A long time ago, when I was still naive about many aspects
of advertising, I walked down a hall at a new job and saw a giant pile of ice
cream. Scoops of every flavor of the
rainbow looked especially luscious under the photographer's studio lights. The owner of the business witnessed my
Pavlovian reaction and laughed at me in his wicked way. The "ice cream" was mashed
potatoes stiffened with sawdust and glue with lacquer on top.
Once in on the joke, I considered specializing in setting up
food shoots. I devoted a good 15-20
minutes of watching a pretty woman adjusting acrylic blobs of fake condensation
on the bowl and decided I'd rather scrape up road kill than work in food
staging.
Moments like this have been popping into my mind because
I've been backing up old files, including stuff from past jobs. Do you know that flash drives have to be
plugged in once in a while to keep them valid?
Or that DVDs eventually fail?
Plus, store them flat or the data can leak out. I don't want to lose things because I can
often rework something instead of starting from scratch. I've also been taking time to go clean up
some files so they take less memory.
In the process, I found old art that didn't work out but has
some potential. This is a rework of one
of those pieces. I've always had an
interest in this style of patterning, but never felt satisfied with my
efforts. I fussed it and am feeling
much better about my approach to the style.
I'm contemplating making it a linoleum print -- or maybe fuss it some
more before committing to cutting print.
I mentioned the "ice cream" experience to a
photographer friend once, and he waxed nostalgic about other "food"
concoctions. I expanded my road kill
fantasies to include listening to food photography methods. All the same, the initial experience was
cool and I like working with photographers.
I just can't bear the tedium of their business -- which of course can't
be confused with the delightful hours I've spent on art. You've just got to find your medium.
Sometimes I'm baffled by people who don't find their
calling. They should do different
things until they find something they like.
I suppose trying new things means you'll be a rank amateur at all of
those things until you've learned some skills in one of them. You've got to be willing to suck at
something, and I happily admit I'm lousy at a lot of things. There's lots of things I can still learn,
and learning is fun.
Dad used to say "You can do whatever you set your mind
to", which I viewed as an open horizon of possibilities. Sis viewed it as a punishment if she didn't
achieve success. Dad followed up with
"If at first you don't succeed, try, try again!" Sis looked dangerous about then, but Dad was
right.
Play, experiment, try, and try again. Don't let short-term defeats limit you. We savor the
successes we fight to achieve. Looking
back on my early pattern work, well, some of it wasn't good, but I enjoyed
doing it in a way making sawdust potatoes pleased my friend. I got better at patterns and still enjoy them enough to play
around with previous rejects. I hope
everyone finds their scoop of "ice cream".
That's such a cool pattern Linda and you certainly have found your scoop of ice cream. Your work is wonderful. I cannot agree more re perseverance if there is something you have realistically set your heart on. I got my huge scoop of ice cream recently and it tastes great ;-) I shall savour the moment and I hope it lasts longer than a real tub lasts in our house!xx
ReplyDeleteThanks Jane, I thoroughly enjoyed doing this one. All this talk of ice cream is making me really wish I had some to eat :)
DeleteI've been thinking very much along these lines as I'm pondering my next steps. Yes, I am willing to suck at many things and admit it!
ReplyDeleteThis is a beautiful pattern. I love the colors as well as the design.
I remember being at a restaurant where we could choose a selection a cart of fancy deserts wheeled up to the table. They were all made out of wax, but they sure looked good!
I remember the plastic food too. I wonder why they don't do that anymore? Thanks for the good thoughts and hoping both of us find many more thing to suck at (and succeed with)!
DeleteWow! That pattern would be gorgeous as a linoleum cut.
ReplyDeleteYou are so right. Nothing better than to keep playing - and playing different games. We can't be good in everything, but we can have a lot fun on the way to finding out what is our calling.
ReplyDelete