Museum Week Continues

I know I said I wasn’t much into museums and so you’d think that going to 10 on Saturday during the Long Night of the Museums would have been enough, but surprisingly…. no.  I went to one on Monday and today our class spent the day in another (which I’ll write about another day when I go through my 300 photos).

Do you remember that in my last post I said that there was 1 museum I couldn’t get into on Saturday because they’d given away their 800 spots for the night by 7pm?  Well, I decided to go on Monday with Donnalynne, one of my classmates.  The museum is called Time Travel, and it’s basically a trip through Vienna’s history, from the days of the dinosaurs, Romans, wars, etc. through until today – all presented in a very entertaining fashion in an old monastery around the corner from our school.  I have some pictures here (Note: these are iPhone photos – I say that apologetically 🙂 ), but they don’t include the best part, which was the 5D movie in a theater where the seats move and things brush against your legs while rats take over the streets during the plague part of the movie, and blasts of hot air hit the back of your head as bombs explode during the war.  Pretty cool!  The whole tour took about 50 minutes and also included inanimatronic-figures, various multimedia shows and sound and light effects.  I was entertained – a great way to learn about history.  One definite advantage of going on Monday was that we were only 4 visitors instead of the 42 max per group, which would have been the case during Museum Night.  I can’t imagine being in the bunker or many of the other stations with 41 other people blocking my view.  Instead, we really got to enjoy both the entertainment and the setting.

After the Museum, we went for dinner in a non-smoking restaurant (I didn’t know those existed!!!) with Austrian cuisine and then walked the cobblestone streets exploring the passages (many of those who owned houses/ villas/ palaces downtown created throughways for pedestrians as it was too dangerous to walk in the streets with all the horse carts). Today, many of those remain. I’m not sure if the one we found was part of that, but today it is filled with boutiques, cafes and cool spots.  See for yourself.  I got home at 11pm, much past my regular bedtime, so I had to wake up with an alarm on Tuesday …. not fun.  I obviously did no homework that day.  Oh well…. it was worth it.

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A Night Out On the Town

After another very good / intensive week at school, during which I learned so much and steadily progressed on my concept for one of my trimester paintings, it was time for a change of scene.  So on Saturday, I had a night out on the town.  Actually, it was more than a night – I left home at 1pm and didn’t come back until 1am, walking most of that time. Oh, but was it ever worth it.  1_DLH_2992In the afternoon, I joined 25 local photographers to participate in Scott Kelby’s Worldwide Photo Walk, an annual event, and at night, I joined thousands upon thousands of both locals and tourists for the Lange Nacht Der Museen (Long Night of Museums) – 130 museums open from 6pm until 1am with 1 low-priced ticket (13 Euros = ~$18 Cdn). Of course, I didn’t get to 130, but I did manage to do 10 of the 11 on my carefully researched list.  This was a very well organized event, with a comprehensive booklet (also available in English), free public transportation, including 5 special shuttle routes, and a huge crew of staff and volunteers.  I was impressed! The one museum I didn’t manage to do only had 800 tickets available, all of which had been snatched up before I could get there at 7:30pm – oh well, I might just pay their usual 12.60Euro entrance fee and go another day.

Here’s a summary of my day in both words & photos.

Donau Kanal Worldwide Photo Walk:

When I got the email from my old camera club in Newfoundland about this year’s Photo Walk, I decided to Google Scott Kelby’s website to see if there were any groups participating here in Vienna. There were 2, one downtown where I spend most of my days, and one along the Danube Canal, which I hadn’t visited yet.  So I joined online and got to the meeting point an hour early (no surprise there) to sit on a bench, and people/dog watch while the weather turned from an early Fall afternoon to a cold and windy wintery type day.  Fascinating! When group members arrived, I tried my best to stick to German, but it’s so easy to switch to English when folks use it to talk to me. For the next 2 hours, we slowly walked along the canal, where I mostly focused on the graffiti – fun!  I had purposefully not brought my tripod so that I wouldn’t have to use the cloak rooms at the various museums (which would have slowed me down considerably), so I had to shoot at over 1200 iso it was so dark. That’s one reason I decided to have fun with zooms and pans. (Note: click on any photo to see it larger.)

*I have to choose 1 photo from this walk to upload to the group – I’ve got it narrowed down to 3.  What’s your favourite photo?

Long Night of the Museums:

We ended our walk at the Design Tower by architect Jean Nouvel, where our group leader had arranged for us to go up 18 floors to The Loft for a complimentary drink and the start of a guided tour. At 7pm, as the group was getting ready to go have dinner, I was more than ready to take off as the Long Night of the Museums was already one hour underway.  The Design Tower was a participating venue, and I was glad to have seen it, especially the breathtaking views on the city, but I had so many other places on my wish list.

Stop 2:  Kunst Haus Wien – Museum Hundertwasser:
If you’ll remember, I really resonate with Hundertwasser’s buildings that I shared with you on my first week here – both this museum and the public housing complex a few blocks away.  I had never been inside, though, or seen any of his paintings.  I loved the colours and harmonious use of spirals and squares – although very different from Klimt, these elements are present in both their work (and mine)…. The energy here was very good for me and the place wasn’t too crowded as this museum, about 10 minutes walk from the Design Tower, wasn’t centrally located.  I took a couple of pictures before learning that photos weren’t allowed.   While there, I also walked quickly through a photo exhibit by Linda McCartney, but it didn’t capture my attention.
DLH_3280DLH_3276 Stop 3 & 4: Upper and Lower Belvedere:
From Kunst Haus, I hopped on the free Line 1 shuttle that brought us back to the central Meeting Point in front of the Hofburg Palace, where I jumped onto the Line 2 bus which took me to the Belvedere (remember those lovely garden photos with a large square body of water in front?).  In the Upper Belvedere, I saw Klimt’s “The Kiss” and other of his works, some of which I totally didn’t resonate with and others that I loved.  I also found a large digital photo screen of a black panther and a marble sculpture with a different interpretation of Amor & Psyche than the one I fell in love with as a child in Paris at the Louvre … all three of these will help me refine elements of my trimester painting.  Great!  I was glad to also go through the Lower Belvedere as some of the soul paintings from 1900 touched on themes of mysticism and myth in a way that I enjoyed.  Of course there were lots of other rooms full of paintings / old portraits that never spoke to me – I remember being bored by them as a child and although I do have much more of an appreciation for them on an intellectual level thanks to all I’ve learned at school in the past 3 weeks, I still don’t enjoy them.

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Hofburg Palace

An amazingly talented bottle player...

An amazingly talented bottle player…

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Lower Belvedere

Stop 5:  Secession:
I rarely spend much time in museums, but I was in and out of this one so quickly, it’s quite funny.  I had a purpose – to see Klimt’s Beethoven Frieze in the basement.  I glanced in 2 other rooms on the way, but it was modern stuff that totally didn’t speak to me, and so I decided not to waste my precious time that the bus rides had already cut into.  The frieze was worth it and I do like the outside look of this building – don’t you?!
DLH_3284 DLH_3285Stop 6: The Vienna Butterfly House at the Burggarten Palmhouse:
I had been wanting to visit this since my first days in Vienna – I have such wonderful memories of photographing butterflies in various greenhouses in Canada.  I’m glad I didn’t pay the usual entrance fee for this one.  There were hardly any butterflies, none of which were flying around at this time of night.  Part of the reason I didn’t get much out of this experience, however, was probably that I waited about 20 minutes in line and the crowd inched its way through the space as one slow line – no way for me to get out any faster.  Still, it was nice to be among greenery, but nothing very spectacular in that realm either.

Stop 7: The Albertina:
This palace is one of the most famous art museums in Vienna.  The line wasn’t too long, and I quickly made my way up to the “Matisse and The Fauves” exhibit. I liked the purple walls and some of the art, but I didn’t spend too long in front of anything.  Still, I was thrilled to have an idea of the space and grateful for the splashes of colour.  This step away from what other painters of the time were doing was not well received by critics of the day, but now look at where they’re hanging.  It’s really truly important to create according to our own inner callings – not what the world wants or expects from us. Still, I’m sure they had to pay the rent and eat too…

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Stop 8: Austrian Film MuseumI had been curious about this museum as it’s quite close to my school and I am a big movie fan.  The museum basically consists of the screening room and lobby. I only had to wait 10 minutes for the next screening – this one a 20-minute compilation of “tension” (the volunteer said there wasn’t really a word for it in English) in 4 films throughout history.  Sitting down in the dark, especially during the third and the longest/ most tedious art film clip I’d seen in a long time, my body recognized that we were already past my usual bedtime.  Still, I got to experience the space, and for that, I am grateful.

Stop 9:  Natural History Museum:
It was now 11pm and I only had 2 more museums on my list, so I slowed down a bit to walk the full circle of exhibits on both floors.  This building is a mirror copy of the Art History Museum across the courtyard/gardens, where my class goes on Thursdays to draw.  It was neat to notice the similarities and differences in the interior decorations – great ceilings and wall friezes in both!  This one, however, is filled with minerals and animals of all kinds – 30 million specimens … and lots and lots of people.  I can see how it would captivate museum lovers for hours on end… but unless I need to come back to practice drawing something, once was enough for me.  Lifeless specimens behind glass don’t really do it for me.  Or perhaps this is like libraries and videos stores – simply too much visual stimulus that leads me to feeling overwhelmed, choosing to leave for quieter surroundings instead.  Have you figured out yet that I’ve never been much of a museum person? That’s one reason this one-ticket deal was great for me so I could get a quick taste of it without the expense.  There is no right or wrong, good or bad – there just is, and that is me.

Stop 10 – Last Stop – The Leopold:
It was now a bit past midnight and I headed across the street to the Museum Quartier where I’d selected one of the many museums there to visit – The Leopold.  The second floor was a very loud smoky bar with live music and dancing that resonated throughout the whole museum – interesting.  I mainly focused on the Leopold collection with the largest Egon Schiele collection and Art Nouveau showcase with works by Klimt and other Secessionists.  The Leopold is a very modern space compared to some of the older museums, and the work fits in very nicely here.  I once again resonated with some of Klimt’s work and was reminded by both his and Shiele’s pieces that once I’ve figured out how to draw the human figure (a continuing challenge despite our anatomy of the muscles class this week and life drawing experiences – but there is progress….), I’ll be able to find my own style of drawing them to integrate the figure in my work the way I’d like to – a way that is yet to be determined.  I loved how Shiele left off the feet in this one painting – I’ve been doing that too – hands and feet are especially difficult to draw…  That might not have been why he left them out though…  I left this museum a little before 1am as folks were begging the security guards to let them in past the 12:30am last entry (without success).  Half an hour’s walk later, I was home with my feet stretched up along the wall above my bed to help reestablish a more normal blood circulation.  What a great day!  I’m glad I decided to do it alone instead of with the couchsurfing group or classmates as I could follow my own agenda at my own speed – a very different one, I’m sure, than most people out and about last night.

Well, it’s now 5:00pm on Sunday (it takes a loooonnnnng time to edit photos – I started with 498 – and write blogs) and I haven’t started my homework.  But first, time to cook some of this week’s meals.  Hope you had a great weekend.

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Letting Go … a lesson in non-attachment

The principle that nothing in life is constant but change itself has long been ingrained in me.  I let go of 5-year plans decades ago, when I realized that my life could be richer and better directed by my Higher Self, my Spirit, my sources of guidance who communicate to me more and more clearly as I learn to listen.

For those of you who have been following my journey, you know how strongly I was guided to move to Vienna to study at the Vienna Academy of Visionary Art.  I am grateful for that guidance every day as I am learning so much. My 6 months of intensive and multifaceted fundraising efforts were definitely worth it. I know I am meant to be here now. If you’ll recall, I had originally planned to be here for a trimester, but when the fundraising efforts exceeded my goal and the school changed its curriculum, I came to the conclusion that I was meant to be here a year.

Since arriving in Vienna a month ago, I have done my best to live in the present, to be here now.  I’ll admit that there has also been an underlying current of stress flowing through my days as I am yet again faced with having to embrace the mystery and put my trust in the Universe (which is strong… it’s my trust in bureaucracy that isn’t).  Many of you perceive me to be a free spirited, go with the flow kind of gal – that’s definitely the big picture me, but not necessarily the day-to-day me. My left brain hyper-planner is more often than not trying to run the show and when it doesn’t succeed, it can be pretty stressful. Learning to balance the two has been my journey and my key to success.

Yesterday was my deadline to commit to my housing reservation for the new year. They were able to extend my current room until February and then move me to another residence a few blocks from here at an equal distance to school as this one is full for the next semester- they even extended their reservation period by a couple of weeks following my request.  Unfortunately, I am not willing to risk losing $1000 by committing to this reservation as I am uncertain if I will legally be able to return to Austria after Christmas when my current visa expires.  There is a 3-month mandatory out-of-the-country period between visas and because the school’s accreditation papers are still being passed around from one ministerial office to another (which they have for the last 6 months), I am not currently able to change my class D visa to a residence visa, which I could do here.  I did buy my next Ottawa-Vienna-Ottawa plane ticket and extend my Blue Cross health insurance so I would have the paperwork ready for whenever I can start the residence permit process, but I am not willing to commit to the international residence housing contract.  Committing to it didn’t feel right.

I like where I’m living and all that is provided by this agency.  One of my classmates made her request closer to the date of arrival and is living at the end of the subway line amongst car dealerships. I just like having things figured out and set up ahead of time so I can relax and know that I’ll be in a nice clean place with all that I need.  Yet again, however, life is asking me to detach from the need to know – to let go of even knowing whether or not I will be returning to Austria after Christmas.  If I don’t, where will I go? What will I do? Oh my God!  Oh yeah… this is supposed to be a post on how I’m learning to let go – detach…  trust that I will be exactly where I am meant to be for my Highest Good.

I’ll admit – there’s a question in the back of my mind.  Am I really meant to be here a year?  Does my Spirit have other plans for me?  Did I misinterpret the signs? I’m committed to my art and know I would benefit from being here for the full year.  I look forward to what’s coming up in the next 2 trimesters and am thoroughly growing as an artist already through all we’re doing in class and all the extra work I’m doing at home to establish a stronger foundation in drawing.  Should I commit and therefore affirm my Faith that this is my plan, my intention?  Or do I remain open – trusting that I’ll be shown what I am meant to do when the time is right?  It’s tough when decisions are necessary in the “real world” of housing, tuition, etc.  I want to know!  But I can’t at this moment – it’s out of my control and out of the school’s control.

So I’m letting go (my intention through writing and sharing this).  I’m exercising non-attachment.  My deadline to decide on housing has passed and so that’s that.  I don’t have any decisions to make right now.  I open myself to guidance and will live day by day until there’s something I can do.  Just like with my lessons on drawing 2-point perspectives yesterday, I can choose to look at this situation from a different angle and know that it is perfect in what it is, even if my grounded left-brain planner self would wish it to be seen from a clear 1-point perspective, straight on and perfectly square…  We live in a world of illusions, so delusion won’t help …. I’m not sure what that means exactly, but I was moved to conclude my post that way 🙂

Enjoy living in the moment this weekend  – I’m off to a huge flea market with a classmate and we’ll see where we go from there.

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Yay for YouTube!

This was my Spirit Calling Card reading this morning.

Untitled-1Indeed!  Being a beginner at drawing, I have sometimes felt overwhelmed and not equipped to handle what I’ve been asked to do in class.  I’ll admit, part of it is definitely psychological – I’ve already talked about my baggage when it comes to drawing. I’m still working on that, and I’m happy to report that there’s great progress!

Being a beginner has also been a great blessing.  The fact that I’m so much less experienced than the others and that I am missing many of the very basic skills that we aren’t covering in class ( ex: how to hold a pencil for drawing, how to make pencil strokes, etc.) has propelled me into a whole self-study program before and after classes, thanks to the Internet.

Since Sunday, I’ve been spending an extra 2-4 hours a day on YouTube with a whole bunch of teachers learning about and practicing everything from how to hold a pencil, the different kinds of pencils,  the dimensions of “the ideal superhero”, to human anatomy for professional artists so that I can better understand how those muscles wrap around the bones and affect the light/shadows on a human figure. The artist/ teacher in that last video enjoys dissecting bodies to deepen his understanding – not something I’m willing to do!   I did try to examine my own arms in the mirror this morning, but alas, they look more like the cylinders on the drawing mannequins; therefore, they aren’t teaching me much about biceps and triceps…. except maybe that I could develop mine…  Anyhow, I can now understand how some of my friends can stay up all night watching YouTube videos – it’s not all silly time-wasters. It’s become an integral part of my artistic education! To think that when I last lived in Europe (Czech Republic in 1994), I didn’t even have email (nor did most people)!  Now I can simply search for teaching videos on almost anything or Google “Klimt drawings” and spend an hour looking at hundreds of his sketches to see a bit of his creative process and other styles of quickly rending the human body on paper – very encouraging!

So here are a few photos of my progress in the last 3 days. It’s so far from where I want to be, but oh so far from where I was just a week ago. It’s all good … and all relative!

And this is my class in a park where we spent an hour and a half observing and drawing water droplets… not so easy!

IMG_2765 IMG_2778Life is definitely teaching me to appreciate the challenges I am experiencing as a beginner and all the opportunities for growth and learning they provide.

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A Saturday Morning in Vienna

On Saturday morning, I headed downtown to the plaza in front of City Hall (Rathaus Platz) for Masters 2013 – an international horse show. Entrance was free from 8am – 2pm, and so I took advantage of that to have fun with my camera for a couple of hours during the Bronze Tour showjumping. It was interesting watching all the riders with their coaches in the ring pacing the jumps on foot before the start of the competition.  I particularly enjoyed watching a little dog doing the rounds – sometimes with his masters and sometimes on his own.

I really felt for those riders who came from afar and were eliminated within the first few seconds because their horse refused a jump a couple of times or knocked down too many gates.  What surprised me the most is that the fastest horse there (while I was there anyway) who also cleared all the jumps without a penalty actually looked like a small painted pony – the whole crowd commented on how cute and small it was when it came out.  What pep!

I then headed towards the Art History Museum to practice drawing for 1.5 hours, but first I walked through the Sports Day festival in Heldenplatz.  A good morning.

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An Intense & Intensive First Week

The first week of my intensive program was also pretty intense – a gamut of information, teachings, emotions, experiences, practice, weather, etc.  I had no time or energy left to blog by the time I got home at night, but here’s a recap of my week based on notes I took along the way to give you an idea of my life as a visionary art student.

Tuesday:

I really connected to Newfoundland during the night with the driving rain against the window.  I enjoyed the concert!

This morning was Day 7 of the online Deva Premal & Miten 21-Day Mantra Meditation Journey, and the focus was on Liberation – that felt right as I began my journey into drawing – into learning new tools for expressing my visions.  The previous 6 days of these online meditations were equally perfect – with themes like The Cosmic Yes, New Beginnings, Inner Peace, and Love.  When a friend sent me the link, I’d thought I had enough on my plate, but I’m so glad I added this to the buffet. Chanting before going to school puts me in the right frame of mind – that and my morning routine of yoga, Spirit Calling Card reading, and paraliminal CDs to eliminate self-sabotaging thoughts, tap into my personal genius, change my beliefs, etc.  I have so much baggage around drawing…  Luckily, school doesn’t start until 10am, so I have lots of time in the mornings, being an early bird.  I even get about an hour of German lessons as I listen to my audio-course while walking to school, sometime detouring into parks or new alleyways and castle courtyards.On my way to school today, I came across bus loads of soldiers standing around in the courtyard next to the palace entrance.  After trying my German with a policewoman, I found out there would be a military parade in 10 minutes for the arrival of the Austrian President along with some international dignitaries coming to town for something big (couldn’t understand that part and wasn’t really interested in it either – never was into politics).  I saw the parade, but when the band put their instruments down, I figured even the President could get caught in traffic jams, plus I was too excited for my first real day of class to wait for him… even if I was still 45 minutes early. That gave me time to go through my bag of art supplies I purchased the day before to familiarize myself with them, as well as to socialize with our group of 7.

Unfortunately, when I got to class, I found out that what we thought I had sold on Saturday had simply been placed in another room – oh well…. I’m still so very abundant!  Every day I wake up thinking “Wow, I’m in Vienna, attending a visionary art academy…. I’m so lucky!”  Indeed, I feel so grateful for it all!I had fun today and learned so much with the first of our teachers, Laurence Caruna, who is also the academy’s director.  Through a PowerPoint presentation, we learned about how artists calculated dimensions for the ideal figure throughout time (Egyptian, Byzantine, Renaissance, etc.) – I finally learned why Da Vinci’s figure was in a circle & square – not that I can repeat it now…  Interestingly, we were encouraged to sketch what we saw while listening – since my left brain was busy listening, I found myself sketching without judgment or emotion (a rare thing) – cool!

 In the afternoon, after applying our new knowledge onto traced human sketches (using a compass to measure dimensions), we worked with a live model in a classic static pose.  It actually worked – his body measured 7.5 heads …. cool!

I’m showing these sketches here for all to see, simply to show my starting point.

IMG_2710-2 starting pointYou see, I’ve been wanting to draw my whole life, but built so much resistance and negative feelings around it.  I just never liked it (partly because I appeared to have no natural talent or patience for it).  There may be some significant event in my past that added to that baggage, but I can’t remember it.  I tried a drawing class once and started the “Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain” book, but to no avail. All I know is that my art and I both need to grow, and I’ve found myself repeatedly frustrated by my inability to draw the simplest images. I so want to incorporate drawing elements in my art, and so I’m determined to get over all these blocks I’ve created for myself.  I feel worse than a true beginner because of all that baggage – I know that I (and the teachers) will require a lot of patience, acceptance, perseverance, and love  – as well as lots of practice, practice, practice.  Even writing about it now brings tears to my eyes.  Luckily, this is not a competitive school – there’s already a sense of collaboration amongst students, and I’ll definitely benefit from their passion for drawing and their already amazing talent for it.  I’m grateful for all the tips they’ve already shared with me.

Today was a great day!

Wednesday: 

The guidance I received from my Spirit Calling Cards this morning was to: “Stretch peace and rejoice in the pure teachings”.  How appropriate! We spent most of the day working on sacred geometry with a compass and a straight edge (a ruler, but we never use the numbers) and a bit of math/algebra – so detailed, precise and complicated – but very interesting.  We’re working on the foundations this week and will eventually learn how to apply it all. That felt like the “pure teachings” my guiding spirits were talking about this morning in my card reading. The “stretching of peace” was more necessary in the afternoon, however.  We once again worked with a live model, this time in a series of gestural poses – several at 30 seconds, 2 minutes, 5 minutes and a couple at 8 minutes long.  It was fast and free at first, but by the very end, my inner demons started coming out and I wanted to quit, questioning why I thought I could ever learn to draw, or rather why I ever wanted to or would ever need to…. I know – it’s only Day 2 of classes…. but at that point, I couldn’t imagine ever enjoying it – I had to remind myself of my goal and that I was simply tired after a long and full day. My self-limiting beliefs are strong, but I’m working on them. I’m trusting the process and today’s two teachers (David Heskin and Aloria Weaver – a couple from the States) were great.  Each teacher has a very unique teaching style – the three of them together make a very complementary core team for this trimester.

Four of the students (3 who live together and one of the others) were talking about going home to continue drawing and painting all night, but I just couldn’t imagine joining them at this point. Our 7 hours of class time a day are enough for now…  Instead, I so needed a break and so Donnalynne and I raced out of class to get to the Burg Kino in time to see the 6:15pm showing of “The Third Man” – best British movie of the 20th century – a cult film starring Orson Welles, filmed here in Vienna in 1948, when a big part of the city was still in shambles after the bombings of the war.  The ferris wheel was in it, as well as the building right next to our school in Josefplatz.  That’s where Orson Welles lived.  Good movie – not sure if I’ll ever take the guided walk or sewer tour that are offered in town, but the movie was on my wish list.  I grabbed a slice of pizza on my way home – there are no lack of pizzerias around here…. and European pizzas are soooo good – definitely comfort food!

Thursday:

Every once in a while, I’d stop what I was doing in class to say to myself “No wonder it takes some artists years to create a piece” as the planning stage alone seems painstakingly time-consuming… such a different approach from my in-the-flow intuitive abstract painting style that can produce a dozen pieces during a one-week blissfully intensive painting marathon. Could I ever be patient enough to work in this way? I’m certainly not a lazy person, but I do like shorter projects with an end in sight.

I’m getting a lot more comfortable with the ruler and compass – today we looked at how to take our perfect square, created from a circle, to make harmoniously proportionate and balanced rectangles (1:2, 2:3, 3:4). From there, we built rabattements and rectangle armatures to guide the compositions of our paintings.  It’s rather fascinating stuff and much more elaborate a compositional scheme than the golden mean in the law of thirds I’d learned in photography.  Our school’s mini-library has a rare and precious book that shows multiple examples of how it has been used throughout history – I look forward to having more time to glance through it.  At the end of class, we only had 2 minutes to make a quick sketch using our armature – so I reverted to my spiral trees.

Our last class of the day was at the Kunsthistorisches Museum (Art History Museum) – once we’d gotten our gear, headed out, bought our yearly memberships, and made our way through a special entrance (because of our easels) and up into the Greek statuary part of the museum, we had about an hour left to draw our chosen sculpture.  I worked on Aphrodite and was quite happy with the results.  I got the proportions almost right and Laurence helped me with the shading – I haven’t learned to see all the variations of tonal values and am still so very uncertain about the drawing process (where to start, what to do next, how to do it, etc.) … this was equally challenging yesterday when working on drawing a white sphere on a white tablecloth.  Practice, practice, practice and lots of welcome coaching.  I felt good though – I enjoyed my museum experience and was glad I’d done a few extra paraliminals to increase my motivation and enjoyment of the process (Peak Performance).

Friday: 

I woke up at about 4am from a series of disturbing dreams.  After I’d been awake for a few minutes thinking about them, I felt my bed shake … it wasn’t until I got home from school that I remembered that and checked the Internet. There had been an earthquake measuring 4.3 on the Richter scale near Vienna at 4:06am.  From what I could see on this German website, there are earthquakes in Austria almost every day…. interesting.  I should have written my dreams down, however, as my Spirit Calling Card message for the day was: “Your mysterious dream is the beginning of a message”.  Hmmmm….

Today we worked on perspective.  We learned how to build a one point and a two-point perspective picture plane and then built some cube structures on the one-point page (unfortunately, I forgot to take pictures of that).  It sure beat the class I’d had once before that consisted of “Draw this room and look at the lines – that’s perspective”.  We’re learning sooooo much this week – we have to as we only have 3 more weeks of drawing before the 2-week intensive and then we’re into our paintings.  I can’t imagine what I’ll be painting yet as I’m still far from being able to draw anything to paint – but I won’t jump ahead of myself – one day at a time.

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In the afternoon, we started with a second attempt at drawing our sphere – I got a lot more coaching from Aloria and one of the students beside me, and I’m glad to say that I can see some definite progress.  Encouraging!  By staring at that ball long enough, the various shades of grey would start to reveal themselves to me….

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For our last class, our model was Edgar, our friendly classroom skeleton.  We had a bone anatomy class (Aloria is also a massage therapist and so is very knowledgeable about the human structure).  It makes a lot of sense that the more we know how the body is built, the more we’ll be able to use those structures as our reference points when we’re drawing.  We then spent time drawing Edgar’s hand …. fascinating!

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All in all, it was an intensive and intense week – I’m sure I forgot to mention lots of what we’ve covered.  I know I don’t have pictures of all we did this week, but I’m sure this post’s various galleries give you an idea.  I’m glad to say that by Friday, I was looking forward to going back to the museum this weekend to practice some more with my little sketch book.  I gave it an hour and a half this morning (Saturday) and I seem to have regressed, but I’m sure that’s all part of the process.  No judgment today – I just treated myself to a turkey schnitzel for lunch instead.  Tonight, however, with a fridge full of fresh vegetables, I need to get back into home cooking, both for physical and financial health.  I’m glad to report though, that there is a variety of reasonably priced healthy food options when time or energy is lacking to do the home-cooked thing.

I haven’t decided what I’ll be doing tomorrow – no plans or schedules yet.  I needed to take it easy after my first week of school.  Tonight, I might take a look at some “how to” drawing videos or some German TV (I’m understanding more and more and am creating myself some fun opportunities to practice it).

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Great First Day!

I was the first student in class this morning (not a surprise….) to see that the teachers had been very busy transforming the space from a party room into a really nice classroom.

IMG_2700That’s Edgar at the front.

We didn’t use any of this space today, however.  Instead, we sat in a circle on the floor to the right and started with an opening prayer and long OM chant before hearing a bit more about the story behind the Vienna Academy of Visionary Arts and from everyone present (6 faculty and 7 students).  I got surprisingly emotional when my turn came.  Surprising, not because I am not an emotional person, but because I myself didn’t expect it.  It was very moving to see the strong link between spirituality and art for those present.  I’m in the right place!

After lunch, we headed to a big art store the size of a Michael’s at the end of the U3 line, Boesner, to buy all the art supplies on our first shopping list (for the drawing part of the program).  Interestingly, the store doesn’t take credit cards…  Luckily, I had enough cash on me – 80EUR ($116).  I learned that for purchases over 75EUR, I need to ask for a special receipt so that I can claim the VAT tax back when I leave Austria.

Tomorrow we start drawing!  Last night, I did my paraliminal CD on reprogramming beliefs, specifically the “I can’t draw” one.  This morning, after dreams with a strong theme of “starving artist” (no doubt inspired by a comment I heard at the party), I also used it to reprogram any beliefs I had around that.  When I got to school, I found out that they had sold quite a few of my bookmarks, a few prints and a full set of my Spirit Calling Cards at the party on Saturday.  Yay! Confirmation – artists can be abundant!

Our weekly schedule, if you’re curious, looks like this for the first month:

Monday – Friday:
10AM – 11:30AM – Theory (stylizing the figure; sacred geometry, composition)
11:30 – 1PM – Practice
2 – 4 PM – Studio Drawing (from casts, photo references, prep. for our 3 paintings of the trimester) & Thursday, Sacred Codes

4 – 6 PM
Monday & Wednesday – Life Drawing with a Live Model
Tuesday & Friday  – Refining the life drawing
Thursday – Museum Drawing
Plus the grand master of Visionary Art, Ernst Fuchs, who also has his studio in the Palais Palffy, will likely wander into our classroom daily to offer feedback.  We’ll also get to spend time observing him paint – quite an honour!

I look forward to seeing what transpires on paper tomorrow – I must remind myself to be gentle, accepting, patient, open, and loving with myself.  It’s 9pm… perhaps a good time to go to bed with another paraliminal CD.  I’m a fan!

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The Prater Park

A lot of people seemed to be looking at my walking sandals today – I’d considered my hiking boots to go exploring the Prater, but with a high of 21C (13 when I left), I was glad I wore my open-toed footwear.  Fall/winter will be here soon enough and my poor toes will then again have to be closed in.  I love these shoes!  Sure, they’re a bit inconvenient when a pebble gets caught in there, but a bit of yoga balance and a practiced finger does the trick.  This time, however, my brain registered it as strange that my hand was wet after handling my shoe and yet the pathways were dry … yuk! I’d stepped in doggy doo-doo! Try finding a place to wash your hands in these parks! I did find a toilet (free, surprisingly!), but there were no sinks.  Later on, though, I found a water pump that did the trick after using grass and a pond in between.  But I’m getting ahead of myself…

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I had put it up in the school’s Facebook group that I’d be leaving the Prater fairgrounds entrance gate at 11am if anyone wanted to go on a hike, but as I had anticipated, I was on my own. That gave me a chance to do another 3 hours of learning German with my iPhone as I wandered around, sometimes in circles, in the Prater park, a huge space with the Hauptalle (Main Alley) in the centre (with lanes for bicycles/in-line skaters, pedestrians, horses, and dirt paths for dog walkers/joggers) and paths going off in all directions through all sorts of terrains and attractions.  I mostly stuck to the bigger pathways on the lower side of the map, simply because I didn’t know how safe it would be to wander into the woods on my own, but I still got a good taste of nature.  I brought my real camera this time, but alas, dear fans who complained that I didn’t have a photo of the squirrels at Shönbrunn, there were none here.

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After 3 hours, when I spotted a sign for the underground, I decided that I’d had enough.  Once I found my way there, I learned that the Eurolines buses to Brno, Czech Republic are only 7.60 EUR instead of the 30 train ticket.  They leave every day at 17:30 from the Prater… a bit of a problem with my 18:00 end of classes.  I’ll keep exploring options.  I got off the U3 at a station that was new to me, but whose name I recognized as being a street that connects to mine. It turns out that it starts on Mariahilfestrasse (the big shopping street), which gave me the chance to get a pistachio gelato cone for my walk home.  When I arrived at 3pm, one of my roommates was still sleeping – they came in at 5am.  They start 2 weeks of German classes tomorrow, so we’ll be on a more similar schedule then.

 

 

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It’s Official!

The Vienna Academy of Visionary Art is officially open and what an opening it was!

Crowds and parties aren’t usually my scene (although I love dancing!) and so I woke up a little nervous about the day ahead.  I chose a couple of paraliminal CDs to put me in the right frame of mind and, as usual, got a thoroughly helpful Spirit Calling Card reading.

readingI’ve been pulling that “Community” card almost every day!  So I spent the morning and the early afternoon on my own, doing my yoga, meditation, laundry, groceries, etc. before heading to school at 2pm to help set up.  I met more of my teachers and the last of my 6 classmates whom I hadn’t met yet, plus others who trickled in closer to the 5pm starting time.  I do like being early at events so that the crowd grows around me instead of my walking into a mass of energy and people.

The evening started in the Figaro Salle where there were paintings on display, live painting, cello music, a sales table (they sold a few of my bookmarks), speeches, and a 20-minute Power Point presentation by our director, Laurence Caruna.  I was in charge of advancing the slides, which forced me to really focus on his speech.  I was pleasantly surprised that I could understand the gist of it, even if it was in German.  Thankfully, he said “next” in English.

Then we moved up one floor for vegan treats at the Fairy Kitchen and the celebrations in the classroom/school.  A few times during the night I thought to myself “this is a really cool classroom!).  There was an exhibition of the teachers’ and some of the students’ work, slide projections of teachers’ work above that, and the doors to the Internationales Phantastenmuseum were open so guests could access the gallery halls through our cassroom.  As I was at the ticket table, I spoke more German on this night than I had in 2 weeks! It was great.  I don’t know how many other times I’ll have the need to say “she has the stamp” and “please take off your shoes there”, but it was fun to practice. Luckily, my partner was Austrian, so she answered people’s more complicated questions.  Plus most people spoke English, so it wouldn’t have been an issue.

At 8pm, I joined the 40 minute meditation – even if I didn’t understand anything, it was great to help create the space and when 100 people sitting in a circle chanted OM together, it was the most beautiful OM ever!  Then, the dancing began and it was great – just like the old days when my friends and I went to punk clubs in Hull, across from Ottawa, because tthat’s where you could just close your eyes, dance, and simply be (vs. the meat market dance clubs everywhere else).  Tonight’s sacred barefoot dance party was put on by Avaloka, and it was just my style.  After about 1.5 hours of dancing, however, I decided to leave while I was still having fun and before I got too exhausted.  It was past 10pm (the party went on until 1am) and I enjoyed the 40-minute walk home – the streets were still full of tourists and locals – I feel very safe walking here at night.

I had a good day and indeed, I feel our community taking shape – it’s a truly beautiful community.  I’m glad I believe in “Feel the fear and do it anyway” – I’m glad I’m here and opening myself up to even more new experiences.  I look forward to the start of classes on Monday.

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An Amazing Classroom

When I looked online for the forecast this morning, I saw that the heavier rain was expected at 12pm and so I decided to postpone my 4-5 hour hike through the Prater and went back instead to the Shönbrunn Palace Gardens to explore the left side for 2.5 hours while doing my German lessons on my iPhone.  It only took me 10 minutes to get there by underground (2 lines) – wow!  What an inspiring classroom, and again, away from the main gardens, there were very few people.  For a very long time, I followed the star shaped super-tall hedges while repeating my German phrases.  When I turned a corner to see an elderly man masturbating in the distance (sorry, no photo), however, I decided to switch gardens. Luckily, there are lots to choose from.  Following the paths up the hill towards the Gloriette, I found myself walking in the woods. I could imagine the royalty exploring their hunting grounds on horseback in times past.  Today, however, the paths seem only to harbour beautiful rusty dark squirrels that run right up to you to beg, 2-coloured crows, statues, sandboxes, benches, and occasional openings with a great view.  Oh, and I found an outdoor swimming pool and wellness center that greatly appealed to me – there wasn’t a soul on this very cool day under a threatening sky, but I considered coming back on Sunday for their last day of the season (the water is at 23 degrees these days).  Something about the experience appeals to me.

After 2.5 hours of learning German in this beautiful landscape, I headed back to the underground just as the rain was getting heavier.  I got out on Mariahilferstrasse to activate my iPhone (9.90EUR for a SIMM card) and 10 EUR/month.  Good deal, I believe.  I then had a chicken PHO soup at a noodle shop and hopped on the first of a few different trams and buses to continue exploring the city.  Indeed the heavy rain was starting at 12pm!  I think I’ve discovered that buses with numbers in the hundreds actually leave the 21 districts of Vienna as I ended up into what seemed like a village within a most luscious green forest.  Since my Weekly Pass is only for Vienna, I got scared of the 100 Euro fine and hopped off. I waited about half an hour for the bus heading back the other way, quite the difference with the inner city 4-minute waits.  Luckily, by then, the heavy rain and hail had stopped and I got home dry with a few new places in my discovery-bag.

I’ll be going to bed early tonight because tomorrow is the big opening of the school – I’ll be helping out at about 3pm and the party goes until 1am… not sure if I will.  I’m excited and nervous – there are 150 saying they’re going so far on Facebook in a space that I’d say can accommodate 40…  hmmmm…

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