rock-flipping

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Today, thinking about finding some rocks to flip for the International Rock-Flipping Day, we thought the beach might offer up some interesting possibilities. So we checked the tide tables – low tide at 4:00 pm. We headed out before that for a walk to Cates Park or Whey-Ah-Whichen and its saltwater beach, sitting on Burrard Inlet. It showered on and off all day, and we got caught in one but our umbrella helped keep the camera dry.

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This rock revealed one tiny crab and two long translucent worms, both quickly going into hiding, Can you see the worms?

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We startled many tiny crabs under a second rock, but they all moved too fast to catch a good photo, plus I’m not very knowledgeable about the names of the sea life, sorry.

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This was our best photo catch, the star of the day, sitting still ON rocks rather than under.

Check out Dave’s photos and links to other participants who had better luck than we did today. Thanks for the fun idea, Dave!

Oh, now there’s even more! Keep checking from time to time as the list keeps growing, and truly international it is. There are more at Flickr as well. I’m enjoying checking out new blogs to add to my already-too-long-list. And I’ve succumbed to the temptation of adding the handsome IRFD button (designed by Jason Robertshaw of cephalopodcast).
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August 12th stardust

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Like Mouse in France, I wanted to wish on a star, or actually on the Perseids, last night but it was raining.

I have more than one good wish and remembrance on this auspicious day:

– Happy anniversary to our daughter E and son-in-law J
– Remembering both their late grandfathers’ birthdays that amazingly fell on the same day (though not same year, I think)
– Happy Birthday to nephew N, living and working in faraway South Korea
– Remembering the serendipity of my father’s name and birthday month

Feeling delight in these many far away connections of family and blogger friends far away, all under the magic of celestial showers on this August day
Image: Astronomy Picture of the Day

UPDATE August 13th: I was awake for about an hour early this morning. Just before retiring again, at 3:00 am, I remembered the meteor showers. The sky was clear so I bundled myself up and went outside. During the five minutes or so, I saw one quick flashing tail. Beautiful stars all over. Made my wishes. it was very cool and damp, and I was getting a sore neck so I went back to bed.

about Photoworks

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Two months ago I wrote about my desire to organize my best photos into their own corner or archive on this blog. I’ve been thinking a lot about:

– what do I consider my best or most interesting photos
– recognizing their importance as art works in their own right
– how to organize the new photo archives
– using the blog as archives of my art AND photos
– knowing the benefit is more for me than for readers
– how some photos were used in my art works in the past
– knowing that some may be used in future prints
– and some may be printed as art photos
– taking time to go backwards over past posts to select the best
– pausing to read some of them, like looking into a diary, reviving memories

So, I finally bit the bullet and did it this weekend! Erika, my new tech assistant (thank you!) set up Photoworks up in the left bar, with subcategories below. Sifting through three-and-a-half years of posts (over 900) one by one, I tried making selections with a critical eye. It was interesting for me to note that in the first year I did not post many photos (except of my art work), and when I did they were small and conservative. In time, I began to take more interesting photos (the SLR digital camera helped) with the blog and sometimes possible future artworks in mind. I also began playing with the scanner more. Now that there’s a place to park them, I look forward to putting up many more photos, old and new. Feel free to have a browse through Photoworks and let me know what you think.

my favourite sculpture

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First I saw Ossip Zadkine’s De Poeet, then Tuumailua’s challenge to bloggers to post their favourite sculptures.

So here’s my choice of current favourite, especially one located in Vancouver: Magdalena Abakanowicz’ Vancouver Ancestors, posted a year ago. I’m wondering if it’s still there, if the city purchased it after the Biennial. The website mentions the auction but not the final results. I really hope it’s still there…

What is your favourite sculpture?

catching up

This blog has taken a back seat for a few days while I’ve been enjoying a visit from our eldest daughter. She lives with her partner some five hours by car northeast of Vancouver in a tiny community, half an hour east of a small city. So, shopping in the big city is important for her. I’m not much of a shopper anymore but I did go with her to Ikea. She’s still in the home making and decorating stage of life, while we need very little. Still, I oohed and aahed over many lovely things with her.

I bought something we did need though – several large glass storage jars with those rubber seals on the lids. We had a major moth infestation in our grains containers last year that I wished to avoid a repeat of this summer. I’ve also been concerned about chemicals leaching out of our present storage containers, the tin canisters from the beginning of our married life plus various plastic ones. So these seem to be an excellent alternative.

Well, as soon as daughter left, a chain reaction began in the kitchen, as you may imagine. Because the jars were too tall for the drawer where the old containers had resided, rearranging became necessary. Wash the shelves and the new jars, let dry. Transfer the grains and sugar. Arrange the jars on the shelf. Store the bowls, sieves and other kitchen paraphernalia in the drawer. Wash the old containers and recycle. Clean the kitchen. Now I must bake something!

Oh, I know this is boring and has nothing to do with art, but some artists still have kitchens, hmm? And I did capture an image…

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But wait, I must tell you about what’s on at qarrtsiluni, which always features wonderful writing by many master word crafters. Today’s entry Facing Impermanence by Rachel Barenblat is a must-read, truly beautiful and very moving. I’d read it before on her blog and am happy to reread it today. Rachel also wrote a wonderful post about qarrtsiluni’s current theme on her own blog, which saves me the trouble.

While I struggle with words, I love image making, so I’m very pleased that the editors chose to publish my old post, scanning.

interview, revisited

Two years ago on May 11, 2005 I wrote:

Melanie McBride of chandrasutra felt that Big Media has been misrepresenting bloggers and decided that it was time we spoke for ourselves and let them (and everybody else know) who we actually are, who we link to and why we blog. She decided to do an interview series by bloggers about bloggers to publish on chandrasutra. She sent out questions to a selection of bloggers she read, from well known to lesser known bloggers, men and women from different walks of life. Now I’m excited that Melanie has posted her interview of me. I feel very thrilled and honoured to be included with such a distinguished group of bloggers! Many thanks, Mel!

Melanie took an extended blog vacation last year though chandrasutra remained online. On 23rd November, 2006 (it was still up in my RSS reader), she wrote this hopeful note: “Boy do I miss blogging. Every day there’s stuff to write about. But it’s a matter of having the time, even a few minutes, to say something moderately worthwhile or insightful. I hope to resume posting now that I am done with the project that has taken all my time over the past month.” Later I was saddened to find that her site had gone offline. (I miss you Mel, where are you?)

Thankfully I had made a screenshot of Mel’s page of the interview of me and saved it as a PDF. I like seeing it in the original context with the images and comments included. Below is a transcript of the interview, with some minor editing of small errors, likely my own, and making some of the links active. I found it interesting to read it again and see what has changed (not much). So this is all for the sake of updating and preserving the archives (and my vanity), but I hope newer readers will enjoy this.

The blogger’s blogger: an interview with Marja-Leena Rathje

Finnish-Canadian artist Marja-Leena Rathje is a blogger’s blogger who uses her blog as an online showcase for her exquisite prints, a past/present blend of the organic and archeological, with personal reflections about culture and artistic process. Rathje also shares a variety of research subjects that inform her work including anthropology,
archaelogy and Finnish history. In her own words:

“I was born in Finland, and emigrated to Canada as a child. I’ve been an artist all my life, with a passion for printmaking for over 20 years. I started using the computer in 1998 as one tool in my artmaking. My Finnish roots became of greater interest in recent years with so much new material appearing on the internet – history, ethnology, archaeology, ancient rock art, far north cultures around the globe.”

MM: Why do you blog?
ML: When my friends and I were preparing for our exhibition in Finland in 2002, another friend made a website, Traces, to accompany it. Afterwards I asked if he could develop a full artist’s site for me. Busy with his growing career, he eventually suggested I do a blog, which would bring a great deal more traffic to my site than a regular website. My reaction was “what’s a blog?” and “what am I going to write about?” He then set me up with one, teaching me the basics and left me to practice it for a while. I searched for and studied other blogs that interested me – chandrasutra was one of them. After three months I felt ready, and February 2004 it was launched, a bit timidly at first but quickly becoming a passion. The blog is a place to put up my work, to write about printmaking, other artists and exhibitions, and about the many things that interest and influence me and make me the person, and therefore, the artist that I am. It is a place to keep all the fascinating information that I have gathered over the years and still keep finding. Writing has helped me focus my thoughts, though finding the right words, being more articulate, continues to be challenge. It is another creative project, a form of self-publishing, with a unique world-wide audience, often silent, but with a few voices responding and making it all so very worthwhile and satisfying.

MM: Where do you find your inspiration?
ML: From life past and present, my work, from other bloggers, from my research. Sometimes I seem to go off on a tangent, off the topic of art, when inspired by some lighthearted stuff, like Christmas or May Day, but I realize that it’s really another part of this life that interests me, that I want to know more about and makes me the person and artist that I am. Recording it and sharing it all on a blog is an exciting process for me, far more in-depth than a few scribbles in my sketchbook.

MM: What blogs do you read and why do you like those blogs?
ML: I read a variety of blogs and the most read ones are on my blogroll. Some have become dear friends that one likes to visit every day, and I’ll mention just a few here. Among artist’s blogs, Anna Conti’s Working Artist’s Journal is my favourite. I also really enjoy the linguistic challenge (my Finnish is a little rusty) of reading the well-known Finnish printmaker Kirsi Neuvonen’s excellent blog Kuparipelto (Copperfield) that just started in February this year. (She has a separate website for her work that is also in English.) I continue to be surprised there are not more artist’s blogs though more are slowly appearing.

Naturally there are numerous wonderful writer’s blogs, two favourites are Beth’s The Cassandra Pages for her articulate and wise writing about many human issues, multiculturalism, daily life and because she is a lover of art and Anna Scott’s
Self-Winding for her wit and humour about English country life and her love of art and literature. Both have been very appreciative of my art work and have become friends.

Of course there are many more, like yours, and Ronni Bennett’s Time Goes By, and the photography & politics blog of Gordon Coale.

MM: Many Big Media journalists have attempted to discredit bloggers by saying we’re “diarists” and questioning our “credibility” etc. What do you say to that?
ML: I think some of the Big Media journalists, constrained by their owners’ right wing agendas, may feel threatened by the free speech of bloggers, especially in the area of politics and world affairs. These bloggers are very important in keeping news open and available, whether it’s the girl in Iraq or independent journalists who write blogs (many are quoted in Gordon Coale’s blog). There’s a growing loss of readership from hard copy to online. A sign of change are The Guardian and Tyee here on the Canadian westcoast that have embraced blogging with news.

MM: Beyond blogging vs. journalism. Bloggers need to get rid of Big Media frames
and frame blogs in our own terms. To that end, what are the frames we can use to define blogging/participatory media according to our own terms?

ML: As a non-techie, I don’t understand this question, even after a lot of thought. Basically, I think bloggers can do and are doing as they wish, the heck with what Big Media says. Blogs are only one of many new media emerging and changing our world.

MM: What are your “desert island” 3 favourite/most important posts of all time?
ML: Blogs are daily changing, transitory, and of such variety – how can I just pick a page here or there to take with me? However I can see a personal use in taking my portfolio of printworks. It has become a great resource for me when I want to look up some of my work for information or to refresh my memory or show someone quickly. I sometimes reuse older images in new works, in new ways, so I’m always looking out for some new connections. Going online is sure a lot faster than getting out the slide projector or pulling prints out of storage, and you can’t take them with you to a desert island. But does that desert island have wireless internet? Oh, and I don’t have a portable!

UPDATE JULY 2, 2007. I found Chandrasutra again, it seems I missed one letter in the URL! This interview minus photos is up again, as well as the others in the series.

UPDATE January 15, 2010. I’m sorry to see that Chandrasutra’s site is now private, requiring a password.

thinking blogs

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Wow, this blog has been named a “thinking blog” by Peter – poet, writer, husband, father and spiritual guide extraordinaire of Another Country! I’m thrilled and honoured to be included in such good company, and especially pleased that Peter knows how to say my name right! (He’s got help from his Finnish wife.)

So what’s this “thinking blogger award”? Following links, I found it’s a meme with a difference, to tag “Blogs That Make Me Think”.

With much difficulty choosing only five from numerous worthy ones from my links list, of which many have already been tagged with this award, here’s my list:

1. Beth of Cassandra Pages always presents beautiful, deeply thoughtful writing on culture, life and spirit, and is the author of recently published Going to Heaven.

2. Dave of Via Negativa is a quirky, humorous, and intelligent mostly nature-based writer, poet and photographer.

3. Natalie of Blaugustine is an inspiring and lively artist, fabulous illustrator and writer of graphic novels, most recently The God Interviews.

4. Hanhensulka of Dionysoksen Kevät is a Finn living in Brussels who writes with humour about culture and sometimes about Finno-Ugric studies (my favourite!) in Finnish.

5. Kris of about Archaeology provides a fantastic resource on one of my favourite subjects.

Participating is totally voluntary as I know some bloggers do not ‘do’ memes! If you choose to join in, write a post with links to 5 blogs that make you think.

(UPDATE: Apologies for any confusion if you visited earlier and now find that I’ve edited this post, deciding to take Dave’s advice, per the comments below!)

UPDATE, May 2nd, a bit late: A big thank you to Lori Witzel, an artist, photographer and writer with a keen eye who blogs at chatoyance for also nominating me! I’m doubly blessed by this circle of bloggers.

connections

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I have often mentioned that finding connections and being inspired by them is very much a part of the way I think and find ideas for my art work. One of my print series is even called Nexus, which mean connections. Blogging for me is about connections too, about inspirations given and received in this wonderful moving web that covers the world.

These thoughts have re-emerged to the front right now as I’ve been honoured and very awed by several blog-friends who’ve found connections and inspirations from a couple of my recent posts.

Dave wrote a fabulous poem.

Mouse in France wrote some great prose, both inspired by my post about hands in cave art.

Olga wrote both prose and a great poem about her thoughts on connections, inspired in part by an art piece of mine.

Venus de Willendorf was the subject of one interesting blogpost by Finnish blogger “hanhensulka”, living in Brussels, and he responded to my comment with a post linking to my Venus works, and the hands post as well!

Thank you, friends, for this wonderful web of inspiring connections!

On the home front, we have been having a week of mostly sunny weather and spring is definitely here at last. I’ve been busy preparing for friends arriving this afternoon for a short stay this weekend (connections of another kind!). Dessert just came out of the oven, husband is out picking up a fresh salmon for the barbeque, and I’m having a short break catching up a little with blog reading and writing. Have a great weekend, everyone!
———-
Addendum: April 2nd. Though I don’t take horoscopes seriously, I could not resist a chuckle over today’s very weird one for this Aquarius, in our local newspaper:

“You’re making a connection, a link between your small mind and your higher mind. You may feel like an alien in a bubble, but you’re no stranger to being strange. Stay in touch with your earthly relations.”

broken blog

On Thursday evening (March 1st) this blog suddenly appeared very odd in design and showed only some of my very earliest posts from 2004 on the main page. The links (underlined as of yore!) went to wrong pages using the old html instead of php to which we later converted. The RSS reader did the same, and where I first noticed the break. Thankfully the contents in my blog editing program Movable Type (v.3.34) seem to be intact still.

But, yikes! I was extremely upset, thinking the blog has been hacked and I’ve lost it forever. Morbid thoughts, thoughts of all the work lost, thoughts of all the work to restore from backups that aren’t the fully restorable type! I’m going into grief mode…

I had no clue how to fix the problem, I needed help. My clever internet savvy daughter Erika came to the rescue and fixed it that evening.

Or so we thought. Yesterday afternoon, the problem came back. Erika quickly fixed it the same way, but we were left with the question of why this was happening. Today, it went awry again near noon. I’m awaiting a fix as I type this, knowing posting this right now isn’t going to make it appear to you, dear readers. Maybe later***

Many apologies to everyone who’s visited and found my blog broken. With luck and a lot of knowledge on the part of my helper, I hope the problems will be solved very soon and permanently. It does not seem to be a server issue since other family members who are on the same server do not have problems. I know I haven’t given much technical information because I don’t understand the problem. Erika and I’d be very interested and grateful to learn from anyone else who may have had a similar problem with their blog and how it was fixed.

***Two hours later – Erika fixed this again, but we don’t know how long this will last. I’ll post this now in hopes that visitors will get a chance to see this message. We may have to consult with J, my son-in-law and the original designer of this blog. So patience, friends. Patience and a calm heart, Marja-Leena!

Much later: J. found an issue and corrected it! Hopefully that ends the problems. Please let me know if you encounter any more weird stuff here.

THREE!

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ONE, TWO, now THREE years of blogging!

I’ve surprised myself, when I recall my very tentative beginnings with this “art” project, as I like to think of it.

Thank you all for your inspiration, encouragement and warm friendship.

UPDATE: Oh, a blog birthday gift! A photo of mine has been posted over at qarrtsiluni. Go have a look and check out the other work, too! Comments are welcome and appreciated. Should you be a first time visitor to this online journal of creative writing and visual art, please consider submitting a piece. The current theme (which changes about every two months) is “Come Outside”.