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Here's wishing all of you out there, family, friends and strangers, Peace, Joy and Love on this Easter Sunday!

One of my most vivid memories of living in Paris from the ages of 10-12, was my father coming home from work in downtown Paris with bunches of tulips purchased from the flower market for my mother. Thus, for me, tulips have come to symbolize the deep love that my parents shared throughout their marriage, even during those difficult years for Paris, Europe and the world, of 1955 to 1958...

Imagine this, my mother Alice, lived her entire adult life in Florence, SC until she met my father Norman Ballard during WWII. They met when he was stationed in Florence in 1944 where I came along a year later.  After a couple of moves stateside, I wonder how she was able manage with 2 children and life in the neighborhood of Saint Cloud on the outskirts of Paris.  The Hungarian Revolt, the shut down of the Suez canal during the winter (this meant no heat one winter because there was no coal), the flooding of the Marne River where we lived, along with the unrest and bombings in the city of Paris due to the difficult relations between the French and the Algerians, were all events that happened during the years we lived in and loved Paris... Way to go MOM, is all I can say!  

One of my tulips that has returned for a second year.  Did I mention that tulips always remind me of Easter.

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A must see exhibition currently showing at the new and thriving GCCA...

I assure you that this invitational exhibition along with a show of works by Palmetto Luna Arts, curated by Diana Farfan featuring Latino Arts & Culture will be well worth your time to visit them.

Some favorite images!  Be sure and see these and many more excellent works by our regional artists!  

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Clay Vessels for all Seasons, workshop offered at the Bascom, Highlands, NC, June 6-10, 2016

Click below to register for the "Clay Vessels for all Seasons" on the Bascom website.

4 VESSELS FOR 4 SEASONS -  2014  

CLAY VESSELS FOR ALL SEASONS - This workshop was so popular, I am teaching a variation on this workshop but adding a some extras for those that want to take it again.

On Friday we all collected natural materials and created various arrangements that ranged from the formal to the wabi sabi. Some of my favorites were Corbin Tucker's moss gardens and containers for orchids.

  • Mon, Jun 6, 2016 10:00 - 4:00pm  Fri, Jun 10, 2016 10:00 until 5:00pm
  • The Bascom Center for the Arts 

http://www.thebascom.org/

Workshop description - If you love clay and you love nature, this is the class for you!  We will be hand-building clay vessels for all that great "natural stuff" that many of us love to collect.  The Bascom is surrounded by the natural beauty of the mountain environment of Highlands, NC.  Paths along a nearby stream will be a great resource for collecting natural forms or texture for our clay forms... A trip to the local Botanical Gardens will be another fabulous source of inspiration.  Containers will be hand-built for Ikebana style arranging or less formal arranging, for mini moss gardens or for dry  arrangements of branches, grasses and pods.  Paricipants may choose high or low fire methods of working.  One day will be devoted to making Terra sigillata that can be used on low or high fire clay.  Between the atmosphere of the barn studio and the natural beauty of the Highlands, especially in June, most certainly it will spur our creativity to a new high!  I can hardly wait! 

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I love this quote I just discovered....

"Artists are people driven by the tension between the desire to communicate and the desire to hide."  D. W. Winnicott

On the subject of hiding... I took this sun face down outside my studio door recently to take to school.  I wanted to use it as an example for the students since they are starting this project in clay.  After removing it, I was startled to discover something on the wall that had been hidden by the sun face!

There attached to the cedar siding was this precious, tiny brown bat!!!!  You can see his little ears at the bottom and his folded wings along side his inverted, furry, little body.  I was so surprised and excited to see this tiny fellow up close, that I had to show him (or her) to my husband Roger. Then, I carefully replaced the protective sun face in a way that would not disturb this tiny sleeper.... I still sigh when I think about it.  It seemed like such gift and a privilege to have such a lovely encounter.

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