Pack’s Point Mid Morning, Mid October
Kitchen Mesa in October
Matrimonial Mesa
The Road to Ghost Ranch
Wrinkle in Time

Everyone wants more time right? Time often opens it’s self up to us, and we don’t want it: the time stuck in traffic, the time waiting in a waiting room. My wise husband taught me years ago to use the time that we have, and I have made a game out of trying to enjoy time’s wrinkles.
I painted the above painting a couple weeks ago, while my son recovered from an appendectomy. As I headed to the hospital I grabbed a change of clothes, a snack, my water bottle, my phone charger, and I chucked them into my pastel bag (which was cocked and loaded (key to enjoying time’s wrinkles)). I didn’t paint in the ER, or while he was in the OR, but the next day he napped and I found a wrinkle to paint in.
Today I have happily found another wrinkle – here is my airport studio. Before you tell yourself how organized I am, notice the yellow, mark-of-shame, late check-in tag on my luggage.
Bonito Canyon

I spent a perfect day here painting. My boys ran up neighboring Argentina canyon across the crest trail and down Bonito where we met for a picnic. My girls splashed up and down the stream I was painting (look close they are in both photos). As you can see by the second photo I was in full sun with no umbrella, so my painting came out too dark. It is hard to judge values when you are getting blasted by sunlight. Good lesson. Bonito day.
Elwin

7″x5″ Pastel on sanded paper by Dana (an open studio visitor)
One of my favorite things about running an open studio is helping people realize images that are in their heads. It is like solving a puzzle for me. This study as done on one such afternoon. Dana sat at my open studio, having just lost her uncle Elwin. She wasn’t a portrait artist, she had limited time, and a limited selection of pastels, but a desire to express. So I sat with her and suggested she do a value study, in colors that weren’t flesh tones just somehow represented her Uncle. As she worked she told me about her uncle.
About Elwin (in Dana’s words): He was just short of his 88th bday. He was born on a farm in southeast NE and raised thru the depression. Since I can remember, he’s been a treasure hunter. Hugely interested in rocks of all kinds and rock hunting… also collected antiques and memorabilia. He had a great eye for finding something that has value. Traveled the world leading people on tours. He had over 70,000 photos on file, and was the go to guy for entities that needed a photo of any given situation (for a price). He was a top seller in eBay until the day he died.
Firefly
The window’s curtain, lightly blown,
Reveals the lawn that’s newly mown.
But life is dark before my eyes,
For dead of night has swept the skies.
A sudden flash disturbs my sight –
From stillness comes a blink of light.
I grasp the door without a sound,
And step out on the dewy ground.
Across the yard, it zips around,
The firefly that I have found.
So silently I move along
To music of the cricket’s song.
I focus on my bright delight,
And lift my arm up to its height.
I’ve cupped my hands and soon it’s done.
I’ve caught the little ray of sun.
A rush of guilt envelops me,
For now the dark is all I see.
I peer inside my two cupped hands,
And there the sad, gray creature stands.
I part my hands and let it see.
It lights up just once more for me.
It spreads its wings so it may fly
And lifts itself into the sky.
I thrill to watch and see it go,
Happy knowing what I know:
That it will always, always fly.
My light and joy will never die.
-Julia Powers









