Engage directly with Earth, Air, Fire and Water. Create images that soften the heart, awaken the senses, provide space for reflection and leave a lasting impression. Delight in both nature's beauty and our primal human drive to create.

LisaLipsett.com


Sunday, June 6, 2010

Snake Creations

This morning I was startled by a beautiful dark grey mouse that scurried under my feet in my studio. I managed to trap her under a small plastic Tupperware container and brought her in to show my seven year old daughter Ruby. After we ate breakfast with her beside us and a period of observation we took her into the green house and let her go. Ruby really wanted to hold the mouse in her hands and managed to hold her for a second before the mouse scurried up her arm and out into the garden. As we walked out of the garden a beautiful fair sized garter snake lay at our feet. We decided to have her stay for a short while with us while we drew and painted with her. We named her Snavely.... Click here to see the three videos we took of our drawing and painting session.

Ruby and the snake

First Ruby outlined her with pen and then painted.

Ruby outlining the snake
snake outline

Ruby's snake painting and a small drawing

Then I created with the snake. First I drew the snake with each hand. Then I drew the way the snake felt to touch. I ran one hand along its surface while recording the sensation with the other hand. I found this to be much easier and more satisfying than drawing how she looked.

Touching and drawing the snake


                      snake touch drawings        drawing how she looks

To hold and caress this creature of the wet grass between my fingers gave such pleasure. I could feel each smooth scale against my fingertips as her body caressed the palm of my hand. She was cool and damp yet pulsating warm aliveness.

I followed the drawings with a painting of her. I used my right hand, followed by my left and then both hands. I closed my eyes to choose the colours.


                   left hand         both hands      right hand

Then this question popped into my head. What if I caress her smooth vulnerable bottom with paint? What if I coloured her, asked what colour she’d like then dipped my finger into the coloured space and let her dance across the ground moistened page? What would appear? What body communication might appear here?

Ruby coloured her bottom first and let her move across a wet page. I filmed her as she did this. Then we switched with Ruby filming me while I painted with the snake. I asked what colour she'd like and then carefully placed that on her belly. She also slithered onto the kit where colour adhered to her belly.

Ruby painting the snake


The painting the snake created with Ruby

As she moves over my paintkit, colour adheres to her body...

The creation the snake painted with me

As she moved across the page I saw roundness, sideways roundness with a forward direction that was never directly attacked but came about in a round-about kind of way. She performed rounded lifts then definitive placements. She created a carved out place.

We asked snake: what do you have to share today?

Ruby- The twists and turns and ducks of the snake people
           We must slither fast
           We like hiding in the dark and being sneaky
           We hate being hung by our tails but we love being bracelets

Ruby's snake bracelet

Lisa-   Stay low
           Slide your smooth flexible spine
           Trust
           Twirl, explore, sniff your way
           Forked tongues aren’t all bad
           Say what you mean

Then we laid her in the deep grass at the base of our Palm tree, thanked her and said farewell.........

What calls out to you for creative exploration and connection today?

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Our Doodling Nature


"Stop doodling and do your Math", my grade school teacher would cry out. Doodling was seen as dawdling when I was in school. Meandering without focus or purpose, the doodler was seen as wasting time and getting nothing done. Sunni Brown agrees that doodling has had a bad rap. Click here to listen to her Ted talk where she puts to rest the myth of doodling being a waste of time. http://www.ted.com/talks/sunni_brown.html

I like to doodle, dream on the page, go with no plan, not apply myself and play with a sleepy mind with no particular direction.

My seven year old daughter says she is double minded. She can remember every detail of a story being read to her while she draws, cuts paper, sews. She says it is harder for her to concentrate if her hands are not engaged in something creative. Jackie Andrade published an article in February 2009 in the journal of Applied Cognitive Psychology entitled: What Does Doodling Do? In it she recounts improved concentration and a 30% improvement in memory retention of participants who doodled while listening to a list of names over the phone versus those who didn't. So there is something to support the notion that doodling helps to awaken more of our capacity for engagement. Maybe it engages both hemispheres in a more balanced way. All that aside, doodling doesn't really get the credit it deserves. However I find that it is a rich and valuable way to know.


Phone doodle

When I doodle while on the phone somehow I become deeply present with the person I am speaking with while I also understand more about how I am feeling during the conversation while watching an image unfold. I can see how the dialogue feels.

Doodling is also very near to the practice I teach here that involves closing our eyes and drawing a feeling connection with Nature. I wonder if doodling with Nature is any less real than the traditional Nature Journal exercise of accurately drawing what we see?
Accurately painting and drawing what we see in Nature can be very pleasing as though something important has been accomplished. We have seen clearly, we have stilled ourselves long enough to really see what is there in front of our eyes and we have managed to get that onto the page, in proportion with correct markings. 

This is a western natural history approach to drawing Nature. Indigenous peoples don't seem to draw accurate reproductions of animals and plants in their world. There is something more relational about their visual art. There is spirit to the images, a story to be told about the relationship between the being and the artist. The image holds the richness of that relationship. A clear comparison is in the work of  BC artist Sue Coleman (www.suecoleman.ca/artcards.htm). Click on one of her artcards and see how she combines both Native and Western art depictions of animals on the same page. When I look at her images I watch how each meets a need in me. The reproduction feels pleasing in that I can recognize the animal, its exciting to see it stilled and in such detail. The Native rendition entrances me, gives me a window into the character of the being and I feel a deep longing to know more.

I wonder how this relates to doodling. It seems that a quiet mind can be obtained from both accurately drawing what we see and doodling. Maybe with doodling it's that we can see more of what we are looking at. We can access the pattern that connects this animal to other living beings and to ourselves. We move from accurate reproduction of detail to a place where we open our hearts to the being. We feel a connection and open to what a being may have to say to us today. We open to what we may have to say to them. A connection can be deepened over time as we realize that it nourishing to revisit this being over and over again and wonder what has changed, what endures, where we stand. We image ourselves with the being thus giving greater understanding, form and a sense of connection to both of us. The image-making becomes a knowing alive bridge between us- fluid yet solid at the same.

Nature's Doodles on Arbutus Leaves

I went for my usual walk up the back roads behind my house the other day. On a isolated stretch of dirt road I noticed two arbutus leaves. Each had intricate wooly doodle on its surface. A wonderfully thready example of Nature's creativity on a natural creation.

close up of Arbutus leaf doodle

After sitting quietly with one leaf for a few moments, I did a drawing with each hand in turn. My eyes slowed tracked the surface of the leaf while my hands recorded what I was seeing. I didn't tell my hands what to do or overly control their direction. I simply paid close attention to the details on the leaf and let my hands be the secretary for that experience.

Then I closed my eyes and drew the leaf using each hand in turn. I simply set the intention to paint the connection I felt with the leaf and drew with each hand in turn.

                              Drawings with eyes opened then eyes closed

The larger leaf drawings were done with my eyes open while slowly trying to see the detail in the leaves while still moving my pen quickly along the page.  In the lower right of the page you can see the two drawings done with my eyes closed.
There was a lot of swirling and twisting and turning that happened in these drawings. I loved the repetitiveness of the feeling of my pen moving slowly on the smooth page.

After the drawings were finished I recorded some words that came to mind as I doodled the connection I felt with the leaf.

round and round and round she goes, where she stops nobody knows
explore, play, enjoy the feel of it, no where to go and nothing to be done
like ants on a sidewalk, caterpillars on a leaf
wandering
knitting the world together one strand at a time
silly snow string sprayed this way and that
filling the space with lacy undulations

Then I painted my feeling connection to the leaf. Right hand first, then left hand followed by both hands.

Leaf painting using left hand-right hand-both hands

I closed my eyes to choose the colours and started with my left hand. Orange called out to be used and a rounded two line figure emerged. This was followed by the reddish/pink spring-like swirls created by my right hand. The image in the center was created using both hands and seems to have qualities of both. There was a sense that little balls were being ejected from the bottom of the image and tossed around much like a juggler would keep many balls moving in the air. I see strong form, leaf-like form even with lots of energy.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

While I walked home that day I noticed Nature's doodles in the bark of trees, on blades of grass, in the dirt road. Even the cracks in the paved portion of my route had a doodling quality to them. Out of the randomness of these creations I was reminded of a common creative language that speaks of playfulness, spontaneity and attentiveness in relationship.

Where do you see doodles?

Where and when can you doodle today?