Reconsidering 2020 & the Challenges!

Life is full of challenges! Over the last year we have all had to move outside our comfort zones. Doing things differently and thinking in a different way are not always a bad thing.

Lovely Lady | 12″x9″ | oil on board | $420

Like me I am sure your usual schedule for the day has been run over by a truck and thrown to the wind! Instead of feeling lost and without a schedule come up with a new one. You may be surprised how much better it works for you and your family. Working from home in my studio is something that I have done for many years. I always felt it gave me the best of both worlds. I am able to take a walk, throw a load of laundry in and enjoy lunch on my own front porch if and when I choose. The one thing I don’t have is kids at home during this time. I realize this element changes things greatly especially if you were to be educator as well during this time. While taking over the enormous role of teacher many may be realizing that the teacher wasn’t the problem after all…I know it can be hard to believe as a parent. I have been there myself not that long ago.

There are challenges that arise from working at home but you are the one that gets to figure out how to fix them. Where are you going to work that you can have the desired atmosphere to most efficiently do your job? Also it isn’t a “play for free card”, it simply allows you to do things in the order you choose. As long as the work gets done you can do it in any order you choose and at any time you choose. I find myself working more than eight hours a day as I love what I do. You may find the same thing happening to you. Working more hours also happens due to the lack of interruptions that you would normally get in the office.

Repair of a Broken Heart | 12″x9″ | oil on board | $420

Much of my inspiration comes from the land and what it produces. I’ve painted everything from mushrooms and flowers to landscapes and crumbling homes from years gone by. Growing up in the Hawkeye state of Iowa, I spent many days playing in creeks, fields, barns and the great outdoors. To this day I find the outdoors to be the most inspirational and healing. We were very fortunate to have this time of quarantine begin in the Spring! I took many walks and spent much time watching flowers bloom and the countryside come to life as it turned from green to once again burnt oranges and warm yellows. The virus hasn’t stopped any of the beautiful plants, flowers or trees from delivering their comfort and reassurance that everything will be okay.

Some day soon our lives will return to a new kind of normal after this all over. Part of what I have been doing during this time is spending time in discovery taking a class and working with an amazing coach that has opened my mind to a new way of using color and a new way of painting. Abstract paintings are something that I never thought I’d do, but after taking an enticing class at the Burren College of Art in Ballyvaughn, Ireland my curiosity was peaked. I love the idea of my paintings leaving a bit more for the viewer to interpret themselves. With my curiosity being stirred and ripe I turned to another yet another abstract class that just happened to during this time of quarantine. What an amazing stroke of luck! It was just what I needed to give me something exciting to look forward to each week. The class that I took was with the wonderful Gwen Fox. I just had no idea how much I would enjoy and learn from her online class.

Dare to Dream | 12″x9″ | oil on board | $420

Gwen has done an amazing job of encouraging me to look outside my comfortable box. I have discovered just how many colors can be created with just five simple colors and this I found absolutely fascinating while just playing with paint! Color is something that I have ALWAYS loved.

Painting abstracts may or may not be my calling but I sure have had a time of discovery opening that box and spending time there to find out.

Tell me what new box have you opened during this time

and have you enjoyed it? Will it be sticking around for 2021?

“NATURE’S GIFTS” | New Series for Holiday Giving!

Margaret Dukeman has joined the Artists Sunday movement!

Join me for Artists Sunday on November 29th!

It’s like Black Friday or Small Business Saturday all rolled into one for ART!

Each of the pieces has been gold, silver or copper-leafed on the edges for a frameless option!

Give something special, unique and hand-crafted this holiday season! Plus, by shopping with artist you’re also supporting the local economy. Join me on November 29, 2020 for Artists Sunday, by gifting and shopping art to support the artists you love.

Beautiful, original ART from Artists around the country for those extra special people on your list!

MargaretDukeman.com

To prepare for the big day, I have created a new series of work called “Nature’s Gifts” on 6″x 12″x .5″ boards featuring my love of the garden and all that the land provides us. Each of these stunning pieces has an either silver, gold or copper-leafed edges so that you can forgo framing and keep it simple or frame it later if you like. These flowers and colors are sure to warm you over the cold winter season. They will bring Summer to the side table or mantle for your favorite gardener or plant lover. I am giving a 20% discount on these pieces Friday, 28th – Monday, 30th. Simply enter the code ARTISTSSUNDAY2020 when checking out in my Etsy Shop online or message me for personal help in making a purchase. As a bonus there is also gift wrap on every purchase (when requested in the notes of the purchase) and free shipping within the continental United States and $25 for International. So order early and know that your gift is on its way to your recipient or yourself. Make it easy!

Check them out early as they are one-of-a-kind and I have only a limited number of these beauties available. A great way to share with those asking “What can I get you for Christmas” is to create a shareable wishlist using one of these tools. Then send it out to your family and friends. Be sure to include your favorite pieces from my collection!

Make your gift as unique as the person you are shopping for. Don’t miss out on the painting of your choice by waiting as these pieces are absolutely one-of-a-kind and limited in number!

If you’d like to schedule a personal zoom call for shopping or a personal studio visit please message me at: MargaretDukeman@gmail.com

2020 Echoes Through Art

As we all know this is no normal year…2020 seems to have its own plans for us.!

On a “normal” year I’d have spent 6-8 weeks in Ireland both walking in the tracks of my ancestors, having a solo exhibition and collecting new images and material for the upcoming years work.

Since an Ireland adventure wasn’t going to happen this year and with 2020 being an adventure all its own, I decided to reach out to people on my street and across the states to collaborate on paintings.  Like everyone else I was feeling lonely and a bit lost as to how to make the most of this strange time. 

I wanted to put words to my feelings and I thought if I did, others probably wanted to as well.  Being a graphic designers I loved the idea of incorporating a background of words that helped us define this year for now and years to come with a piece of artwork.  Not that anyone will be forgetting this year any time soon I’m sure!

While creating the painting it is important to me that the majority of the words show through the painting.  I spend a lot of time looking at the words and translating their feelings to images and colors.  Sometimes the individual adds a drawing and that is incorporated with what I develop as well.  Each piece has been incredibly unique while at the same time echoing similar challenges.

The echoes in each piece definitely have overlaps as each collaborator puts forth their personal trials.  College students, Parents, Teachers, Small Business Owners, you name it they each have their trials as well as their friends and families challenges which create a plethora of mixed feelings.

My hope would be to bring a bit of comfort and a distant hug to the collaborator by combining their words and my art.

“Everything You’ve Ever Wanted Is On The Other Side Of Fear.”

George Addair

Uncomfortable = Growth

Using uncomfortable situations for growth both artistically and personally.

Who would choose to be uncomfortable?

Making it Through the Tough Times | 12×9 | $420

I agree that it is usually the last place anyone would want or choose to go. However, with challenges we also open ourselves up to growth. It isn’t the easy kind where you simply try a new food and you like it or you don’t. It is more the really tough kind where you are out of your elements and every thing you try is new, hard and unsettling. NOT A FUN PLACE TO BE…RIGHT?!?!

Well, think about it this way…

…if you want to grow you should seek out to new things to try. Do you remember encouraging a small child that starting school would be fun? As adults we need to remember to encourage ourselves to jump out of our everyday routine and grow. Without it we are wasting a life that is meant to be lived to the fullest. I don’t think anyone on their dying bed said “Just why did I climb that mountain just to see the vast world beyond!”. Quite to the contrary I think we will wish we hadn’t spent so much time worrying about things that truly don’t matter or yearning for things that were simply materialistic and didn’t enrich our lives at all.

Looking for Direction | 12″x16″ |$560

Okay, enough of that as I am not a therapist, but an artist. The whole point of this is to tell you that I am deliberately putting myself in one of those uncomfortable situation…on purpose!

HOW EXCITING!

Doing Time on Whiskey River | 20″x10″ | $600

That’s right I said exciting as I am so looking forward to the growth both as an artist and simply as a person.  This time last year I was taking an abstract painting class taught by talented artist Rita Wobbe at the Burren College of Art, in Ballyvaughn, Ireland.  This was a very challenging class as my work has never been described as abstract. I found it both instructional and an incredible opportunity to grow my art.  To continue expanding my art I enrolled in another abstract painting class, this one with artist Gwen Fox.   Once the class had completed I knew I wanted more…I had grown and wanted to continue growing!   I decided that this was the perfect year, with being quarantined and longing for growth, to spend time really developing my voice as an artist so I signed up for art coaching with Gwen.

If you’d like to follow my progress and growth over this next year join me on my Instagram and Facebook pages.  Amazing new creations will derive from this time in an uncomfortable position!  I encourage you to use these unusual time to expand yourself as well.

What uncomfortable position are you going to put yourself in to grow?                                

Bogs Are Like Pages of History

Treasures and inspiration are found in these layers of history that bring warmth and a distinct aroma to a cold, rainy evening in Ireland.

Many time I get asked travel questions about Ireland. When it comes to where to stay I always quickly respond with a local BnB. My reasons for this are always that you are getting to know those who know Ireland best…they were born and raised there. A favorite stay of mine was in Tipperary at a BnB called Old Farm hosted by Margaret & Alfie McCaffrey.

While spending a few days, Alfie took me to visit several local sites, foraging for mushrooms and answered absolutely any question this American Artist could come up with, in regards to Ireland and her ancestors.  I have to say one of my favorite sites was the Redwood Bog.  While walking the bog Alfie explained the process of owning part of the bog, harvesting turf, what makes the bog and the different plants that were in the bog.

Being a gardener I was totally attracted to several of the plants.  One of the plants that really caught my eye is the bog asphodel.  This plant produces spikes of beautiful bright yellow flowers in the Summer and the foliage turns a stunning burnt rust in the Fall.  This rusty orange color plays off beautifully against the lavender heather that also grows in the bog.  So if you can imagine the two colors together it will quite literally make you stop your car to take a look!  Along with these plants are also the bog cotton.  It is as its name would imply a plant which appears as a wispy boll of cotton.  When you see this plant there will be wetland and acidic soil beneath.

“A Walk in the Bog” | 14×11 | oil on board | SOLD

These waterlogged, nutrient rich patches of land are layers and layers of plant material that have decomposed over years and years of time.  It creates an entire ecosystem for wildlife and plants which has been a source of fuel for the residence for many years.  Between the layers of the bog are the stories of time.

The remains of animals and humans have been discovered, along with swords, ornaments, bog oak and many other wonderful gems can be found accidentally deposited over the years  in the bogs. Due to the properties of Sphagnum moss in the bogs, which has preservatives built into it’s cells, whatever dies or is covered in it will decay much more slowly and therefore have many more stories to tell of the past when discovered.

Bog Asphedol and Heather

I have found the bogs to be inspirational because of their history, intense beauty and significance to the people of Ireland over the years.  If you make it to Ireland please take the time to walk and discover these pieces of ground steeped in history and significance throughout the West and midlands of Ireland.

We Are All Irish for March!

Tóg go bog é & Celebrate the month of the Irish!

There are many reasons to love the arrival of March…Spring, Warmer Weather, Flowers &

ST. PATRICK’S DAY!

This is the day we are all Irish…if even for just one day.

We don the green, we pinch those who don’t and we love heading to the parades and pubs.

Being Irish, I love watching everyone celebrate my Irish ancestors!  Talking about my times in Ireland, time spent traveling the countryside, getting to know the history and people of the Emerald Isle is something I really enjoy sharing.  St. Patrick’s Day invites me to do all of it!

“The Wilds of the Atlantic” | 16’x20″ | Oil on Board | $720

One of the pieces of Ireland that I’ve brought back and love to experience in my own kitchen is the art of making traditional brown bread.  Inbetween working on new works of art I enjoy stirring-up a quick batch of Brown Bread.

If you are looking for a special Irish treat to celebrate the holiday with I highly recommend Traditional Brown Bread.  It is super easy to make and brings the warm homey fragrance of freshly baked bread to the entire house.  This wonderful fragrance has a way of transporting the entire house to the beautiful green sunny shores of Ireland.  My favorite recipe for brown bread is one I picked up from the Gouganebarra Hotel in County Cork.  Gouganebarra  is a really special place to visit and spend some quality time.  It has made it into many of my photographs and paintings.

Brown Bread for Lunch Anyone?

One of the reasons this recipe is a favorite is that it contains treacle .  If you have never had treacle before it brings a sweet syrupy molasses/honey flavor to the bread.  I have found that I love this bread toasted in the mornings as much as a sidekick to a hearty soup.

Another ingredient this recipe calls for is Irish Wholemeal Flour.  In the states this ingredient can be challenging to find at the local grocer but I choose to do an online order from King Arthur flour.  This flour is a special coarsely ground, dense red whole wheat flour.

Another way to enjoy the bread is with some Kerrygold Dubliner Cheddar Cheese, Kerrygold butter or live on the edge and include BOTH!  This bread also is terrific to take on a long hike for an energy snack.

Whatever you do in March enjoy the refreshing outdoors and bring a bit of the Irish to your kitchen.

Tóg go bog é – Take it Easy!

If you’d like me to email this brown bread recipe,  in the comments below leave the best way to send it or message me and I’ll send it on over.

Bringing Simplicity into Life and Design

“There are two ways to live: as though nothing is a miracle, or as though everything is a miracle” Albert Einstein

Last Summer I took a course on Abstract Painting at the Burren College of Art. Set in Ireland’s famous Burren you can’t help but absorb all its natural beauty.

While there I had a time of both personal and creative growth. 

The campus contains centuries of architectural grandeur including a castle as its center axis and fields with rows and rows of stonewalls carefully stacked by generations prior. Each wall has its own little micro-garden growing on, in and over it. They were each and every one of them exploding with colors that would fill a rainbow.

While walking the lanes and narrow roads around the college I had times of great peace and contemplation which resulted in a harvesting of a wealth of creative research.

My abstract painting instructor, Rita Wobble challenged us to think of our world in a more simplified manner. I’m talking circles, rectangles, triangles and flat colors. I found it to be an interesting but yet a tall challenge to a realist painter. However, by the middle of the week I realized I was starting to get the hang of it.

One morning middle of the week I was eating my breakfast while watching birds on a wire only to find myself creating those simple lines and colors just as we had talked about several days earlier.

I found it to be both relaxing and peaceful to not need to include every detail and leave a bit to be interpreted later. I no longer had the demand of many little feathers to draw but a circle with two triangles coming off of it that now represented my small bird.

Could life really be this easy?

Part of simplifying life for me includes working on myself. One of my favorite places to collect my thoughts, create and write is Dzogchen Beara, a Buddhist meditation center in Ireland. I can’t think of any place more peaceful for reflection, contemplation and strengthening of my inner-soul. In order to make changes in my life I must be strong and at peace in myself.  Where is your favorite place to recharge and collect yourself?

In order to give the best of yourself, you need to be the best of yourself!

Prints Available!

Little reminders I like to have around the studio and my home are quotes. I find having a few simple wise words to be just that meaningful or funny message I need as I’m going through a tough time or just having a cup of coffee trying to decide how to proceed with my day.

Combining the ordinary (weeds) and the extraordinary (favorite quotes) is such a great juxtaposition! By combining the ordinary with the more refined I think allows you to realize that life isn’t perfect and that we can meet it where it is at and transform it into the simple life it was meant to be. This series of work is one I really enjoy working on so I’m continually adding to it. Do you have a favorite quote I should use? I’d LOVE to hear it! Leave it in the comments below.

During my creative adventures I rejoice in finding the ordinary, that which is passed by, and turning it into a work of art in an attempt to show people that there is beauty all around them. Some of my favorite “flowers” to paint are those “weeds”. They are wild, not planned and still they evoke a life lived to their fullest.

The world has so much to offer if we will open our hearts and minds to the love, beauty and kindness of who and what is around us.

Way too often we magnify the differences and conflicts of this world are brought out.  I challenge you to look more closely for the similarities next time and what can inspire you to be a better person. Which can in turn inspire you to be the best, whether that is more simplified or not, person you can be.

Prints Available!
Prints Available!

Over the next week look for the beauty in this world so love and kindness can win!

Prints of the two inspirational designs with quotes above are available in my etsy shop MargaretDukeman.etsy.com

My Adventure to an Abandoned Fishing Village on Cod’s Head

Take the time to get out of your car & walk the countryside or you will miss the best of the “Céad Míle Fáilte”

Today  I’m  reminiscing about a beautiful sunny day in Ireland a year ago full of big puffy clouds.  This hike took me to Claonach, an old abandoned fishing village at the end of  Cod’s Head, County Cork.  This hidden gem is a short walk along the coastline out by Gortahig, on the wonderful R575, which I spoke about in my last post.  This is yet another reason to make this lovely road part of your trip to experience the countryside of Ireland.

Let me stress again if you are planning a trip to Ireland don’t over schedule your time.  Take the time to get out of your car and walk the countryside while you’re there.  If not you will miss far too much of what you came to this beautiful country of a “Céad Míle Fáilte” or “Hundred Thousand Welcomes” to see.  Trust me when I say, SLOW DOWN…drop your technology…experience the people…notice the landscape around you and the culture.  You simply won’t regret it as it will grab your heart and never let go!

This walk  along the coast out to Claonach allows you to spend meditative quiet time as you lose yourself looking across Coulagh Bay to the Kerry Mountains.  On a clear day the mountains simply echo each other and fade one into another and pull you towards them.  As you walk along the narrow road the coastline appears to fall away to the wilds of the bright blues of the Atlantic crashing the rocks below.  If you feel like you’re being spied on during this walk of amazing scenery you would be right!  There is sure to be sheep around the corner or gazing at your from every corner.  This would be another one of the reasons I love this walk.  You are sure to have a natural zoo built in of animals that look so at home in their environment.  Make sure to take your camera as you will have many opportunities to click away!

After a nearly two mile walk you will crest a hill and see the remnants of the old village with its ruins of old stone cottages and very protected inlet for the boats of the once active fishing village.  You can see walkways and a lone road that makes its way between remaining cottages up the side of the mountain.  From what I understand there are only two part-time residents now as the village doesn’t have electricity.  Even with the lack of electricity, I felt a real draw to spend a day or two in the old village collecting images and spending time in an area that used to be vibrant and active all those years ago.  This village’s claim to fame is the filming of the movie “Falling For A Dancer” in 1998.

Claonach is just one of the many hidden gems that Ireland has to offer if  you lose the car and walk the land.  Take the time to sit and talk to the locals of the area and discover the places that only they know that history has left behind.  They can share what the walls of the ruins would love to speak if they could.  You won’t regret the time spent having just one more pint with a friend either old or new!

Don’t forget to collect all your “Céad Míle Fáilte”

While on the Beara Don’t Forget to Take the R575!

Hugging the Coast this Road won’t Disappoint!

One of my favorite roads in all of Ireland is probably the curviest and trickiest of those for a first time driver. However the rewards are huge and well worth the nail biting time for the driver or backseat driver. This road between Allihies and Eyeries hugs the coast and gives jaw-dropping views across Coulagh Bay to Kerry. One of the delightful differences of this drive over the Ring of Kerry is the lack of the large tourist buses. The Ring of Beara is both quaint, quiet and all that you are hoping for in a trip to Ireland. I may be just a slight bit partial as this is where my ancestors came from and I can see their faces in the locals and hear their voices in the stories that are told.

As you start winding your way on this gorgeous drive you will see so many stunning views. Just remember to stay on your side (that would be the left) of the road as you lose yourself in the views. Drive it slow and take your time. Make sure to notice pullovers as these allow you to let locals and others to get by so you can travel slow and still see everything there is to take in on this amazing adventure. On this stretch you will get glimpses of Dursey Island, along with the bull, the cow and the calf, three small islands off the end of the peninsula. Take time to get out and walk as you will see so much more and feel the beautiful sea breezes on your face.

As you take a steep ascent along this winding road you will come to the peak of the mountain. From here I’d suggest you pullover just to see what you can see…okay I always have to get a picture from this spot as well. On a beautiful clear day you can see the Iveragh peninsulas, better known as the Ring of Kerry while looking to the north. As you are looking across the countryside you will also want to noticed the amazing weathered fence posts and the way they lead your eye through the landscapes. These gray “soldiers” appear to guard the roadsides and help you get safely along your way.

As you pass over the mountain you will see that the road winds like a river as it heads towards a pink farmhouse and outbuildings. Like threading a needle you will pass between the house and the outbuildings so be sure to slow to a snails pace and wave if the farm lady happens to be hanging her laundry out to dry.  The beauty of this setting is absolute storybook like.

Next on the R575 adventure is the quick hike up to the Mass Rock located on the East side of this beautiful road. As you take the short hike up the mountainside you will feel the intense history of this place which goes back to Penal Law times. Due to the laws of the time period it is completely hidden from the roadway. Once you arrive at the Mass Rock you realize just how hidden it is from the road and the protection that it would have provided from persecution.

Upon leaving the Mass Rock you will climb up yet another mountain to reveal yet another beautiful valley on the other side. While winding down the narrow lane of the reverse side I’d suggest you stop in at the Urhan Inn for a pint. There have a wonderful array of outside seating on a beautiful day and a warm pub atmosphere inside on a gray one. Either way you are sure to find a great place for a pause!

From here simply enjoy the last few kilometers winding your way through the countryside to Eyeries.   This colorful village is sure to not disappoint with all of its brightly colored buildings. I’d suggest a relaxing stop at Cindy’s Gem Cafe for a coffee or tea and a treat or a pint at Causkey’s on the back patio.

Here’s to a drive with an adventure around each of its many curves along the Wild Atlantic Way’s coastline…SLAINTE!

Traveling Solo is Awakening

Good or bad, right or wrong each decision is yours…ALL YOURS!

As I return from my yearly retreat in Ireland I thought I’d challenge you to take a similar one for yourself. When was the last time you took off on a trip by yourself? I’m not talking a movie night or going to see relatives. I’m talking a week where you don’t have to answer to anyone or anything. The job and responsibilities are left behind and the phone isn’t by your side.

Each year I challenge myself to experience time like this as I head to Ireland for an exhibition and a self-designed residency for six to eight weeks. The first time I did this was a very awakening experience; I had decided to spend an additional week in Ireland after traveling with my sisters and mother.  As they left for the airport to return to the states and I was alone in our final hotel I all of a sudden realized I had no one but myself to rely on. The feelings were both scary and empowering all at the same time.  At the time I knew no one in the entire country that I could have called upon if I had needed help. Once I got past this paralyzing feeling I began to experience the biggest rush of an adventure. Each time I did something I told myself “Look that wasn’t hard and you did it all on your own!”

16″x20″ | Oil on Board | $720

Traveling on your own comes with some wonderful perks. YOU decide which exhibitions you attend, what architectural marvels you walk past, how long you stay and what direction you walk.

Good or bad, right or wrong each decision is yours…ALL YOURS!

Choosing to sit for an entire morning and collect images and thoughts…nothing better for the soul!

Over the years I have found this time to be very cathartic. I spend a great deal of time soul-searching, writing, creating artwork and gathering information which later is translated into works of art in my Huntsville, Alabama studio. Writing was never something that I considered myself to be good at but it has really given a lot back to me over time. I force myself to reflect on my life and all the riches that it provides on a daily basis and what I’d love to add in the future. These discoveries always manage to find their way into my work either through my writing or creative manifestations. I spend a great deal of my time observing nature while climbing the mountains and sitting by the sea. The freshness of the breezes whipping my hair from side to side give my skin that freshly touched feeling.

These times of solitude feel like a baptism allowing me to open a new chapter in my life each year.

What new challenges will you put in front of yourself in the coming year?

Remember to be just a bit uncomfortable so you allow yourself a place to grow.