favourite models after returning from the
Florence Biennale in 2009.

Such sights we saw.  Like an opera singer
standing all alone in the middle of a piazza
at night singing with no one around.  She was
in a beautiful dress, and we heard her when
we were around the corner and down a narrow
side street.  She was magnificent.

Have a dreaming and planning day.

Thursday, March 2, 2017

David's Birthday -- and salad

Silver salad servers at work
Black marker and watercolour
on Fabriano watercolour paper
4 x 5 1/4 inches
Barbara Muir © 2017
It's our friend David Cohen's birthday, and he probably
wishes that I didn't remember the occasion even with
concussion brain, and didn't sing Happy Birthday to him
over the phone. (I'm no singer!) But he is a wonderful person,
super writer, great photographer, and married to my dear
friend Marcia Labelle (an amazing artist, and sculptor.)
I am not that good at remembering dates of birthdays, but
David's sticks in my mind. So Happy Birthday David.

I love the salad servers in this picture which I inherited
from my mother, and we use them every night to serve
salad.  Steven makes a delicious salad, and cuts carrots
like a professional chef.  On my night to make supper
(we alternate nights) I serve his leftover salad, and
anything else he cooked that I can possibly reheat.
(Not a cook sorry).  I hope David had some salad
with his birthday dinner -- along with cake of course --
maybe not at the same time.  Cake deserves ice cream.

So I did a little drawing of a typical salad at our house
 -- this one in a glass bowl, and now it's a watercolour.

Have a Happy Birthday Party -- with salad!

Wednesday, March 1, 2017

On the Highway -- Spring is coming Mr. Snow

Best summer drive
Acrylic on canvas
12 x 12 inches
Barbara Muir © 2017
Happy March 1 -- wow that went by quickly.  March doesn't
know whether to come in like a lamb or a lion, and was
way too warm today 16 degrees Celsius, or 60 Fahrenheit.
But now there are chilly winds, and apparently we may
see snow (it has been an almost snow free winter in
Toronto.)

I am planning to hit the painting highway in the coming
month, and get working on some larger pieces, so I
may not be able to join you every day.  I know I have
loved the Month of Love, and don't worry I love the rest
of the year too.  The painting today is a highway view --
lovely trees against a bright field, the kind of sight that
always lifts my spirits.

Have a joining-me-on-the-painting-highway day.