Posts Tagged ‘Jon Lev’

North Bennington Plein Air Invitational, 2010

Friday, September 10th, 2010

Yesterday, Thursday, was the first full day of the NB Plein Air Invitational. Cloudy. Some Rain. Jon dropped me off at 7 in the morning and I painted at Park McCullough untill the rain was pouring so  hard around 2 that I packed up my trusty cart and walked to the train station.  I was beat.  But I managed to make two more oil sketches (a poor one of the freight yard that took me about four hours, then a wonderful little sketch of Whitman’s truck that took 20 minutes!)—for a total of six for the day, and eight oils so far– before packing it in at 6:45 pm.  Went home, cleaned brushes and palette, showered, gave Joyce the work to frame, and went to the lecture on plein air painting by Gurney at Bennington  College.  When I came home I could hardly walk up the stairs to bed.

Today, Jon dropped me off at 7 a.m. again, where I worked in pen & inks (no watercolors or guache) on different Canson and Arche watercolor papers (a total of 9, I think, but two or three total washouts and the last one I didn’t even get a sketch laid in—I was done!)  in front of Taraden B&B until 9:45, when Jon picked me up for Rosh Hashana services.  Cloudy. After services and tashlik I returned to wrestle with that weeping willow.  I worked on that tree most of the time til 7 pm.

At 7 p.m.  the sky opened up, cleared and the most amazing sunset appeared.  Though I did not paint it, I was aware that had I not been out there packing up my stuff from two days and one evening—a total of 23 hours of landscape painting—I probably would have missed that sunset, or at least the kind of awe I felt.  It was one of those fleeting sunsets that I couldn’t have caught even if paints and painter had been poised and ready.  It was more than enough to be present.

I learned a lot —about my own style of painting, about my limitations, about my new cold wax medium and my new papers.  I became friendly with a variety of trees.  I’m a moderately better landscape painter than when I started.  Not as much better or clearer as I’d hoped.  But better.  I learned about plein air competitions and what materials and frames I’d want to use to attend in the future.  I learned about my own “stuff” and methods and where I can streamline.  I learned about my endurance–and I’m glad to say that I have some.  I feel ready to begin landscape painting again with a  new vigor, ready to receive the fall and winter.  I also realized how many painters there are in the world and that there are a lot of good ones.  This inspires me to become better, to pay attention and focus.  I am happy that there are people like me who want to spend their lives outside painting the light and air.

If it weren’t for Joyce, who brought me an amazing birthday lunch yesterday, and framed for me constantly, and for Jon, who shlepped me back and forth from North B I don’t know how many times, I couldn’t have participated in this event, and that would have been really sad.  I am so grateful to Jon and to Joyce.

I’m appreciative of all the folks who put the event together—It was a great deal of hard work, time and money to do so, and I do not take those efforts and expenditures for granted.  I was happy to participate and I would gladly do it again.

Tomorrow I’ll get my stuff from Joyce and drop it off for the show:  2 for the competition, and 6 for the exhibit.   The “Quick Draw” is in the afternoon—I’m traveling light with gray chartpak markers and micron pens!  I’ll work on matboards.  I’m planning to draw the other painters in the outdoor environment—maybe a few trees, too. It’s two hours.  Should be a little different than what other folks are doing.

Coyote Flaco Opening, 4 SEP 2010

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

Opening Reception @ South Street Cafe, Recent Works, 13 Aug 2010

Monday, August 16th, 2010

These are a few of the photos taken by Mike Kornelsen, Denver photog and great friend, at the recent South Street Cafe opening of the Recent Works Exhibit. The photos are overlapped here, so if there’s one you want to see in it’s entirety, you have to click on it.  When I learn how to fix that, I will do so.

Happy 8th Anniversary!

Sunday, June 6th, 2010

Behind Powers’ Market (My First Painting Ever), 6 June 2002, oil on canvas board, 11″ x 14″

6 June 2002 was the first time I ever held a paintbrush, felt the creamy texture of oil paint on canvas.  This is the first painting I ever made.  It was with my friends, Stella and Sophia—incredible painters both—behind Powers’ Market in North Bennington.  They painted the lake and the waterfall.  I painted the dumpster and the parking lot.  And my life was forever changed.

That day Stella lent me her supplies, but the week following I made my first art supply order with all the money our family couldn’t really afford to spare.  Subsequently I changed my work life, my daily routines, the way I related to everything in order to accomodate this new love:  Painting.  Fortunately for me, my daughters (now both amazing artists in different media themselves)  and my beautiful husband were willing to make room, too.  It hasn’t been without extreme challenges at times.  Part of being in a true family, in a real relationship, is accepting people for who they are, accepting what matters to them and making room for each person to be themselves while also keeping the family alive and making sure no one of the couple is bearing more than their share of the emotional, physical and psychological and spiritual expense. Above all making sure that the well-being and best interests of the children are the number one priority always.  At the same time the parents must also continually evolve their own interests and identity—both in service of themselves, but more importantly so that their children have a model for how to live in the world.  How to be one’s own true self and live one’s own life. We teach by living.  No one can ever understand from the oustide what the exquisite delicacy, creativity and balance, ecstasy and pain of this means:  Only those involved on the inside do. It is the ultimate “golden mean”.  Eight years ago today I painted my first painting, and, by the grace of my family strength, love and life, I’v e been making artworks almost every day since.

I will forever be grateful to Stella Ehrich for opening that artistic door for me.

Jon just called on his way home from fly fishing with his college buds in the Adirondacks and asked me for a painting for his friend’s camp.  He said, “Even though it’s your painting, it’s also a piece of me in it.”  No truer words.

Happy anniversary to us all.

Yesod shebe tiferet…Foundation in beauty.

Sunday, April 18th, 2010

“Tiferet” oil on stainless steel refrigerator door,#3 of 7 of the “Sustenance in Exhile” project 5770/2010 Counting the Omer project

Tonight, Sunday night, April 18, 2010, we count twenty days, which is two weeks and six days of the Omer.

Jon is my foundation, he fills my life with beauty and stability.  He is tiferet in every sense of that word which is so unique among the sefirot, the divine characteristics.  He is my everything—lovingkindness, strength, beauty, endurance, humility/gratitude and foundation and ultimately he embodies personal dignity as well.  Everyone says he is a saint because of how he puts up with me.  But he is not a saint.  Definitely not.  He is a man–in every sense of that word.  My beautiful man. Everything good about me I owe to him and to our daughters.  Everything good about my life I owe to him. A saint is loving because that’s what saints do, it’s no accomplishment—A man, however,  has a choice about who he is, how he behaves…..

Jon is tiferet and everything tiferet implies, by hard work and hard choices.

This is the third refrigerator door of the Sustenance in Exhile Series:  Tiferet.

sketches of jon

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

oil sketch of jon

sketch of jon reclining

sketch of jon sitting

Exhibition: “Jon”

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

Jon

Jon Lev is the love of Viola Moriarty’s life and the father of their two beautiful daughters, Anna and Phoebe.

Jon (at Stratton Mountain)

Jon at Stratton Mountain

Jon (reading at Stratton), collection of Victoria Jeffries

Jon (reading at Stratton), collection of Victoria Jeffries

Jon Reading at Ponquogue

Jon Reading at Ponquogue

Jonathan L. Lev grew up in North Adams, Massachusetts, worked and lived in Colorado for many years, and now resides in Bennington, Vermont. He is the Superintendent of the North Berkshire School Union in Massachusetts.

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