Around the Curve

melaniestokesart.com
Around the Curve
18×24 Oil
$275

My husband loves to walk in unknown territory.  Take a walk in a park with him and he is sure to leave the path.  Land uncharted, thick woods without paths, hills to climb and overlooks to view… now, that is his type of hiking!  Even when we have a path, he is the one to say, “let’s see just around that curve!” and the hike continues a little longer.  Are you getting the picture?

There is something about the possibility of seeing just around a curve that brings hope.  You don’t know what is ahead, but you can always hope.  Maybe the view will be better.  Maybe there is light around the corner. Maybe there is a clean restroom!

In this life, we are reminded to hold on to hope.  “I hope you get well.”   “I hope things work out for you.”  ” I hope the world doesn’t fall apart.”   Hopes and dreams can be shallow.  Yet, hope is what causes us to push ahead,  to get out of bed and see the sun rise, to keep living on this earth, until we have our hope of heaven with God.

Just Around the Curve — keep hoping!  and praying, and serving, and loving.

The Next Time You Eat Shrimp…

melaniestokesart.com
15×30 Oil

We all love a shrimp dinner!  Summer sun, beaches, coastal vacations and  SHRIMP,  are a delight to me, and probably you, too!

I was on this Florida dock in May, early in the morning, so artists could catch morning light in their paintings.  The boat on the left looked like it had seen better days, half-sunken into the water.  The one on the right is a shrimp boat, with empty nets all rolled up.  The birds flew around it, perhaps attracted by the smell and all the edibles being stirring up in the water.

As I was there to learn about painting, to watch the masters, to listen to their wisdom, I noticed a shrimper walking toward our group.  His truck was parked under the shelter we were using.  His body language looked dejected and tired, his lunch box or tool box weighing him down.  One of the guys in our group was talking to him and later told us what he said.

The shrimper had been out all night, doing what shrimpers do, trying to haul in those pounds and pounds of fresh shrimp that we so eagerly desire.   After a night of hard work, something happened that caused him to have to cut his nets and let the whole catch go.  (I’m not a shrimper so I don’t know the details.)  But I understood enough to realize how difficult his job is, how much he had lost, how dejected he was, all because we love shrimp.  

He probably does not want everyone to stop eating shrimp.  Then he would be totally out of a job!  But, the next time I eat shrimp… I will think of this man, and so many others like him, who live on the coast, smell like fish all night, come into the dock in early morning hours and then have to clean out a boat.  They may go home to a family, beginning their day with good news or bad news, and lay down to sleep during the daylight hours of a beautiful day.

Things aren’t always as picturesque as the image that we see.  That is the story behind this painting.

 

Updated Website

New Website Look!

Same domain name –  different hosting – learning curve for me!

How do you like it?  Click around and give me your feedback on the new website construction.  Anything missing?  Something you wonder about?  Help me trouble-shoot by trying it out.  Check out the Portfolio of current work, too.

You will notice I don’t have the Archives of Sold Paintings.  Maybe I will add those later, as I know several of you have shared your purchases with friends that way.    And, the old blog posts are gone!  (I saved them, but don’t plan to post them all again.)  So, this is the first of many new blog posts to come.

Recent Highlights:

May – Solo show at Averitt Center for the Arts, Statesboro, GA
– spent a week of fun learning at Plein Air South, Apalachicola, FL

June – teaching adult painting classes at MAC on Main Art Gallery, Thomson,
– working on commissions and daily paintings
– preparing for the next solo show in November! (stay tuned)