watercolor painting of chicken by emily weil

daily painting | maker farm hen

Chickens. What could be cuter? (Well, living next door to a rooster would probably be annoying, but this coop only has female fowls). Maker Farm in Alameda was the destination of a field trip for the drawing class I was teaching, and I do suggest you check it out (https://bayareamaker.farm). They welcome visitors and have marvelous goats, pigs, flowers, ducks and friendly human farmers. A place of delight for anyone, let alone artists with sketchbooks. I took some photos of those clucking cuties for painting subject matter, and on this sunny day as I reviewed the pics it brought back fond memories of the kind folks there, my delightful drawing class students, the silly and adorable goats and the spotted piggie (who was a bit of a bully and nudged me around). Getting my watercolors out today was fun — I felt joy in creating today, rather than making myself do art (which isn’t a bad thing) which has been my M.O. for the better part of these past 12 months. I feel truly grateful to be alive and experiencing this amazing world. As well as eating the tasty eggs I brought home (ooh, and the lovely colors of the eggs! From a beautiful light blue to golden yellow to creamy white. Gorgeous! Almost hated to crack them open, but I was hungry). Yum-ola.

9″ x 12″ watercolor, acrylic pen, ink, pencil on paper = $140

 

 

 

daily painting | piglets

Wrestling piglets in the straw-strewn dirt — what could be cuter? These inseparable litter mates, I am told, will grow up and get huge. So I really enjoyed their cheeky adorableness out at the new location of Maker Farm next to Ploughshares Nursery. Charlotte’s Web comes to mind, with Charlotte saving Wilbur the pig. I loved those books, Stuart Little in particular. Probably because Stuart could fit into those clever little matchboxes and be safe, a feeling I longed for when I was Emily Little (how I loved those illustrations!). Today’s trip to buy groceries felt far from safe and made me so anxious, with Covid marching through California and getting more clever. Always happy after a crowded store experience to come home and scrub my hands with Clorox and Brillo pads and gargle with Lysol. Ugh. But this too shall piss — uh, pass. Happy Merry New Year, everyone. All the cliches have already been said about 2020, but my wish for 2021 is that our hearts can heal from loss and we can have hope again. And give each other lots and lots of hugs. LOTS.

7″ x 10″ watercolor, pen, acrylic ink on paper = $90

 

 

 

daily painting | maker farm hoofer

A couple of days ago I grabbed my bike to get outdoors and try to outride the dark thoughts creeping in under my eyebrows. I enjoy riding down the estuary to where the shipping cranes on- and off-load the hulking, ocean-traveling ships. Such a funky, interesting mix of sights and scenes — the clanking of the primary-colored containers as they are loaded onto the ships, small sailboats dwarfed by enormous rust-stained hulls, maybe some cute little oystercatchers pecking at tidbits at the tide’s edge with their cartoony, orange beaks; a few folks living in their RVs, humans letting their pets loose at the dog run. It’s so splashy and unsanitized. Nearby is a fun nursery called Ploughshares, a collaborative operation and a good spot to buy plants for your garden and support the local community. I was delighted to ride past their spot and see folks with rakes cleaning up an open lot alongside backhoes moving dirt around, sheep chomping on composted refuse and piglets wrestling with each other in the mud. Turns out Maker Farm, which had been next door to my marina, found their new home. They let me come in the gate and photograph the activities, and this friendly and curious hoofer came over to say hello. It’s a kind of figure drawing, right? Sheepy, shaggy models. These unexpected and fun moments are such a relief from dodging grief bombs. Last night, while out on my deck, a Great Blue Heron swung around the corner of my house and flew within a few feet of me. I could hardly catch my breath, it was such a magnificent surprise. Beats hell out of dodging raindrops dripping through my ceiling onto my bed in the middle of the night, but that’s another adventure too boring to describe. A Christmas night wake-up, but it’s OK now. Moving soggily onward.

7.5″ x 7.5″ watercolor, pen, acrylic spats on paper = $75