Hippness is not a state of mind, It’s a fact of life!
-Cannonball Adderley
This is a piece I’ve been working on here and there for James Gurney’s Art by Committee. It’s a monthly art prompt that he hosts on his blog, Gurney Journey. I really like to participate when I can as it shows another side of my work.
You can see all of the other entries on November 15th. Be warned…. once you get there, you won’t want to leave! His blog is chocked full of valuable information and inspiring examples of his work! You might even consider buying his new book Imaginative Realism. Check it out!
This is an illustration I did for a poem in the November issue of Stories for Children Magazine. It’s a cute poem by Vicki Rogers about a boy who eats a pickle and gets himself into…. a pickle of a situation!
You can read the poem HERE
A skinny little Hallows Eve Faerie…. not your average Tinkerbell!
The Green Thumb
A wicked little Halloween tale!
Link Here
There once was an old woman who possessed a remarkable “green thumb.” Flowers bloomed, trees bore fruit, the grass was always green on her small half an acre lot…. and yet the land that surrounded her oasis was barren, dry and void of life. The only interruption in the landscape was the lifeless and cumbersome machinery poised to devour the small Eden she had tenderly cared for.
The man who spearheaded the conspiracy, had many times been dismissed. In his gluttony he conceived a plan to torture the woman by detaching a part her anatomy each time she denied him access to her property. The intent was not to kill but to terrify.
The first surprise encounter resulted in the loss of a thumb.
When the ambulance arrived to hasten the woman to the hospital for medical treatment, they found her drenched in blood still tending her garden amidst her great pain. Sadly the woman died en route to the hospital.
While the villan in this evil ambush remained anxious about the woman’s death, the glee in his victory absorbed any thoughts of humanity he had left.
As he surveyed his newly acquired property he became aware of a sound. A familar mumbling, a quiet sing song voice of adoration. As he moved into the garden he found her… busily tending to herself in the garden. “You see” she said “Everything I touch grows…. even me ……..”
Adapted from a story first shown n the television series “The Night Gallery“
The book of chosen for last night’s bedtime story was The Widow’s Broom by Chris Van Allsburg. The picture are delightfully dreamy and the story is engaging with a surprise ending!