Grasping at Imagination…

I stay home every day with my son.  I also work from home, though who has time with a 15 month old to chase down and pull off of high pieces of furniture?
As I watch his imagination begin to grow and expand I find myself longing for just a fraction of what he possesses even as he is forming his.  The wonder with which he studies the wheels of a toy car, or the first time he pushes that car and makes a sound, or the way he gazes intently at the pages of a book he is pretending to read, make me long for the days when I could fully believe I was on a spaceship headed for distant galaxies or that if I touched the floor, I really would burn up in an instant from the lava that covered every square inch of carpet. It slips away without us even knowing it…

I’ve worked in creative fields my entire life.  I even majored in “pretending” in college receiving a Bachelor’s degree in Acting/Directing, and even with training, that full buy in to the given circumstances elude me compared to my son.  It makes me wonder how and when it all went away?  Is it possible to get any portion of it back? How can I ensure that Kieran gets as long as possible to explore the places his mind will take him?  I was lucky…  I had parents that encouraged the play that led me on those incredible imaginary journeys, and I certainly intend to do the same as a parent, but I want more.  I want to make roads in the dirt for MY cars with Kieran, and I want to be engaged in that world from dawn to dusk.  I want the call to come in fo dinner to be the same disappointment that it was when I was 8.

I seek this in my life…  I know that I will never attain the same level of suspension of disbelief, but perhaps I can access the suspension of time and space and invest fully in the creative projects I take on as an artist…  This, I believe must be the thing that separates good art from pedestrian art.

This is what I see in the work of Andy Goldsworthyor William Kentridge.  This is how Pina Bausch worked with her dancers or Mishel Gondry makes a movie.

This is how a street artsist like Banksy maintains his inspiration, or music like that of Hauschka’s continues to be new no matter how many times you listen to it. I long for this in my work.  I long to find my true voice, and to live in it fully as if the lava will destroy me if I don’t.

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Hugelbeds in process

Hugelbeds in process

About half way there…

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Taking breaks

I don’t think it’s any secret, but I don’t take breaks very well.  As long as I can remember, even when I know a break is coming up (say Spring Break, or a long weekend), I’ve always, and I MEAN ALWAYS, filled them up with projects, trips, and plans.  So it’s safe to say that taking breaks is an area where I need to improve, for my sanity’s sake, and the sanity of those who are forced to share space with me.

Part of why I embarked on a new life path recently was to address this issue, and I have to say, that it’s still REALLY hard for me.  About two weeks ago, I was faced with a BIG deadline.  Several farmer’s markets and juried craft shows had deadlines for early application guaranteeing best location or were first come first served setups in competitive markets.  I had very little product given that I am just up and running in the home studio and hadn’t even begun to think about what things would look like at a market.  Several sleepless nights and working to the point of exhaustion led me to meet those deadlines and as a result, last week I found out that I was accepted to all of the places I had applied.  Big relief right?  Time to take a break.  Well, turns out, that just spurred new anxiety.  Oh God!  I don’t have enough stuff for all those markets!!!  I have to get to work!!!  But determined to slow things down as I had hoped to do with this new life, I settled on the last week of March as a big push week for me, allowing for a little down-time to fill the well before going in to full production mode.

Well, as luck would have it, the weather turned beautiful, making it MUCH easier to work in the studio.  More anxiety.  Oh God!  It’s perfect weather to be working in the studio!!!  I shouldn’t waste this opportunity.  Again determined, not to let my over-active work ethic get in the way of some much-needed downtime, I resisted the temptation to work non-stop into the night.  

Then, however, the monster inside me took over.  I made the mistake of taking some of that down-time to look at my garden plans.  OH GOD!!!  Need to get the seeds started, and I haven’t even ordered grain, and the beds aren’t prepared for outdoor plantings that start in a week or two.  The Hugelkultur experiment that we are building this year is A LOT of work up front, but promises to reduce the amount of work throughout the growing season, so I’ve been committed to following through on the plans.  Turns out dirt is VERY HEAVY by the way…  So, under the guise of rest and relaxation, I began to use the warm days to get this garden ready for the season.  After taking it reletively slowly for about a week, yesterday, the monster won, and won big!  Digging about twice as much as I had on previous days, and really feeling the crunch of the approach of Spring, I completed about 48 square feet of Hugelbeds complete with a trip to salvage a downed Elm tree from Boulder.  THIS… finally broke me.  My back is cooked!  I couldn’t throw a pot if I wanted to right now, and the work-ethic demon, that won’t allow a single moment to go by unused has only been tamed by a body all too familiar with the excesses of this calamitous creature.

I had thought a couple of days ago, that by jumping on a St. Louis Blues best-in-NHL bandwagon I would help to slow down the pernicious personage of pain welling up inside of me, but alas, it seems that Hockey has only shortened the useable time in the day making the villainous varmint push ever harder to get a “Good Day’s Work” in.

So as I write this, hunched helplessly over at the kitchen table, the malignant monster works his magic through my fingertips, knowing full well that, with a Hockey game scheduled for 5pm and only 7 hours left in this work day there is bound to be some cyber-connecting, or inter-webbing, or photo-shopping, or just plain sketching that can advance it’s cause.  A world without breaks.  A productivity level unmatched by shipping jobs off-shore.  A broken body, but a completed project.

I’ve often mused in my life that if I just had all this time I was wasting working for others to do the projects I had in my head that I would not only be able to sustain myself with that labor, but live a more full and happy life.  I still think that is true, but taming this beast and putting it to work in smaller doses will be key to succeeding.  For today, I will try to rest… the body at least.

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Steep Learning Curves

After a particularly steep learning curve in trying to get my website launched, it is now LIVE!!!  You can visit the site here:

www.faiersandceramics.com

That got me thinking though…  Over the last several years I’ve been faced with learning curves on the steepest end time and again.  When you work on the production end of the Theatre at any level you are constantly faced with new challenges that you’ve never entertained before.  How ARE you going to get all of those T.V.s to come on at the same time and present the same image?  How ARE you going to get that real painting to disappear magically and display something else or lift the roof off the building?  How ARE you going to make that entire curtain fall to the ground in an instant on cue?  How ARE you going to make those two free-standing doors magically appear and disappear into the floor in 5 seconds or less without any noise?

So when I decided that I wanted to build my own website, knowing absolutely NOTHING about how to do it, I went through what I have learned are the 8 common steps in approaching daunting and seemingly insurmountable tasks.

1.  Denial – All good steps to deal with a problem in your life should start with this step in my opinion…  In the case of a daunting and seemingly insurmountable task it usually takes one of the following forms or both.  a).  Denial that the task actually exists, or b).  Denial that you will have any problem tackling the problem.  Both have surfaced for me on various projects, but regardless of which one takes shape, both give way to step 2…

2.  Procrastination – I LOATHE Procrastination, and yet, I employ it without fail in nearly every part of my life.  But if there is a time I am SURE to employ it, it is when I am faced with an enormously challenging learning curve…  Usually I will put off learning anything about the problem until I am forced to do something about it.  At best I will mull the problem over in my head a few times to get a good thesis in mind.  ***WARNING*** Educated guesses are a great place to start, but when combined with procrastination can produce sleepless nights and coffee overdoses…

3. Begrudging Acceptance & Decision to Start the Project – I recognize that it is counter-intuitive for any type of acceptance to come in the MIDDLE of any steps to solve great problems, but that’s just the way it is… If it weren’t for this middle step, these “seemingly” insurmountable tasks would fall into the JUST PLAIN INSURMOUNTABLE category.  So with head hung low and recognition of how much time has been wasted procrastinating, the project has at last become tackled, though at this stage it resembles a 13 month old clinging to the leg of his father and screaming as he sinks his hands into a pile of poopy diapers…

4.  Frustration – This frustration is primarily directed at this point toward software developers who think your issues are trivial and simple to solve, manufacturers who either don’t make the thing you have thought up in your head or cannot get said item to you overnight, or keyboards that clearly DON’T understand what you intended to press with your coffee-rattled fingers.  Though sometimes this frustration will be squarely directed at your dog who has decided NOW is the time that he needs go in and out and in and out the door…

5.  Depression – Usually, though not always, a time comes while tackling a daunting or seemingly insurmountable task where you will be convinced that there is no way in HELL you are going to be able to crack the code or make it work or understand what anyone is telling you.  It is just as easy at this point to go back to bed and give up as it was to procrastinate in the first place.  Often times I feel in this stage like just tacking on a few more days to step 2…  However, I also find that this stage falls just before the summit of the problem.  Keep going!  This usually happens at a point when I’ve realized that everything I’ve done will need to be scrapped and I will need to start over anyway, so why not just go back to step 2 promising to do some more “mulling”.  I’ve come to understand everything prior to this point as a Research and Development phase.  If you can overcome the hurdle facing you at this point and go ahead and start over, you’ll find that you’ve learned just about everything you need to know to make the project work…

6.  Flurried Excited Confidence – Once you start into the project anew, you will find you have a second, nay tenth wind, and can see the end in sight.  Creativity abounds and you CAN’T BE STOPPED.  During this stage you get great new ideas that may add hours to your project, but go with it, you won’t be sorry.  This is the Climax!  Everything is happening at once and you’re beaming with pride!  Go get em!

7.  Celebration – This is where I stop and have a beer!  Job well done!  Reminisce and think fondly on your vicotories.

8.  Ego Fulfillment – The unfortunate reality to overcoming a challenge like this is that your Ego will need some stroking.  I know I know I know…  Ego is the root of many problems.  I myself try every day to strip myself of the demands of the Ego, but it’s there and it’s loud in moments like this.  Do your best to recognize that very few people will care that you have overcome this challenge… In many cases it is indeed your job to have come up with the answer, so that said… FLAUNT IT!  Show the World!  YOU ARE GREAT!!!!!!!!!!  Just whatever you do… don’t look at your list, mine always contains at least 3 projects sitting idly in Step 2…

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High Five!

It’s finally here!  After many more months than I anticipated, the virtual High Five Video is here!  I think you’ll like what you see, even if it is a little long.  I had a lot of fun putting it together!  Good to have something to do on cold days like today.

In other news, I will be bisque firing the first batch of rewards this weekend, and will be spending next week glazing and getting started on the second batch of reward ceramics.  It’s been cold in the studio, much to cold to coat y hands in water and clay, until the last week or so, but the forecast looks good for the next couple of weeks so I’ll be busting my tail as weather permits.

What have I been doing with my time when I’m not elbow deep in clay?  Glad you asked…  I’ve set up a first draft of my etsy shop, which you can visit here:

http://www.etsy.com/shop/faiersandceramics

This will be dramatically overhauled once the backer rewards are finished, but for now, if you want to add to your shipment, you can purchase made-to-order ceramics here.  Once there is an overstock of items, I will list them individually.

I’ve also been updating my blog, so stop on by and click the follow button to stay up to date on all that dribble too!  There I’ve been dreaming of permaculture and planning this year’s garden…

http://tinderlight.com/

 

Business cards came in the mail last week and I’ve got my eye on some March 1st deadlines for juried craft shows and sales around the front range.  I’m looking forward to getting everything under the tent and ready to sell.  If all goes according to plan you can find me this Spring and Summer at the following locations:

Boulder Farmers Market (Arts & Crafts days only – see website (http://www.boulderfarmers.org/) for dates.

Longmont Farmers Market (Arts & Crafts days only – see website (http://www.boulderfarmers.org/) for dates.

Louisville Street Faire - All summer long on Friday evenings!!!

I’ll also be concentrating on getting my wares into some local cafes and boutiques, so next time you’re hankerin for some handmade ceramics, be sure to look around for fAi(e)rSAND!  You can also stop by my facebook place page to “like” it and keep up to date on the goings on as they happen. I’ll be posting the High Five Video there as well!!!  I’ll also be sure to post there and here when the website is up and running.  I own the domains and you can email me at ben@faiersandceramics.com, but there’s no site to visit as yet.

http://www.facebook.com/pages/fAierSAND-Ceramics/292915097422240

Last but not least, that party I mentioned is coming up!  I’m shooting for next Saturday night, February 4th.  If you are on the front range, or feel like traveling please come on by and see the studio!  My hope is that I will do the glaze firing on Friday of next week and be able to open the kiln by Saturday night to see what goodies await inside.  If you chose a Sipping Mug or Salt Bowl as your reward, you can even take your pick of the litter and fill it full of wine!!!  Much love to you all.  I feel so incredibly fortunate, and it’s all because of you!

PEACE!

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Dreaming of permaculture…

So I admit it… I tend to be deeply interested in way too many things, but I’ve decided here in the Year of the Dragon, that it brings a particular richness in my life that I wouldn’t think of living without. While we were in Southern California, with the weather hinting at Spring there, I began dreaming of our garden for the coming year.  This will be the first year in many where we won’t be in transition during the summer months, so I’m incredibly ambitious as to what we can attain.  Perhaps a little over-ambitious…  Our experiment last fall was, on the whole successful.  We got a substantially sized garden in, knowing full well that it would likely be overtaken by winter, as it was, but were happy with out successes and learned an awful lot.  For example… pulling weeds sucks!  Eager to build on our successes and employ the lessons from our failures, I began planning this year’s garden on December 26th.  Since we didn’t have a long enough season for most of our plants to go to seed, I started with the Seed Saver’s Exchange 2012 seed catalog! How delicious! What I like to do with any project, is DREAM BIG, then reign things in as is needed.  Case in point was my excursion through the above mentioned catalog.  When all was said and done, I’d picked the following which I organized in to the document you see here:

See the full PDF here - 2012 GARDEN PLANS

I used to be a production manager, so I like things to be organized, but I admit, this might have been a little over the top, but then I saw a new App for the iPad, which, in a much sleeker form was setting up garden organization in the same way.  Here is the link for all that are interested from Mother Earth News, which is admittedly a bit of an obsession these days when it’s too cold to work with wet clay in the studio.  Behold… the Grow Planner Gardening AppNow, as I am trying to limit the amount of stuff I buy in the name of Artful Simplicity, I am not going to go and buy an iPad in order to use this App (though the little consumer devil on my shoulder says that I should).  But I was very excited to see that the documents I had already created on my own were essentially the same templates being used by these incredible resource and organization tools.

To explain how I am using this document a little more, it may help if you know a little about the concept of Square Foot Gardening.  Mel Bartholomew wrote it all down years ago and has revised his practices recently in the All New Square Foot Gardening book released in 2006, which you can likely pick up at your local library.  The basic idea is that by planting different plants next to each other in easy to access raised beds with good soil mixtures that help with water retention you are cutting down on the amount of work per square foot and increasing the yield.

Knowing what to plant, and how much is a consistent problem for beginning gardeners such as myself, so like I said, I like to DREAM BIG and reign things in.  The document I shared above let me start with what I wanted in my dream garden, then think about how much (i.e. how much do I get from a square foot and how many square feet will I need), then lay it out into potential beds.  I started by making a square (1″ X 1″) for each vegetable, herb, or grain including the various varietals.  Then notated in the box, when they should be planted in my zone and how many square feet I intended to plant.  Then color coded the various types of plants for easy reference.  Now, armed with an icon for each square foot I intended to plant, I could plan out my raised beds.  I decided to go with 3′ X 3′ beds or 9 square feet per box.  Then began playing with the tiles until my boxes looked like this…

See the full PDF here - 2012 GARDEN Layout

In the end, this comes out to be about 250 Square feet…  Like I said, perhaps a little too ambitious, and honestly, I’m looking at places I can cut down, not to mention the fact that since we do not have seeds

from last year, I’ll need to purchase the seed for most of this, which makes for a fairly substantial capital outlay.  This of course got me thinking about how I can cut down on expenses, and while I probably don’t need 7 varietals of Melons, I’m eager to  test as many varietals as possible to see what works well for us here.  So how else can I cut my expenses?  With 26 raised beds needing to be constructed and filled with good soil, it started to look like I was going to have to start the daunting task of reigning it in.  My spirits were lifted as I started combing Craigslist’s free page for materials and started in on some more research through a couple of Permaculture websites suggested by a friend while visiting him in Durango, CO on our way back from California.  He pointed me towards Paul Wheaton’s work  in the permaculture community which I’ve been aggressively consuming since arriving home.  His work with Hugelkultur is inspiring and I highly suggest taking a look at his article on the subject in Make It Missoula here.

That said, there are many fantastic people around the world working with this technique and it’s worth falling down the rabbit hole if this does indeed spark your interest.  Essentially, this technique uses old wood (though fresh cut works as well) as a base layer, upon which, your raised bed is built.  The decomposing organic material (i.e. tree branches and other discarded wood, leaves, etc.) creates a rich environment that replenishes the soil’s nutrients constantly and creates air pockets for roots to grow into.  Even more impressive and important, especially here in arid Colorado, the decomposing matter acts a sponge, which holds on to water and provides the plants growing above a consistent source of moisture.  It’s a raised bed ecosystem, not just a pretty place to put some flowers.  There are a number of different ways to employ this method, one of which is pictured above in the construction of a berm, which is most efficient because plants from all around the decomposing wood have access to the store of water, but it can be done in the ground as well as in bordered or more traditional raised beds, like the one directly above.  I will be implementing this method in my raised beds which will reduce the amount of soil I need to use (most likely what I dig up as a bed for the wood to go in to will be enough when layered back over the top along with some compost) and it will reduce the amount of irrigation needed throughout the drier months in our growing season, not to mention, the decomposing matter will create a heat bed that will keep the root systems warmer, providing a longer growing season in my own little micro-climate.  And how about this for an added bonus…  By burying felled wood and decomposing it underground, I am not only using the nutrients the earth has already provided eliminating the need for synthetic, or even organic fertilizers, I’m also… get this… sequestering CARBON!  Yes, I’m helping reduce the amount of off-gased CO2 from decomposing matter!  Beat that if you can!

AND THAT’S NOT ALL…  As I fell in free-fall down the rabbit hole, I stumbled, rather quickly, on to the father of the whole Permaculture Phenomenon.  Though the term, permaculture was coined by Bill Mollison and David Holmgren in the mid-1970s, Sepp Holzer has been doing it all his life.  In this video, he gives an overview of his life’s work, which is his vibrant mountain-side farm in Austria.

What’s clear in watching this, is that slowing down and really observing our own ecosystems brings a true wealth of knowledge, and that permaculture will be different from one side of town to the other.  As Sepp Holzer says, we must work in cooperation with nature, not against it.  I realize that I may be a little late in coming this man and his ideas, but he is none-the-less, my new hero!

Not to be lost in all of this is the beauty of the absolute simplicity and harmony with nature’s carefully crafted rhythms.  That beauty brings me full circle to the concepts I regularly spout here.  By rescuing materials from the dumpster or from Craigslist and reusing them artfully in my garden through the creation of  miniature ecosystems that harness nature’s simple designs, we have another embodiment of life lived with Artful Simplicity!

Now…  I’m off to rescue tree branches from yesterday’s wind storm!  Permaculture to the rescue!!!

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Etsy Shop is Up and Running

No turning back now!  You can now officially order a couple of Made To Order items from online!  For now, it’s just the Bowls and Sipping mugs that were listed through the Kickstarter project, but keep an eye out for future offerings as I explore the possibilities in the studio.

Check out the current listings here and make them a favorite of yours if you have an Etsy Account.

http://www.etsy.com/shop/faiersandceramics

Off to the races and time to pay the bills.

 

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