Happy Spring! Part 2

I’m sorry but I when was working on this earlier, I accidently hit post instead of preview. This is the post in its entirety. Sorry for the confusion.

I’m a little shocked to realize I haven’t blogged since November. After I got my facebook account stolen, I became frustrated with the whole online process. I felt I needed a short break from it, but it became a long break instead. I wish I could report that I created some fantastic works of art during the winter, but, instead all I did was take care of myself.

I have a few unfinished projects, but mainly I’ve been practicing the art of living. The years since COVID started have been a time of making adjustments, but I plowed on, adjusted myself, and kept moving (anxiously) forward. But the truth is, I needed to take some time and process all that’s gone on in society and in my own life.

I needed a retreat – not an artist’s retreat – but a retreat from expectations. I wanted to try to figure out what to concentrate on, what to do with my life now that I’m in my 60s. But in these months, I haven’t figured out any real direction. Rather, I’ve figured out that I don’t want to concentrate on any one thing but flow along with my life. To simply take care of myself and create some things. I want to just enjoy being alive and unencumbered by the fear and hatred so many are suffering from these days. I want to create things, but more like a child – jump around, change direction, and spin in circles. Of course, I’ll have anxieties and health problems, still. I’ll want to do more than I can reasonably accomplish. But now I’ve learned a little bit more about how to just be me.

Last week, we had a warm day, a friend took me to the Dixon Gallery and Gardens here in Memphis to see their amazing collection of daffodils and tulips. It had been cold, but that day was perfect. It was such a delight to see it all, to see all that had survived the difficult winter, and feel the warm sunshine. We’d dressed warmly but shed layers as the day went by.

Here’s some of what we saw:

I got as close as I could in my wheelchair

Deer sculpture in the shadows

I loved this tree so much I wanted to hug it but….
I could only get close enough to pet it.

Bloom where you’re planted.

One of four bronze sculptures around the Dixon fountain — tortoise and hare not competing

The photographer at work

In giving myself permission to not write everyday, I’ve started writing again. I’ve also started drawing and sketching for some visual storytelling.

I’m going to use my blog to show my art, still, but also to post some of the things I used to put on facebook: links to articles, funny things, short rants about city life, maybe even a cartoon or joke.

If you like any of these photos, please feel free to share, download or print them.

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Thanks for reading my blog. Feel free to share it, if you’d like.

This blog is brought to you by the generosity of people who support me on Patreon , buy my art, and who support me in so many different ways. 

If you’d like to make a one time donation, you can do so at paypal

Cards and prints on some of my art is available on Redbubble.  

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If you find a typo, let me know, and I’ll send you a postcard.

What is the The Gift?

I painted a 4×7″ painting on wood panel back in 2020. My son painted the background and didn’t see a way forward with it, so he asked if I wanted to work on it. I did. I wanted to do white outlines on a dark background, practice some spontaneity. My subject matter is often disability and mortality. The result was The Gift.

The Gift by Joy Murray and son, 2020, acrylic paint and ink on board

The most frequent question I got about it was “What is the gift?” I didn’t have a definite answer. The pandemic hit just as I was finishing it. We were all thinking about out mortality. But shifting my gaze from my disability, from Covid, from a narrow definition of life seemed like a gift. All my friends and loved ones, I realized, ease my journey. They are a gift. The beauty of nature, all that lives and transforms, is a gift.

The painting was purchased but I saw it a few months ago, in the midst of a dense depression, and I wished I still had it. I decided to do another one, bigger, and include it in the Look Closer series.

Two months later, I’ve finished it. The flower outlines photograph as blue but they are really purple.

The Gift by Joy Murray, 2022, acrylic paint and ink on canvas, 20×24″
The Gift, detail
The Gift, detail
The Gift, detail

Again, the question people ask me about it is What is the Gift? I still don’t have a solid answer. I give the same answer I did 2 years ago. But in painting this, I realized how much acceptance of the shape and struggles of my life is a gift. And if there is no way of getting “better” or no way of surviving in this rich and beautiful mortal world, acceptance and hope for an afterlife is a gift, even if it turns out to be an illusion (I love my illusions). A flower that dies really becomes a seed, and then a new plant. It’s a gift to have these thoughts. Whatever direction I go, the friends and loved ones I have, the new ones I meet, the memories of those who have already died — all of this is the gift. Life is the gift — not always an easy gift, and definitely not a permanent one. Perhaps I’m a seed.

When I paint, I glance into the changing and amazing nature of life, no matter where I am on my journey.

Is that the gift?

What do you think?

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Thanks for reading my blog. Feel free to share it, if you’d like.

This blog is brought to you by the generosity of people who support me on Patreon , buy my art, and who support me in so many different ways. 

If you’d like to make a one time donation, you can do so at paypal

Cards and prints on some of my art is available on Redbubble.  

You can subscribe to this blog by email in the link below this post.

If you find a typo, let me know, and I’ll send you a postcard.

Happy Thanksgiving 2022

I am so thankful for all of you who support my art and my blog. I hope you have a blessed and peaceful holiday. I want to remember all the simple things I can be grateful for.

One tree has thousands of leaves but looks like only one thing, until this time of year when it lets go of so much. I can see how complex life is, all the colors — dark, light, brilliant, strong, delicate.

She Came Back as a Tree by Joy Murray

Frankd Robinson Exhibit October 2022

Good News — This exhibit will be up until 2023! So if you missed it in October, you can still go.

I was able to see the Frankd Robinson mid-career retrospective exhibit for the second time on Friday. My companion and I were the only one’s there, so I was able to get some photos of the work and enjoy the space. I’d been to the opening but was enjoying the art and people too much to get any good photos.

The exhibit is in 2 well lit rooms. Robinson’s work is often very dense with collage and elements that practically leap off the canvas. For him, almost anything can be a canvas — a skateboard, a bottle, an ironing board, a cooler top. The way the art is arranged gives each piece enough space that you can “read” it, study it, and really absorb it.

Everything is art to him. He uses labels, razor blades, rich thick paint, and words to create figures that display all that passes through our lives — figures emerging from and carrying all the confusion that surrounds us. I can’t compare his work to another artist because I don’t know of anyone who has such a unique style. He addresses problems of race, health, and poverty with power and grace. He shows chaos that nurtures beauty, and unlocks the grief of life and the human condition. His materials also create a space for humor and wonder.

In 2009, he had a show at the Dixon Gallery. Their bio of him said:

Frank D. Robinson Jr. is a Memphis native, obtaining his BFA from the University of Memphis before completing his MFA at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He was also active in the noted summer youth-mural program led by George Hunt and Charles Davis locally in the early 1980’s, and was later a member of the NIA artist’s collective….

Robinson describes himself as a ‘recyclist’, able to turn anything he finds into art… While working at a charter school he would find garbage in the parking lot when he arrived each morning. He decided to make art from what would normally be discarded, teaching the children to transform bad situations into positive experiences by “turning trash into treasure.

Since then, he has had major health challenges, but has continued to work, and continued to create art that acknowledges pain and yet reflects optimism and energy.

Since it is a retrospective show, I got a deeper understanding of the stages of his career. It’s like a history written in the color and ephemera that makes up our lives. It’s the complex vision of a man who has faced mortality in many different ways and continues to “trust his struggle.”

The Martha and Robert Fogelman of Art at the University of Memphis, at 3715 Central, is open from 9-4 Monday through Friday. If you need directions, you can call the UofM art department at 901-678-3052.

Here are some examples of his work, but if you get a chance to see it in person, please do. It’s stunning.

Frankd Robinson and I talk about the healing power of art.
Frankd Robinson influencing and encouraging the community. Or as he says, giving “Love Never Fails”

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Thanks for reading my blog. Feel free to share it, if you’d like.

If you scroll to the bottom of this post, past the comments, there’s a place to subscribe to the blog and it will be delivered to your e-mailbox each time I post.

This blog is brought to you by the generosity of people who support me on Patreon , buy my art, and who support me in so many different ways. 

If you’d like to make a one time donation, you can do so at paypal

Cards and prints on some of my art is available on Redbubble.  

You can subscribe to this blog by email in the link below this post.

If you find a typo, let me know, and I’ll send you a postcard.