Loving and Giving, Organically and Creatively
This fall, my nine-piece oil on canvas work, "Loving," exhibited first in Toronto (at Toronto Art Expo), and then in Chicago (at the Artist’s Project), will have a new home and resting place. My association with Boston’s Art Connection enabled it to be discovered by Brockton Neighborhood Health Center, MA, a facility that provides high quality comprehensive health care that is linguistically, culturally, and financially accessible.
About "Loving" 9 x (18 x 18 in), oil on canvas, 2008![]()
To be able to love and be loved is essential to human survival (and quality of life). However, many of us don’t have opportunities to find the love we long for, or don’t feel loved in the right way by the right other(s) at the right times. That acknowledged, longings still churn. What do we do with them? One option is to transfer them to canvas. The title for this nine-piece series didn’t come right away. Once I was mid-way processing and painting, I started to realize what I was creating—as well as why and how. The more I got into what I was representing, the more influenced I became by the imagery being revealed (or channeled). Each time I walked into my studio and saw it, I felt a lift (and gift). Love was out there on the canvas, transmitting full-force back: love that can be so elusive in real life. Creating "happy art," I realized, as I have done before, can keep me going in ways little else manages to, consistently and unconditionally. It helps turn up the volume (and mood) when essential. What needs immediate attention is identified and underscored in colors and brush strokes—like how important it is to take proper care of oneself, no matter whatever else preoccupies.
About My Organic Art
"Organic art" is the name I’ve given to a personal brand of abstraction. It describes a way of working, and style, that seems to have developed from a natural pension for doodling, or "doodlemania." In retrospect, my original "doodlemania" doodles may be considered somewhat one dimensional and contrived: I work on a specific piece (drawing then coloring) until it’s finished. The more evolved organic depictions (using paint, not drawing media) challenge rigidity and take me out of a comfort zone. They also offer surprises, even magical moments. I tend to develop a number of pieces simultaneously, in multiple layers and following no particular plan (limiting control and deliberateness). The artwork feels more alive, a dynamic organism leading the way.
Please see the artist’s section of the DocSusan website for more information about my artwork, as well as previous artist donor pieces (and recipients). An earlier blog entry, Summer 09, Community Giving Through Art, in the Boston Area (August 20, 09), shows this summer’s contributions.
About Upcoming Mosaic Murals
For those interested in acquiring original wall-size mosaic murals, using imagery from my artwork and photos, please look out for an announcement on or about October 8, 09. As a “feature artist” with a new design/manufacture company, fresh possibilities for my artistic creations are on the horizon:-)








