My favourite colour is purple. I like most colours, except that I'm not too fond of yellow. I'm a teacher, a student, a wife and a step-mom to four young adult-ish kids. My favourite room is my craft room. I like to play with photography, paper, scrapbooking, book and card making. Thanks for checking out my blog!
Showing posts with label Dominican Republic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dominican Republic. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Visual Journal- May 2013

theme:

The Lord bless you and keep you; 

the Lord make his face shine on you and be gracious to you;

the Lord turn his face toward you 

and give you peace. 

Numbers 6:24-26




For the background of these pages, I applied Dylusions spray (after midnight), Adirondack color wash (stream) and Perfect Pearl Mists (turquoise) onto wet white gesso. I also used gelatos and water colour pencils once it dried. I tore maps and placed them vertically and torn book pages for the writing. I added gelatos and watercolour pencils around and over the map strips. I outlined the text boxes with blue pen. 
I love the vibrant colour that the Dylusion ink spray added! 

I finished this page when I returned from the Dominican Republic. On our last evening we went to the Casa Monte Plata to have a last visit and say goodbye to our friends. This page is dedicated to all those who serve in this home and all those who call this place their home.

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Dominican Republic- post trip reflection #1

We had an amazing trip to the DR in May. I'll try to share some stories and impressions from my journal on my blog here. My first sharing will be via a movie I made for my school. I wanted to share with the students and staff what it's like to be a student at the Eva Russell School in Monte Plata. I wanted the students to see how friendly the students are. And also how many things we have in common with them. Hopefully this comes across in the movie! Click HERE to view the movie.


Thursday, March 28, 2013

For Sale!

I'm sharing some of my photography. All proceeds will go towards Granville Chapel's Open Door Service Trip to the Dominican Republic in May, 2013. 

We will be working with Kids Alive International- at their orphanage and school for children at risk, in Monte Plata. If you are interested in purchasing any of these, please let me know.

For those of you who are local, on April 7th you will have a chance to see these and buy them in person. Ask me about it.


First, photos mounted on canvas. These are 4" X 4" and 1.5" deep. They can stand alone on a shelf,or you can use the picture hanger on the back to put on the wall. A trio of these look great together! They are $10 each.
1. Monte Plata, DR

2. Monte Plata, DR

3. Haina, DR

4. Window, Monte Plata, DR

5. Monte Plata, DR

6. Monte Plata, DR, naked boy playing on cell phone

7. Monte Plata, DR
8. Haina, DR, banana leaf

9. Haina, DR, papaya leaf

10. Juan Dolio, DR 
11. Monte Plata, DR

12. Vancouver, BC, Hydrangea

13. Vancouver, BC, Hydrangea

14. Vancouver, BC, Sunflower

15. Hilo, Hawaii, Fern

16. Vancouver, BC

17. Keremeos, BC, hope among rocks

18. Kona, Hawaii



 I have note cards for sale, with all the images above, plus a few more.  They are 11 X 14 cm,  about the size of a thank you card. They are $2 each or $10 for six cards. A group of these would make lovely gifts for Mother's Day!



THANK YOU!


Sunday, November 27, 2011

Fear Not

I worked on this page in my faith art journal in August and September. When my faith journalling group got together, we started out with reading some different lines of scripture. Then we did a 12 minute free write, where we wrote whatever was on your mind. Then we tried to make a visual page of what came to mind. We also wrote a found poem, choosing lines and phrases from our 12 minute write and put them into a poetic form. 


Add caption

pg 1, with a pocket for the writing I did
pg 2, Dominican homes


 
Isaiah 43:1
Fear not, for I have redeemed you;
I have summoned you by name;
You are mine.
Twelve minutes of writing. Three minutes of percolating over a verse. FEAR NOT...why is it that I always find fear when I face new things? Unknown things? Things that I chose for myself and put into motion and things that I long for and am glad for, but still, there is FEAR when I think of starting something new.
This verse talks about being redeemed and that is the reason not to fear. It talks about being SUMMONED by name and that is the reason not to fear...God says “You are mine, Joan.” That is the reason not to fear. It doesn’t talk about absence of things to be afraid of. It just says “You are mine. I have called you by name. I have redeemed you. Fear not.”.
Names- it was in Nigua that people called me by my nickname- for that is how they knew me. The look on their face when they saw me coming down the path to their house with Rafaelito...saying, “Yo si se quien es que me viene a visitar...es PINCHIE!” Normally I cringe at being called that name of my childhood, but on that day it was special. It was tender and endearing and reminded me of this strong connection I have with this person, this place.
Why is it that I get so emotional when I start telling the stories of our trip? How will I share in front of a larger crowd? It is the feeling of being so full, full of joy, full of memories, full of remembrances that spill out of my eyes and trembles my voice. I don’t want to hide that feeling, but I want to be able to share it in a way that can be understood. Do tears help us to be understood by others? Do fears and tears unite us in deeper ways than language?
I loved the homes of the DR- the vibrant colours, the clean floors made of dirt, the wooden windows, open to the outside, the front room for visiting, with lace curtains hanging. I am trying to remember the visuals of my photos...did I take too many? Should I experience more of the moment instead of hiding behind the lens all the time, trying to capture moments to look at later instead of really seeing it in the now? Pink and green walls, blue and white walls, brown no paint walls. Always motorcycles buzzing by.

FEAR NOT
 face new things
I long for
the reason not to fear.
You are mine.
Tender and endearing.
Strong connection:
full of joy,
full of remembrances
that spill out of my eyes and tremble my voice.
Do fears and tears unite us in deeper ways than language?
Vibrant colours of home
experience more of the moment
see it in the now
Always motorcycles buzzing by.

Friday, September 30, 2011

Warmth and Colour on my computer screen

These are beautiful children! I look at them everyday and get lost in their precious, deep eyes. I have this photo on my computer screen saver as a reminder of my trip to Nigua this summer. 

Saturday, March 5, 2011

collage #8 of 2011 Travel


My grandma's old atlas is a great source for background papers.  The small photo is from the summer of 1993 in El Limon de Azua, Dominican Republic. This village and its river have been on my mind this week. 

The background paper is watercolour paper with a saran wrap put on while wet and left to dry. 
I've been playing with circles lately.
Thanks, Robin, for this beautiful stamp on your letter!  It took me back to my childhood days of stamp collecting: soaking the stamp and removing it carefully from the envelope, then flattening.

Saturday, January 29, 2011

The River



So this week in class we drew/painted a river to represent our learning inquiry that began last September. We were to think symbolically of the obstacles, the banks of the river, whether there was anything in the river, and any bends along the way. I used watercolour pencils, watercolour crayons, and watercolour from tubes. I figured it's water, so why not use WATERcolour? 

I enjoyed the process. The next step was to bring 12 or more collected quotes that we have read during our inquiry that were meaningful. We wrote them on post-it notes and then placed them on top of our river painting in appropriate places along the river. Then we reflected on our river pieces and wrote about them.


My river/waterfall painting:
Narrow at the top, widening with time
More beautiful than the original intention
As we progress down the waterfall, the boulders become less visible. They are still there- in that they guide the water down the specific path. Some boulders may be just under the surface, but not clearly visible. But they are not constricting, they don’t need to be present any more. I become less and less, as the students become more and more independent and familiar with the writing process and things to try.
The water is made up of various blues and greens, with different painting techniques. Like the individuals in my class- they are individual writers with their own style and flair. All together, they make up a beautiful group of authors.
All together, their writing creates a variety of expression, the most unique shelf in a library.  The students enjoy writing together, they enjoy sharing their writing aloud. They appreciate each other. The water and swirls represent this sharing, this overlapping.
 In the DR of my childhood, the river is the source of life for the small rural farming village. Pipes can guide the water to feed the thirsty land, to make it arable for planting at any time of year. The river is the place where girls collect heavy cans of water, confidently balanced on their heads, bringing the valuable water for cooking and drinking and cleaning to the proud but humble homes with thatched roofs. The river, with surrounding rocks, is also the Laundromat, where girls and women beat the clothes on the rocks to clean them and rinse them in the flowing water. Gossip is shared around these rocks. In the heat of the day, the cooling river and falls bring welcome relief and are a Playground for the kids, who scream and play in the water. The river is a source of life. Without it, life in the village is different and more difficult. 
In the church with the precariously tippy benches and hard swept dirt floor, they sing of the joy in their soul that is like a river of living water in their being. This song is full of life, with a syncopated beat that is hard not to tap a toe to. It lifts them from the struggle of daily life. It reminds them that they believe in something more than what they see day to day. The river is a beautiful symbol yet also a dependent reality in their lives. 

I think of this too, as I think of my inquiry and what I am learning and what my students are creating with their authoring: It is living, it is changing, it is somewhat predictable, but still breathtaking with beauty. It is a source of life- students crave the sharing time, the double block of writing time, the huddled trio discussing Pumpkin’s next adventure, the pleading with me to take their Writer's Notebooks home. These are the swirls, the sprays that form the whole body of water.












 I can’t just arrive at the swirls. The water needs to wind its way around the rocks and boulders. It needs to meander until it hits the more rapid flow. I could zoom in with a camera lens on just the froth and flow. That has its beauty on its own. But I would miss so much if all I looked at was that part. It’s beauty in the whole. The beauty is in being on the whole journey.