Epic
Posted: May 11, 2013 Filed under: Uncategorized Leave a comment »
It’s been an epic production period – five large new billboard paintings in six months. As we wind down and get ready to ship everything out, I’m feeling so crazy lucky to have had such a great group in the studio. Each person came with a totally unique skill set - and overall there was just a great amount of breadth and competency as we faced each challenge. Thanks so much to Patrick, CJ and Kelly who are painting fiends, and to and to Peggy, Lucy, Jane, Lani who all also contributed significant stints. The studio just seems to get better each year.
Compound Garden
Posted: March 27, 2013 Filed under: A-Z West 2 Comments »
Last spring I started growing things in metal stock tanks in the middle of the shipping container compound (above)… this spring the garden is going full force. Three tanks are filled with greens (two are mine, and one is Emmett’s) and we will soon add a fourth for a summer crop of tomatoes and cucumbers. The prepper in me sometimes wishes for more room, but the high metal sides do a really good job of keeping the critters out. And I’ve been wanting to read up on vertical gardening and square foot gardening to see if there is a way to maximize the space that we already have.
One great thing about the garden is green smoothies every morning. Our friend Kartz (one of my big-time heroes) battled brain cancer with kale juice, and got me interested in the alkaline diet last time she came for a visit – I’ve been thinking that I need to write about diets soon, and all of the different ones that people I know prescribe to. (there are a lot!)
Edge of Something
Posted: March 25, 2013 Filed under: Uncategorized 1 Comment »
AZ West started out as a tiny 700 sq foot homestead cabin and over the last twelve years has evolved into an elaborate compound of structures and parcels of land. For my first six years in the desert all water was hauled in by trucks that were notoriously unreliable. We lived by the rule “if it’s yellow let it mellow, if it’s brown flush it down”. House guests who offered to wash dishes were watched with an eagle eye to make sure that they didn’t use more then a trickle. Even the cooling systems (evaporative) require water – so when there is non, life becomes untenable.
Nowadays I have a well, and the house borders on the edge of bourgeois. But there are regular reality checks that serve as remiders that we are living in the desert . Last year the pump in the 660 foot deep well failed and had to be pulled and replaced two times in less then twelve months – and last week a secondary pump that pushes water from a holding talk to all different parts of the property had to be replaced. It isn’t a question of whether a part of the system will fail, but a question of when it will fail. As a result I’ve learned the art of appreciation – this week we are celebrating our shiny new blue pump that is optimistically pushing water to all edges of the property.
Women
Posted: March 22, 2013 Filed under: Uncategorized 1 Comment »
Last weekend Katie, Sarah and Kate hosted a Women’s dinner. I’m of a generation (of women) who pushed hard to be beyond gender and I’ve spent so much of my life trying to defy expectations based on things like class, sex or age – So I have to admit that I had mixed feelings about celebrating my gender identity . But I’m an eternal fan of Katie, who I trust completely, so I set out following a hand drawn map and a series of signs that said “women”. We parked in the fenced yard of a small stucco house and then walked down an old washed out road that turned into a rough trail that terminated at the ruins of a stone cabin.
It was high up in Pioneertown where the nights get chilly – and there were few flashlights between us, but it was a really extraordinary evening. It also made me realize how many truly exceptional people have moved here in the last two years. (both women and men alike) Katie who is out here teaching desert youth, Angela who lives in a world of her own, Peggy who I think just found herself, Kelly who has wonderfully dry humor and deadpan honesty, Lucy who is totally sincere and sweet, another Kelly who became my new hero when she told me that she lives in the back of her red Toyota pickup for up to eight months a year (while tracking tortoises), And I reconnected with Stephanie Smith who has been here for years doing her thing – which is ever evolving and always fascinating.
I’ve been living in the desert for almost thirteen years – and every so often there is a real shift. Right seems to be one of those times. Several years ago the recession put a damper on investors snapping up desert properties to make a quick buck – and now those of us who are left on the ones who truly love this lifestyle and couldn’t live anywhere else. And being added to this mix is a younger generation of desert explorers bringing a new depth and thoughtfulness to our community. I know things will continue to change, but sometimes I wonder if we will look back on this period as one of those moments when things seemed to be in just the right equilibrium.
Visit A-Z West
Posted: March 19, 2013 Filed under: A-Z West 1 Comment »Truck Stalking
Posted: March 14, 2013 Filed under: Research 1 Comment »I have a long running obsession with Australian trucks and off road camping vehicles. On this last trip I also saw some great flat-beds that are manufactured to fit on smaller trucks – each one comes with different sorts of attachments, work boxes etc. We didn’t have much time to scout trucks, but I managed a few sightings while on a drive to a camping store with Lucina and Charlie.
Here are a few other Australian camping rigs that it’s easy to become obsessed with: The Earthcruiser, the Wothahellizat, and trailers like the Conqueror series or another vehicle also called the Conqueror that looks a bit like a sci-fi motorhome.
National Gallery Homestead
Posted: March 12, 2013 Filed under: Exhibitions 2 Comments »Here is the Homestead as it was being installed in the sculpture garden of the National Gallery. The rest of the installation proceeded with a few other challenges that were all resolved by an extremely patient crew.

And by the end of Thursday the Unit was spit polished and ready for it’s new resident Charlie Sofo – an Australian artist who will be living in the sculpture garden and conducting his practice for two periods over the next month. You can follow Charlie’s blog here. Charlie is an awesome guy and a very good pick as a Homestead resident. The first day of his inhabitation, his friends Joyce and Michael (who coincidentally have a daughter who lives in 29 Palms!) and his brother Liv who works with them, brought fresh vegetables from their organic garden in Camberra. The next morning, feeling a bit like a stalker, I checked on the unit and discovered traces of Charlie’s inhabitation….
Secret of the Stump
Posted: March 10, 2013 Filed under: Exhibitions 1 Comment »I’ve just spent the last week installing a new Homestead Unit at the National Gallery of Australia. Little did we realize that a stump that I acquired from a, friend who reclaims trees in Idylwild, and then turned into a stool for the homestead, would be ferrying a few boring beetle passengers. The sea air must have rejuvenated the beetles, and when we unpacked the unit in Canberra there was a bunch of sawdust in the packing blanket.
Since Australia is a essentially a giant island with it’s own unique ecosystem they are super strict about marauding pestilence – so a team of conservators worked with Australian Department of Quarantine to assess the invaders and and to check if they had spread to other parts of the artwork or shipping crates. Ultimately it was decided that the stump would spend two weeks in deep freeze chamber that the National Gallery has set up for exactly these sorts of situations.





























