I have spent the past week taking photographs of my Muir Beach studio to accompany an article about my art and studio space for a new magazine, Western Art & Architecture. It has been a learning experience. It has shown me how I have cultivated an eye for detail, and this assignment really challenged me because it called for a wide-angle view. In fact, I don’t even own a wide-angle lens and had to rent one from Adolph Gasser. Seeing my creative space with this broad vision was rather exciting, and made me more aware of how the architecture of the space with its high ceiling offers a sense of expansiveness that I often take for granted. Above the clutter of my collage making materials there is clear space - clean, white upperwalls and empty air. I like to think that this is where my ideas swirl around and germinate before landing.
I am a mixed media photographer and a lover of old maps, surrealism, the ocean, and the body’s wealth of wisdom. I started this blog in 2007 to chronicle my experiences in my actual art studio, but overtime have come to learn that the studio has no boundaries. Wherever I am being creative is my studio. Here you can learn more about my sources of inspiration, new work in progress, playful projects with my young daughters, and more. Enjoy!
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