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Introducing....

  • Aug. 17th, 2009 at 1:51 PM
Levi
 Here is a picture of Beautiful Berry, the little sister of Levi.  This was taken 2 weeks ago at 12 weeks of age.  Her ear is now permanently standing up.  She is even smaller than Levi and darker in gray color than he is.  She looks as if she has white booties on or has stepped into white paint.  This morning I found her splashing around in the water bowl, acting like she was a raccoon.  She is shyer than her brother, than all of my other chis.  I think it is due to her being with her mother longer and not being as well socialized to humans as the other pups.
  The breeder I got Levi and Berry from told me that she had to remove all the pictures of her blue chi pups because she still has people contacting her from as far away as France, looking for this unusual color.





Of Interest to Me

  • Jul. 22nd, 2009 at 9:33 AM
Avebury
 

Medieval massacre site found in Dorset

 
In June archaeologists and workers expanding a road in Dorset discovered the site of a grizzly medieval massacre, which perhaps was the result of Viking raids in the tenth or early eleventh century.

They found the skeletal remains of fifty-one men, all decapitated before their bodies were thrown in a pit. Their heads were also found, stacked to one side.



At first, the bodies were believed to have been from people who lived in ancient or Roman times, but radio-carbon dating revealed that they were killed between 890 and 1034, when the South of England was pillaged by Viking raiders from Scandinavia.

What they found shook even experienced archaeologists used to dealing with the remains of the long dead. David Score, of Oxford Archaeology, the project manager, said: "When you are there surrounded by bones with a pile of skulls grimacing back at you, you can't help but imagine how they met their end. It would have been a scene of absolute horror."

Nothing else has been found in the grave so far. Mr Score said: "You might expect them to have been stripped of weapons and jewellery before execution, but the fact we haven't found so much as a bone toggle suggests they were naked when they were executed."

Angela Boyle, senior osteologist, said: "The overwhelming majority are aged from their late teens to about 25-years-old, with just a small number of older individuals. As a general group they are tall, robust in stature with good teeth and appear to have had healthy lifestyles.

"Most of the skulls exhibit evidence of multiple blows to the vertebrae, jawbones and skulls with a large, very sharp weapon such as a sword."

The identity of the skeletons may be revealed by their teeth. Isotopes in the enamel formed while the men were growing up will reveal whether their origins were in Scandinavia, Wessex — Alfred's kingdom — or northern England, where large numbers of Danes had settled.

David Score add, "The time period we’re now looking at is one of considerable conflict between the resident Saxon population and invading Danes. Viking raids were common and there were a series of major battles in the south of England as successive Saxon kings and Viking leaders fought for control.

"It is hoped that further radio carbon dating will be able to define the date range much more closely and other scientific techniques may be able to establish the origin of the individuals; were they Saxons or Vikings?”

The pit was discovered during road construction between Dorchester and Weymouth, venue for sailing events in the 2012 Olympics. A team of archaeologists had been following builders widening the A354 where it crosses the Ridgeway, a prehistoric track along the crest of the limestone hills of south Dorset.

Men in Uniform, Tribute Paid

  • Jul. 18th, 2009 at 12:09 PM
Santa and Woodland Animals

The crew of USS Halyburton march accompanied by the Yeoman Gaoler, center left, to deliver a keg of wine during the ceremony of the Constable's Dues at the Tower of London in London, Saturday, July 18, 2009. The U.S. Navy ship is invited to become the first non-British ship to take part in the ancient, colorful ceremony of the Constable's Dues during its stay in London to mark the start of an international chapter in a ceremony whose origins can be traced back to the 14th century. This tradition mirrors the ancient custom that every ship coming upstream to the City had to moor at Tower Wharf to unload a portion of its cargo for the Constable as a toll because of his extensive powers as the Sovereign's representative.(AP Photo/Akira Suemori)

 
EDIT:  Just as I was forwarding this to Marko, my iPod started playing "LONDON CALLING" by the Clash.  It was such an eerie coincidence I almost fell out of my chair! 

D-Day, 65 Years Later

  • Jun. 5th, 2009 at 8:10 AM
Memorial Day
 American, German vets pay respects to fallen

LA CAMBE, France – American and German World War II veterans paid respects to their fallen comrades at a cemetery near a D-Day landing site Friday before an international commemoration of the 65th anniversary of the Allied invasion of Normandy.

During the ceremony, military bands played anthems of the United States, Germany, Britain and France and German visitors piled wreaths of flowers at the foot of a mound at the center of the cemetery at La Cambe. Some 22,000 German soldiers are buried beneath clusters of rounded brown crosses in a grassy meadow not far from Omaha Beach.

After the ceremony, most visitors headed out, but a few dozen stayed on in a corner of the cemetery, where a German priest and a few soldiers buried the remains of a German soldier discovered last year. A Frenchman conducting construction work near the German battery at Grand Camp Maisy, a dozen miles (kilometers) away, came across first a gun and then the remains, which have yet to be identified.

"It's a great feeling ... to come here," said Austin Cox of Crisfield, Maryland, a sergeant with the 29th Division of the U.S. 115th infantry regiment who landed on Omaha Beach at 9 a.m. on the epic day that turned the tide of World War II.

"My comrades though are buried over at Omaha," said Cox, 90.

Flags from nations on both sides of World War II flew in the spring breeze.

A low, granite entrance leads into the cemetery containing the graves of the German soldiers, each marked with a small, flat stone. The main American cemetery at nearby Colleville-Sur-Mer has about 9,300 graves. Most U.S. war dead were repatriated.

Earlier Friday, British paratroopers swooped down on Ranville as part of the commemorations. Later in the day, a fireworks display was planned up and down the shore where Allied troops launched the Battle of Normandy that helped turn the tide of the war.

The big event is Saturday, when President Barack ObamaFrench President Nicolas Sarkozy, the Canadian and British prime ministers and Prince Charles gather for a ceremony amid the rows of white crosses and Stars of David at the American cemetery, which is U.S. territory.

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Latest Painting

  • Jun. 2nd, 2009 at 11:12 AM
Santa and Woodland Animals
 5x5 inch on canvas, Acrylics and markers



"Robespierre"

Latest Bead Journal Page

  • Jun. 1st, 2009 at 12:52 PM
Santa and Woodland Animals
   I've been a member of the 2008 Bead Journal Project since last fall.  Sometimes it's very hard to come up with some idea-thank goodness there's no Bead Journal Police.  
  I am behind.  Sometimes I have no idea what I'm going to bead.  Sometimes it gets overwhelming and I want to give up.  When it gets like this I try cleaning my studio-not the entire place as that would be overwhelming too.  I'll start maybe by organizing my fabric or going through my beads.  
  Read and see more about the 2008 Bead Journal Project here:  http://08bjp.blogspot.com/
Here is my bead journal page for April.  



"Saguaro Morning in Tucson"

Flight is Just a Dream

  • May. 13th, 2009 at 3:56 PM
Santa and Woodland Animals
   When our my backyard birds gather under the feeders Jolie likes to run out and flush them.  Dammit Rudy would do the same thing and occasionally even catch and kill an unfortunate lagger.  Jolie hasn't had any success because most of the doves are bigger than she is and the other birds fly away quickly.  
  All except the one, the sparrow I've rescued four times now.  Jack (what else would I name him?) joins the other birds when they gather to eat and scratch around.  When they fly off, he's left alone to hop around as best as he can.  Fortunately Jolie has no interest in eating him.  If Dammit Rudy still lived here, Jack would be long dead.
  It was pretty easy to scoop up Jack as he hopped around.  I can't figure out why he can't fly though?  His wings don't appear to be broken, and his legs are fine.
  Then I looked at his head.  For whatever reason Jack Sparrow is missing his left eye.  Could that affect his ability to fly?  I don't know.  
  I carefully placed Jack back in the cactus garden where the plants and rocks could shelter him from predators.  The feeder's there and so is a bowl I fill daily with fresh water.  As long as Jack stays there he will be alright I think.  If he ever got under the fence and out he'd be no match for a predator.  It's a bit amazing a snake hasn't gotten him yet.
  I feel sorry for Jack.  Is he better off in my back yard?  At least he's still with other wild birds even if he can't fly.  Or should I catch him and take him in so he can live at the wildlife rehabilitation place?  I think he'll have to live out his life there but he'd be safe.
  I know it's assigning human characteristics to an animal.  But i can't help but wonder what Jack Sparrow must feel to watch the other birds fly away as he remains disabled and earth bound?

My latest Paintings

  • May. 8th, 2009 at 5:10 PM
Santa and Woodland Animals
   I have always been fascinated by legends and mythology.  I grew up hearing about the legends of Guam and the Hawaiian Islands.  Books on Greek mythology are still my favorites.
  Some people collect figurines-I know a woman very partial to cows.  I won't paint a cow, but a bull---NOW we're talking.  
  When I paint on a 5 by 5 inch canvas, I can do a painting a day.  Late at night, I have Judas Priest or Van Halen or some other rock group blasting, and I paint.  



"The Minotaur Felt Misunderstood"



"Mithra's Bull Awaits its Fate"

For Barbie's 5oth

  • Apr. 7th, 2009 at 10:56 PM
Santa and Woodland Animals
What did I do this evening?  I did unspeakable things to a Barbie doll, all in the name of art and because [info]tricia_joy made me do it!
I'll post pictures of it here tomorrow as it's late.
I had fun.  I'm going to bed, chuckling about poor Barbie....

My Red Antidepressant

  • Mar. 9th, 2009 at 2:29 PM
Santa and Woodland Animals
   I had to go to post office, which is a chore I rate right up there with getting groceries.  So I drove to Location #1, a private contractor for the USPS.  They're gone, closed and not coming back.  Sheesh.
  Get in the car, drive down to Location#2.  Is every friggin' road in Tucson undergoing construction now?!  
  Get in, get taken care of right away.
  It's 64 degrees so I put my top down.  On MY car, that is.  

My M3, BMW's fast convertible.  In Arizona, we're not required to have front license plates.  So Mark put on the one I had while we lived in the Netherlands.  The "AF" stands for "Allied Forces"
I was a bad mood when I left the post office, but with the top down and music cranked, I was smiling all the way home. 

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The 1000 Journals Project Film

  • Mar. 4th, 2009 at 6:19 PM
Moleskine
Back in 2000 when an artist who calls himself Someguy sent out 1000 journals, he caused a worldwide sensation. People were encouraged to create in the journals, share their work on the website, post where they were and the number of the journal being worked on. Myspace, Meet Up groups, flickr, facebook, the internet and news media were all talking about the journals.

With one thousand journals and many more people wanting to get one, I knew I had a very slim chance to work in one myself. But I signed up anyway and time went by. No journal. I satisfied my curiosity by buying the 1000 Journals Project book. When the 1000 Journals Project documentary 
http://www.1000journalsfilm.com/ was released, I hurried to get that too.

Reading the book and seeing the documentary made me really want to have just one journal in my hands. To be able to see what others had created in it and where it had traveled.... The 1000 Journals are famous! To a journaler like myself, holding one of the thousand would be like holding the Holy Grail.

A few weeks ago I "met" Andrea Kruezhage, the producer of the 1000 Journals Project documentary, via flickr. She'd seen some of my journal pages. When she "friended" me on facebook I was thrilled. Then she emailed me to tell me that she was going to be at the Phoenix Museum of Art, showing her documentary and doing a question and answer session after wards. And she was going to have FOUR of the 1000 journals with her.

She said she hoped I could come and we could meet afterwards.  And by the way, would I bring some of my journals? I told her that I had never worked in any of the 1000. Was she still interested in seeing some of mine? She assured me she did. I was so excited I could hardly wait for February 22nd to come.

People were already lined up to get into the theater when we got there. Quickly every seat was taken.  Steve Weiss of No Festival Required introduced Andrea. What made an impression on me was that Andrea so strongly believed in the 1000 Journals project that she sold her home in California to raise the money to create this documentary. That kind of passion I had no words for.

Andrea asked the audience who was there from Meet Up and MySpace? Then she asked where "Theresa from facebook" was? The last time my name was mentioned over a microphone it was because my luggage was lost at Heathrow, but I believe I managed not to embarrass myself in front of the audience.

The people in the theater were of all ages, with several children attending. Many of us brought our own journals. People reacted to the art work they saw on the big screen and to the stories being told. The two young women from Australia who redid other peoples' entries because they thought "they needed more color and we're all about color" got a strong reaction from the audience then and in the Q and A session afterwards. Judging from the long and loud applause after the film ended, the audience liked what they had seen. 

As for the four journals that Andrea told me she was going to bring,  I did not see them anywhere. I thought maybe they were on display in cases in the rear of the theater? So I was amazed when I saw two people holding the journals and passing them around the audience.  Because of limited time, people were encouraged to share the journals with their neighbors. A close eye was kept on the books as they were reluctantly passed on.

At last, I thought-I'm going to have my hands on one of the elusive 1000 Journals!  But before I even had a chance, time was up and the journals were collected.  Andrea was going to the gift shop where she was available to sign copies of her documentary and autograph journals.

Like a good paparazzi I waited until the theater was empty and Andrea was by herself.  I introduced myself and Mark and she gave me a big hug. I asked her if she had any reading material for her flight back to LA? Impulsively I handed her my moleskine journal I had completed while I was in London. I told her if she wanted, she could take it with her, read it and mail it back when she was finished.  She told me my journal had now become part of the 1000 Journals Project.

We walked together to the gift shop where a long line had already formed.  She signed my copy of her 1000 Journals Project dvd. Then she did something that totally caught me by surprise. She handed me Journal #585, told me it needed some help and I could have it for two weeks.

I'm sure my mouth fell open as I gulped "Really?! Really?!"  She laughed and told me to mail it back to her after I was finished with it. Clutching #585 to my chest as if my life depended on it, Mark steered me out of the museum and off to dinner.
  
Since I brought #585 home it has seldom left my sight.   The first night I had it, I even slept with it under my pillow.  Now it is sitting on my desk, waiting for something to be done in it tonight.  

When I mail Journal #585 back to Andrea this weekend I will have done a few pages in it.  And on one of them  I will journal about how I finally got to be a part of Someguy's 1000 Journal Project.

A Nice Surprise

  • Mar. 2nd, 2009 at 4:03 PM
Moleskine
 A moleskine journal of mine gets a mention here in the BLOG/NEWS section:  http://www.1000journalsfilm.com/home.html  

The Sketchbook Project 3

  • Feb. 27th, 2009 at 1:45 PM
Santa and Woodland Animals
 I did a journal for this project



FRIDAY 27, FEBRUARY 2009

LIVE VIDEO BROADCAST from The Sketchbook Project in Atlanta, GA tonight!

Tonight marks the first exhibition on the Sketchbook Project tour. We will be broadcasting it live over the internet so that people who can't make it to the exhibition in person can have a chance to view the show and see how people interact with it. The show tonight also features the work of Emily Maxwell.

The show starts at 7:00pm EST and runs until 10:30pm. To view the broadcast, simply go to:http://arthousecoop.com/projects/sketchbookproject/broadcast.

Please note that because tonight's show is at our own gallery, this is unfortunately the only exhibition on the tour that we are able to broadcast. Also, the broadcast is limited to up to 50 viewers at a time, so if you aren't actively viewing it, please close the window to allow others a chance to!

A Cool Link

  • Feb. 25th, 2009 at 10:18 AM
Passports2
 http://www.360soundview.com/stonehenge/circlesarsen.htm

The Right Thing to Do

  • Feb. 21st, 2009 at 9:10 AM
Santa and Woodland Animals
   When I was a kid, living in Hawaii, one of our history lessons was about Father Damien.  I remembered being impressed that someone would willingly live with and care for a colony of lepers, treating them with respect and love.  So today I was happy to read this:

Priest who aided lepers in Hawaii to become saint

In this photo provided by Hawaii State Archive, Father Damien is seen in thisAP – In this photo provided by Hawaii State Archive, Father Damien is seen in this portrait taken two months …

VATICAN CITY – A 19th-century Belgian priest who ministered to leprosy patients in Hawaii will be declared a saint Oct. 11 at a Vatican ceremony presided over by Pope Benedict XVI.

The Rev. Damien de Veuster's canonization date was set Saturday during a meeting between Benedict and cardinals at the Apostolic Palace.

De Veuster will be canonized along with three other people, the Vatican said.

In July, Benedict approved a miracle attributed to the priest's intercession, declaring that a Honolulu woman's recovery in 1999 fromterminal lung cancer was the miracle needed for him to be made a saint.

He was beatified — a step toward sainthood — in 1995 by Pope John Paul II.

Born Joseph de Veuster in 1840, he took the name Damien and went to Hawaii in 1864 to join other missionaries of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary. Nine years later he began ministering to leprosy patients on the remote Kalaupapa peninsula of Molokai island, where some 8,000 people had been banished amid an epidemic in Hawaii in the 1850s.

The priest eventually contracted the disease, also known as Hansen's disease, and died in 1889 at age 49.

The Vatican's saint-making procedures require that a miracle attributed to the candidate's intercession be confirmed in order for him or her to be beatified. Damien de Veuster was beatified after the Vatican declared that the 1987 recovery of a nun of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary was a miracle. The nun recovered from an illness after praying to Damien.

After beatification, a second miracle is needed for sainthood.

The Vatican's Congregation for the Causes of Saints said Audrey Toguchi's 1999 recovery from lung cancer defied medical explanation, and in July, Benedict agreed. Toguchi, too, had prayed to Damien.

 

On another note, if you want to read an excellent  fictional account of what life was like at the leper colony of Moloka'i, there's this book:  

Varietist Muse, Issue #1

  • Feb. 7th, 2009 at 10:15 AM
The Little King



  For quite awhile,  the art and craft magazines on the stands are pretty much all the same.  I pick them up, browse them briefly and put them back.  It has to be different to go in my shopping basket.  
  My dear talented artist/friend Cynjon Noah has wanted for  long time to put together a publication featuring art that's different.  And because changes are a comin', he did it.
  His first zine (more like  book)  is titled Varietist Muse and can be previewed and purchased here:   
http://www.blurb.com/bookstore/detail/563470?utm_source=badge&utm_medium=banner&utm_content=140x240
  
  Check out what he had to say on his LJ [info]machinarex and on his  blog, http://cynjonnoah.blogspot.com/ 

  And if I knew what I was doing here, I'd be doing links properly.