MondayMorning

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Monday, February 25, 2013

Naomi Shihab Nye

Posted on 2:00 AM by Unknown





"The story is given to you through the process of writing.  I always encourage my students to trust the process of writing.  It will take them somewhere, and it may not be where they thought they were going."











Naomi Shihab Nye


American Poet


1952 -














Commentary


Sometimes we plan too much.  We want to control every detail.  We need to learn to follow the story.  It is a gift.  We need to trust the discovery process.  The story will not betray us.  





Creative Practice


This week write a poem or short story starting with the phrase, "On the day that I died ..."  Follow where the story leads.  Trust the writing.  Go where it goes.





Background on Poet


Naomi Shihab Nye was born to a Palestinian father and American mother in St. Louis, Missouri.  She began writing poetry at the age of six.  She spent her high school years in both Jerusalem and San Antonio, Texas.  She received her BA from Trinity University in San Antonio.





Nye described her writing experience in the Four Winds Press:  "My poems and stories often begin with the voices of our neighbors, mostly Mexican American, always inventive and surprising.  I never get tired of mixtures."  She describes herself as the wandering poet and interacts with different cultures.





Video


Here is a video of Naomi Shihab Nye talking about inspiration:

















I believe that people have more similarities than differences.  Yet people tend to focus on what makes them different than what makes them the same.  In this next video Nye describes a poetry class she taught where she used poems written by both Jewish and Palestinian women.  She used poetry to show that we are more alike than different.












Read More
Posted in American Writer, Naomi Shihab Nye, story, Work Habits, Writing | No comments

Monday, February 18, 2013

Philip Pearlstein

Posted on 2:00 AM by Unknown



Self Portrait (2000)


"The sexual, psychological and social readings put on my paintings by anyone, even a professional art writer, are beyond my control and certainly beyond my concern."














— Philip Pearlstein


American Artist


1924 -











Commentary


We live in a world of critics and fault-finders.  Turn on the television and some commentator has a politician in the crosshairs.  As a society, we put people on pedestals and then proceed to throw stones at them.  Creative leaders face these same negative critics and it can feel very personal.  We are emotionally connected to our creative work and when someone attacks our work we can become very defensive.  Even the best artists, writers, musicians and actors have their critics.  For me, actors have it the worst.  Not only do they face criticism of their creative work, but also their physical appearance.  I appalled by these commentators who criticize what the actor or actress is wearing.





Pearlstein is on target with these comments.  Criticism is beyond our control.  We cannot stop others from attacking us.  The key is how we respond.  If we let it hurt us, it can damage our future creative work.  If we believe it to be true, we may change our creative work to please the public.  We must learn that it doesn't matter what other people say.  What is most important is what our heart tells us.  We must trust ourselves and not be swayed by the opinions of others.





I once shared some of my short stories that I wanted to publish with another writer.  She told me that my male characters weren't real men.  My response was to back off and stop writing stories.    Not a good response, I admit.  I let another person's negative comments change what I did.  And I am sure this as happened to some of you.





Some people have learned to harness the negative energy of others as a motivator.  The negativity inspires them to prove the person wrong.  In an introduction to psychology class in a junior college, the professor told my wife that she would never graduate from college — that she was not smart enough.  My wife transformed this negative feedback into the inspiration to finish college with honors.





How do you handle criticism?  Do you back off and stop doing what you were planning to do?  Or do you transform the criticism into a positive force in your life?





Creative Practice


Identify the negative, fault-finding people in your life.  Ask yourself if you need and want this person in your life.  If you don't, then let him go.  Negative people in our lives are very destructive.  They can cause emotional, mental and physical harm.  If you love the person and still want him in your life, then find a way to transform the person's negativity into a positive force.





Background of Artist


Philip M. Pearlstein was born in Pittsburgh, PA in 1924.  During the Great Depression, his father, David Pearlstein, sold chickens and eggs to feed and support the family.  His parents were very supportive of Philip's interest in art and sent him to the Carnegie Museum of Art for classes.  His studies were interrupted by World War II.  He was drafted and was stationed in Italy where he was exposed to much of the art in Rome, Florence, Venice and Milan.  After the war with the help of the G.I. Bill he finished his schooling and moved to New York City.  He was a realistic painter in a time when abstract expressionism was the dominant form of painting.





Pearlstein married Dorothy Cantor in 1950 and they had three children.  He spent much of his career as a professor at Brooklyn College.





Video


Here is a video with Pearlstein and others discussing his work.















Read More
Posted in American Artists, Criticism, Nudes, Philip Pearlstein, Realism | No comments

Monday, February 11, 2013

Pablo Picasso

Posted on 2:00 AM by Unknown

"What I want is that my picture should evoke nothing but emotion."











— Pablo Picasso


Spanish Artist


1881 - 1973











Commentary


Does your creative work evoke the emotions of your audience?  Does the work touch people's hearts?  Or is it an exercise in intellectual games?  The best creative work, the work that will last, touches people deeply and evokes emotions.  Think of the music the you like or the paintings that you enjoy.  They touch some part of you very deeply.





Are you in touch with your emotions?  Or do you hide your emotions from yourself and others?  When was the last time you had a deep emotional cry?  Do you believe that it is okay to cry?  Movies, more than novels or poetry, tend to touch me very deeply and often make me cry.  I have recently been watching the first season of the TV show, Touch, starring Kiefer Sutherland.  Every episode has filled my eyes with tears.  I have been emotionally touched.





What creative works have touched you deeply?  Have made you cry?  Or laugh?  Or scream?  Or frightened you?  Think of those thriller movies that some people love to watch.  Years ago when I attempted to read Nausea by Jean-Paul Sartre, it made me sick to my stomach and I could not finish it.  





Creative Practice


This week ask yourself if your creative work touches the hearts of other people.  Does your creative work evoke the emotions of others?  Then create a new work from the heart.  Create something that evokes the emotions others.





Poems That Touched Me


This past week I identified ten poems that have touched my heart over the years.  If all my books were taken away and I only could keep ten poems, these would be the ten that I would keep.  All ten poems can be found on the web.  I have linked the titles to copies of the poems.  If you have not read them, you should.





1.  The Waking by Theodore Roethke  


2.  The Road Not Taken by Robert Frost


3.  Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening by Robert Frost


4.  The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock by T. S. Elliot


5.  anyone lived in a pretty how town by e.e. cummings


6.  Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night by Dylan Thomas


7.  Preface to a Twenty Volume Suicide Note by LeRoi Jones (Amiri Baraka)


8.  Underwear by Lawrence Ferlinghetti


9.  What I Learned From My Mother by Julia Kasdorf


10.  Watering the Horse by Robert Bly





What poems have touched your heart?  What paintings have evoked emotions in you?  What novels have left you sad?  Glad? Or mad?





Artist Background


One of the greatest artist of any century, Pablo Picasso was born in Spain but lived most of his life in France.  As an artist, he was constantly reinventing himself.  Known for founding the Cubist movement, he was a painter, sculptor, printmaker, ceramicist and stage designer.





Video


Here is one person's listing of the top twenty paintings by Picasso.  Not all would make my list, but the top 2 would.












Read More
Posted in Emotions, Pablo Picasso, Spanish Artists, Touch | No comments

Monday, February 4, 2013

George D. Green

Posted on 2:00 AM by Unknown

"If you make pictures you are bound to be an abstract painter on some level."

















— George D. Green


American Artist


1943 - 











Commentary




People are often divided between those who love abstract art and those who love realistic art.  Just like readers have different tastes in literature.  A few love poetry.  Most hate it.  Some love romance novels and a few look down their noses at people who read romance novels.  Yet all literature is made up of words.  And the same is true of art.  At its core, all art is abstract.  The artist must create the illusion of realism, because a painted tree is never equal to a real tree in the backyard.  Writers, when they tell their stories, are creating illusions of reality.  The fictional world they create is never real no matter how much they base it on the world they live.  Narrative non-fiction may blend the worlds of fact and fiction, but if the writer strays to far from the fact he is considered a liar and may have his books removed from the bookstores.  Yet all writers at some level write fiction.  The world we write about is not the real world.  Even when I write a story about my mother, the character is not my mother.  She is my fantasy of my mother.  At some level all forms of art — painting, music, literature — are not real.





Creative Practice


This week paint that tree in your backyard as an abstract picture of your mother.  Or write a story-poem in the first person voice of your mother describing the tree in your backyard to her mother.







Bones, 1982





Artist Background


George D. Green was born in 1943 in Portland, Oregon.  He received a B.S. degree from the University of Oregon and a M.F.A. from Washington State University.  He had his first solo exhibit in 1968.




Read More
Posted in Abstract Expressionism, American Artists, George D. Green, Illusion, Reality | No comments
Newer Posts Older Posts Home
Subscribe to: Posts (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Medardo Rosso
    "What the artist must aim at above all else is this: to produce, by any process whatever, a work which by the life and humanity emanati...
  • Charlie Parker
    "Music is your own experience, your thoughts, your wisdom.  If you don't live it, it won't come out of your horn.  They teach y...
  • Soren Kierkegaard
    "Life must be lived forwards, but can only be understood backwards." — Soren Kierkegaard Danish Writer, Philosopher 1813 - 1855 Do...
  • Roger von Oech
    "If you make an error, use it as a stepping stone to a new idea you might not have otherwise discovered." — Roger von Oech America...
  • John Cheever
    "The need to write comes from the need to make sense of one's life and discover one's usefulness." — John Cheever American...
  • Annie Dillard
    "Write as if you were dying.  At the same time, assume you write for an audience consisting solely of terminal patients.  That is, afte...
  • Mahatma Gandhi
    “Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever.” ― Mahatma Gandhi Indian Lawyer /Activist 1869 -1948 Commentary ...
  • Chuck Palahniuk
    "We all die.  The goal isn't to live forever, the goal is to create something that will." — Chuck Palahniuk American Writer 19...
  • Josephine Hart
    "Poetry has never let me down. Without poetry, I would have found life less comprehensible, less bearable and infinitely less enjoyable...
  • Dorothy Dunnett
    "Facts are the soil from which the story grows.  Imagination is a last resort." Dorothy Dunnett Scottish Novelist, Portrait Painte...

Categories

  • A. E. Housman (2)
  • Aaron Copland (1)
  • Ability (1)
  • Abraham Lincoln (1)
  • Abstract Expressionism (1)
  • Absurdity (1)
  • Acceptance (1)
  • Achievement (5)
  • Act (3)
  • Action (1)
  • Actor (2)
  • Adlai E. Stevenson (1)
  • Adult (1)
  • Adventure (1)
  • Adversity (2)
  • Age (4)
  • Aimee Bender (1)
  • Akbar Padamsee (1)
  • Al Hirschfeld (1)
  • Alan Alda (1)
  • Albert Camus (1)
  • Albert Einstein (3)
  • Albert Schweitzer (1)
  • Albert Szent-Gyorgyi (1)
  • Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (1)
  • Alex Haley (2)
  • Alexander Graham Bell (1)
  • Alexander Pope (1)
  • Alexandre Hogue (1)
  • Alfred North Whitehead (1)
  • Alice Neel (1)
  • Alice Walker (2)
  • American Actors (11)
  • American Artists (44)
  • American Businessmen (7)
  • American Filmmakers (11)
  • American Generals (1)
  • American Inventor (4)
  • American Musician (24)
  • American Photographers. (2)
  • American Presidents (3)
  • American Speakers (46)
  • American Sports Heroes (2)
  • American Writer (184)
  • Amos Ferguson (1)
  • Amy Tan (1)
  • Amy Zimmer (1)
  • Anais Nin (1)
  • Andrew Wyeth (1)
  • Anger (1)
  • Anita Brookner (1)
  • Ann Linnea (1)
  • Ann Patchett (2)
  • Anna Quindlen (1)
  • Anne Frank (1)
  • Anne Morrow Lindbergh (1)
  • Anne Sexton (1)
  • Anne Tyler (1)
  • Annie Dillard (1)
  • Ansel Adams (1)
  • Anthony Robbins (1)
  • Anton Chekhov (2)
  • Anxiety (2)
  • Applause (1)
  • Appreciation (9)
  • Argentine Musicians (1)
  • Aristide Maillol (1)
  • Aristotle (1)
  • art (9)
  • Art Forms (1)
  • Arthur C. Clarke (1)
  • Arthur Koestler (1)
  • Artist (3)
  • Attitude (12)
  • Audience (7)
  • Audre Lorde (1)
  • Aung San Suu Kyi (1)
  • Austrian Writers (4)
  • Authentic (1)
  • Autobiography (1)
  • Autumn (1)
  • Autumn Leaves (2)
  • Baggage (1)
  • Bahamian Artists (1)
  • Balance (1)
  • Barbara Hambly (1)
  • Barbara Kingsolver (1)
  • Barbara Sher (1)
  • Barbara Streisand (1)
  • Barbara Walters (1)
  • baseball (1)
  • Beatrix Potter (1)
  • Beauty (7)
  • Being (2)
  • Belgian Artists (2)
  • Beliefs (14)
  • Ben Stein (1)
  • Bengali Writers (2)
  • Benjamin Mays (1)
  • Bernice Johnson Reagon (1)
  • Bernie Siegel (1)
  • Bertolt Brecht (1)
  • Beverly Pepper (1)
  • Biography (3)
  • Birth (5)
  • Blaise Pascal (1)
  • Blame (1)
  • Blessings (4)
  • Bob Dylan (1)
  • Bob Marley (1)
  • Book Burning (3)
  • Booker T. Washington (1)
  • Books (7)
  • Boredom (1)
  • Boris Pasternak (1)
  • Bows (1)
  • Brain (1)
  • Brazilian Writers (2)
  • British Actors (1)
  • British Artists (15)
  • British Inventors (1)
  • British Politicians (1)
  • British Speakers (3)
  • British Writers (36)
  • Burmese Writers (1)
  • Business (1)
  • Butterfly (1)
  • C. S. Lewis (2)
  • Camille Pissarro (1)
  • Canadian Artists (3)
  • Canadian Authors (5)
  • Candle (1)
  • canvas (2)
  • Caribbean Writer (1)
  • Caring (4)
  • Carl Jung (1)
  • Caroline Myss (1)
  • Carving (1)
  • Catherine Lanigan (1)
  • Celebration (11)
  • Censorship (1)
  • Certainty (1)
  • Chaim Potok (1)
  • Challenge (13)
  • Chance (1)
  • Change (15)
  • Chaos (2)
  • Character (7)
  • Characters (2)
  • Charles Dickens (2)
  • Charles Kettering (1)
  • Charles Kingsley (1)
  • Charles Kuralt (1)
  • Charlie Parker (1)
  • Charlotte Bronte (1)
  • Child (4)
  • Childhood (2)
  • Chilean Writers (2)
  • Chinese Writers (1)
  • Chinua Achebe (1)
  • Choice (12)
  • Chopin (1)
  • Christina Baldwin (1)
  • Christopher Reeve (1)
  • Chuck Palahniuk (1)
  • Claes Oldenburg (1)
  • Clarissa Pinkola Estes (2)
  • Claron McFadden (1)
  • Clouds (1)
  • Collage (1)
  • Colombian Writers (1)
  • Color (7)
  • Columbian Artists (1)
  • Comfort Zone (1)
  • Commitment (8)
  • Communication (7)
  • Community (1)
  • Compassion (8)
  • Complexity (3)
  • Compliments (2)
  • Computers (1)
  • Concentration (1)
  • Confidence (7)
  • Conflict (3)
  • Connections (4)
  • Contemplation (1)
  • Content (1)
  • Contradictions (1)
  • Control (1)
  • Conversations (2)
  • Cornelia Funke (1)
  • Courage (14)
  • Craft (4)
  • Creative Expression (29)
  • Creative Journey (13)
  • Creative Leaders (27)
  • Creative Loafing (3)
  • Creative Work (39)
  • creativity (58)
  • Cristina Marrero (1)
  • Criticism (6)
  • Cross-Fertilization (2)
  • Cubists (1)
  • Curious (3)
  • Cynthia Ozick (1)
  • Czech Writers (1)
  • Dance (2)
  • Danger (1)
  • Danish Scientists (1)
  • Danish Writers (3)
  • Darkness (1)
  • David Handler (1)
  • David Hockney (1)
  • David McNally (1)
  • David Smith (1)
  • David St.John (1)
  • David Steindl-Rast (1)
  • Dawn (1)
  • Day Dream (2)
  • Dean Koontz (2)
  • Death (17)
  • Decisions (8)
  • Deepak Chopra (2)
  • Delight (1)
  • Denis Diderot (1)
  • Denis Waitley (1)
  • Description (3)
  • Desire (9)
  • Desserts (1)
  • Destination (1)
  • Destruction (3)
  • Detail (4)
  • Determination (3)
  • Development (4)
  • Diane Arenberg (1)
  • Diane Keaton (1)
  • Diego Rivera (1)
  • Dietrich Bonhoeffer (1)
  • Discipline (9)
  • Discovery (12)
  • Donald Hall (1)
  • Doodling (1)
  • Doors (1)
  • Dorothy Dunnett (1)
  • Dorothy Fadiman (1)
  • Doubt (10)
  • drawing (3)
  • Dream (26)
  • Duke Ellington (1)
  • Dutch Artists (3)
  • Dutch Writers (2)
  • Dylan Thomas (1)
  • E. B. White (1)
  • e.e. cummings (1)
  • Edgar Degas (2)
  • Edith Wharton (1)
  • Edouard Manet (1)
  • Education (5)
  • Edvard Munch (1)
  • Edward Calvert (1)
  • Edward Hopper (1)
  • Eileen Goudge (1)
  • Eleanor Roosevelt (3)
  • Elizabeth Bibesco (1)
  • Ella Fitzgerald (1)
  • Elle Nicolai (1)
  • Elmore Leonard (1)
  • Emile Zola (2)
  • Emotion (8)
  • Emotions (4)
  • Empathy (1)
  • Encouragement (5)
  • Endings (1)
  • Energy (2)
  • Entertainment (1)
  • Enthusiasm (4)
  • Environment (1)
  • Eric Fischl (2)
  • Erich Fromm (1)
  • Ernest Hemingway (1)
  • Ernst Bacon (1)
  • Eternity (1)
  • Ethel Barrymore (1)
  • Eugene Ionesco (1)
  • Existence (1)
  • Expectations (5)
  • Eyes (1)
  • Facts (2)
  • Facundo Cabral (1)
  • Failure (21)
  • Faith (28)
  • Fame (6)
  • Family (4)
  • Farm (2)
  • Fate (1)
  • Father (1)
  • Fear (17)
  • Female (1)
  • Fernando Botero (1)
  • Fields (1)
  • Fiona Gardner (1)
  • Fiona Robyn (1)
  • First Draft (1)
  • Five Senses (2)
  • Flannery O'Connor (1)
  • Flaws (6)
  • Flowers (3)
  • Focus (3)
  • Food (1)
  • Foolishness (1)
  • Footprints (2)
  • Forgetful (2)
  • Forgive (2)
  • Form (3)
  • Fortune (4)
  • Francis Bacon (2)
  • Francis Picabia (1)
  • Frank Glazer (1)
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt (1)
  • Frederick Franck (2)
  • Freedom (2)
  • French Actors (2)
  • French Artists (17)
  • French Writers (17)
  • Frida Kahlo (1)
  • Friedrich Nietzsche (1)
  • Friends (2)
  • Fruit (1)
  • Fun (2)
  • Future (4)
  • Fyodor Dostoyevsky (1)
  • Gabriel Garcia Marquez (1)
  • Gardens (1)
  • Garrison Keillor (1)
  • Gary Zukav (1)
  • Gender (1)
  • Gentleness (2)
  • George Bernard Shaw (1)
  • George C. Scott (1)
  • George D. Green (1)
  • George Elliot (2)
  • George Grosz (1)
  • George Matthew Adams (1)
  • George Patton (1)
  • George Sand (1)
  • George Tooker (1)
  • George Washington Carver (1)
  • Georgia O'Keefe (3)
  • German Artists (7)
  • German Musicians (2)
  • German Writers (12)
  • Gestures (1)
  • Gift (21)
  • Giving (1)
  • Gladys Taber (1)
  • Goals (17)
  • God (5)
  • Good (2)
  • Good or Bad (1)
  • Goodbye (1)
  • Gordon Hinckley (1)
  • Gratitude (20)
  • Greatness (3)
  • Greek Writers (4)
  • Greeting (1)
  • Growth (12)
  • Gunther Grass (1)
  • Gustave Courbet (1)
  • Gustave Flaubert (1)
  • Gwendolyn Brooks (1)
  • H. G. Wells (1)
  • Habits (6)
  • Haiku (6)
  • Hans Hofmann (2)
  • Happiness (13)
  • Harley Brown (1)
  • Harley King (9)
  • Harmony (1)
  • Harold Pinter (1)
  • Harper Lee (1)
  • Harry Chapin (1)
  • Harry Emerson Fosdick (1)
  • Harry S. Truman (1)
  • Hazrat Inayat Khan (1)
  • Heal (5)
  • Heart (26)
  • Heather Graham (1)
  • Heinrich Heine (1)
  • Henning Mankell (1)
  • Henri Matisse (1)
  • Henri Nouwen (1)
  • Henri-Frederic Amiel (1)
  • Henry Miller (1)
  • Henry Reed (1)
  • Henry Ward Beecher (1)
  • Hermann Hesse (2)
  • Herodotus (1)
  • Hisham Matar (1)
  • History (4)
  • home run (1)
  • Honest (2)
  • Hope (23)
  • Horace (1)
  • House of Spirits (1)
  • Howard Aiken (1)
  • Hugs (4)
  • Humility (5)
  • Humor (6)
  • Hungarian Writers (3)
  • Ideas (16)
  • Identity (3)
  • If Only Thinking (1)
  • Illusion (4)
  • Image (2)
  • imagination (20)
  • Immortality (2)
  • Imperfections (6)
  • Inconsistencies (3)
  • Independent Investigation (1)
  • Indian Artists (1)
  • Indian Writer (5)
  • Individuality (4)
  • Influence (5)
  • Information (5)
  • Innocence (2)
  • Innovative (4)
  • Inspiration (17)
  • Instinct (2)
  • Intelligence (1)
  • Interest (2)
  • Intuition (1)
  • Intuitive (10)
  • Irish Novelist (1)
  • Irish Writers (7)
  • Irving Berlin (1)
  • Isaac Asimov (1)
  • Isabel Allende (1)
  • Isabel Bishop (1)
  • Isadora Duncan (1)
  • Isak Dinesen (1)
  • Ishmael Reed (1)
  • Italian Artists (4)
  • J. K. Rowling (1)
  • Jackson Pollock (1)
  • Jacques Lipchitz (1)
  • Jamaica Kincaid (1)
  • Jamaican Musicians (1)
  • James Abbot McNeill Whistler (1)
  • James Michener (1)
  • James Salter (1)
  • James Stephens (1)
  • Jane Goodall (1)
  • Jane Langton (1)
  • Jane Rule (1)
  • Japanese Artists (3)
  • Japanese Writers (3)
  • Jasper Johns (1)
  • Jean Anouilh (1)
  • Jean Toomer (1)
  • Jean-Francois Millet (1)
  • Jean-Paul Sartre (1)
  • Jerry Uelsmann (1)
  • Jim Dine (1)
  • Jim Henson (1)
  • Jim Rohn (1)
  • Jimi Hendrix (1)
  • Joan Miro (2)
  • Johari King (1)
  • John Amatt (1)
  • John Burroughs (1)
  • John Cage (1)
  • John Cheever (1)
  • John Cleese (1)
  • John F. Kennedy (1)
  • John Holt (1)
  • John Keats (1)
  • John O'Hara (1)
  • John Quincy Adams (1)
  • John Ruskin (1)
  • John Singer Sargent (1)
  • John Steinbeck (2)
  • John Updike (1)
  • John W. Gardner (1)
  • Jonah Lehrer (1)
  • Jonathan Hull (1)
  • Joseph Joubert (1)
  • Josephine Hart (1)
  • Joy (12)
  • Joyce Carol Oates (1)
  • Joyce Cary (1)
  • Joye Moon (1)
  • Judgement (3)
  • Judson Jerome (1)
  • Julie Otsuka (1)
  • Kathe Kollwitz (1)
  • Katherine Mansfield (1)
  • Katsushika Hokusai (1)
  • Keith Harrell (1)
  • Ken Kesey (1)
  • Ken Robinson (1)
  • Kindness (4)
  • Knowledge (10)
  • Kurt Vonnegut (2)
  • Langston Hughes (1)
  • language (6)
  • Larry Wilde (1)
  • Laughter (7)
  • Lawrence Ferlinghetti (1)
  • Leadership (3)
  • Learning (28)
  • Legacy (5)
  • Leo Buscaglia (1)
  • Leo Tolstoy (1)
  • Leonardo da Vinci (2)
  • Leontyne Price (1)
  • Les Brown (1)
  • Lewis Carroll (1)
  • Libyan Writers (1)
  • Life (25)
  • Light (2)
  • Lillian Hellman (1)
  • Limitations (6)
  • Lionel Shriver (1)
  • Lisa Alther (1)
  • Listening (9)
  • Lithuanian Artist (2)
  • Liz Smith (1)
  • Logic (1)
  • Losers (2)
  • Lou Holtz (1)
  • Louis Armstrong (1)
  • Louisa May Alcott (1)
  • Louise Bourgeois (1)
  • Louise Nevelson (1)
  • Love (16)
  • Luc de Clapiers (1)
  • Lucian Freud (1)
  • Lucid Dreaming (2)
  • Lucille Ball (1)
  • Lucille Clifton (1)
  • Lucy Maud Montgomery (1)
  • Ludwig van Beethoven (1)
  • Lust (1)
  • Lust For Life (1)
  • M. Scott Peck (1)
  • Madeleine L'Engle (1)
  • Mahatma Gandhi (3)
  • Malcolm Forbes (1)
  • Male (1)
  • Marcel Duchamp (2)
  • Marcel Marceau (1)
  • Marcel Proust (1)
  • Margaret Atwood (1)
  • Margaret Thatcher (1)
  • Maria Luz Q. King (1)
  • Maria Shriver (1)
  • Marian Wright Edelman (2)
  • Marilyn Chin (1)
  • Mark Rothko (2)
  • Mark Strand (1)
  • Mark Twain (2)
  • Martin Buber (1)
  • Marva Collins (1)
  • Mary Frank (2)
  • Mary Oliver (2)
  • Mary Tyler Moore (1)
  • Masaoka Shiki (1)
  • mask (4)
  • Master (1)
  • Mastery (1)
  • Matsuo Basho (1)
  • Maurice Grosser (1)
  • Max de Pree (1)
  • Maxwell Maltz (1)
  • Maya Angelou (2)
  • Mayumi Oda (1)
  • Medardo Rosso (1)
  • Memoirs (3)
  • Memory (10)
  • Mental Leaps (1)
  • Mentors (3)
  • Meredith Monk (1)
  • Metaphor (1)
  • Mexican Artists (1)
  • Mexican Writers (1)
  • Michael Korda (1)
  • Michelangelo (1)
  • Michele Cassou (1)
  • Miguel de Cervantes (1)
  • Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi (1)
  • Miracle (2)
  • Mirror (2)
  • Misfits (1)
  • Miss Subways (1)
  • Mistakes (12)
  • Mitch Albom (1)
  • Moliere (1)
  • Mother Nature (2)
  • Motivation (4)
  • Movement (2)
  • Muse (9)
  • Music (8)
  • Mystery (2)
  • Nancy Grossman (1)
  • Naomi Shihab Nye (2)
  • Napoleon Hill (1)
  • Narrow-minded (1)
  • Natalie Goldberg (3)
  • Nature (8)
  • New Year (1)
  • New Zealand Writer (1)
  • Nicholas Sparks (1)
  • Niels Bohr (1)
  • Nigerian Writers (2)
  • Night (1)
  • Nikki Giovanni (1)
  • Nobel Prize (1)
  • Noise (5)
  • Norman Fischer (1)
  • Norman Vincent Peale (1)
  • Norwegian Artist (1)
  • Notes (1)
  • Novel (8)
  • novelist (3)
  • Nudes (1)
  • O. Henry (1)
  • Observation (2)
  • Obsession (6)
  • Obstacles (8)
  • Octavia E. Butler (1)
  • Octavio Paz (1)
  • Odani Motohiko (1)
  • Open-minded (1)
  • Opinions (1)
  • Opportunity (6)
  • Oprah Magazine (1)
  • Oprah Winfrey (1)
  • Optimism (10)
  • Optimist (1)
  • Organization (1)
  • Originality (3)
  • Oscar Wilde (1)
  • Otto Dix (1)
  • Ovid (1)
  • Pablo Picasso (3)
  • Page (1)
  • Pain (11)
  • paint brush (3)
  • Painting (15)
  • Paradox (3)
  • Passion (12)
  • Pat Conroy (1)
  • Path (8)
  • Patience (7)
  • Patterns (2)
  • Paul Gauguin (1)
  • Paul Klee (2)
  • Paul Simon (1)
  • Paula Abdul (1)
  • Paulo Coelho (2)
  • Peace (1)
  • Pearl Buck (2)
  • pen (2)
  • People (2)
  • Perception (6)
  • Perfection (13)
  • Persistence (20)
  • Perspective (5)
  • Perspiration (2)
  • Pessimist (2)
  • Peter Drucker (1)
  • Peter S. Beagle (1)
  • Philip Guston (1)
  • Philip Pearlstein (1)
  • Photography (3)
  • Physical World (3)
  • Piano (1)
  • Pierre Alechinsky (1)
  • Pierre Auguste Renoir (2)
  • Placido Domingo (1)
  • Plagiarism (1)
  • Planning (2)
  • Planting (2)
  • Play (4)
  • Pleasure (2)
  • Poet (7)
  • Poetry (13)
  • Polish Musicians (1)
  • Portraits (2)
  • Potential (2)
  • Power (6)
  • Practice (6)
  • Praise (1)
  • Prayer (2)
  • Predictions (1)
  • Preparation (2)
  • Privilege (1)
  • Privilege of Service (1)
  • Problems (2)
  • Procrastination (1)
  • Productivity (4)
  • Progress (3)
  • Prosperity (1)
  • Protest (1)
  • Puerto Rican Writers (1)
  • Pulitzer Prize (2)
  • Purpose (10)
  • Questions (5)
  • Rabbits (2)
  • Rabindranath Tagore (2)
  • Rafael Alberti (1)
  • Rafael Yglesias (1)
  • Rainbows (1)
  • Rainer Maria Rilke (1)
  • Ralph Ellison (1)
  • Ralph Waldo Emerson (2)
  • Ray Bradbury (3)
  • Raymond Chandler (1)
  • Readers (2)
  • Reading (7)
  • Realism (1)
  • Reality (6)
  • Reason (1)
  • Rebels (1)
  • Rebirth (2)
  • Reflection (1)
  • Reinvent (2)
  • Rejection (5)
  • Relationships (8)
  • Rene Magritte (1)
  • Responsibilities (2)
  • Revisions (2)
  • Richard Avedon (1)
  • Richard B. Sheridan (1)
  • Richard Wilbur (1)
  • Risk (4)
  • Robert Bly (2)
  • Robert Browning (1)
  • Robert Collier (1)
  • Robert Frost (1)
  • Robert Greene (1)
  • Robert Henri (1)
  • Robert Mapplethorpe (1)
  • Robert Persig (1)
  • Robert Rauschenberg (1)
  • Robert Spiess (1)
  • Roberto Bolano (1)
  • Roger Crawford (1)
  • Roger Fry (1)
  • Roger von Oech (1)
  • Roman Writers (2)
  • Romanian Writers (1)
  • Romare Bearden (1)
  • Roots (2)
  • Rosanne Cash (1)
  • Roses (1)
  • Rudyard Kipling (1)
  • Rules (2)
  • Russian Artists (4)
  • Russian Writers (6)
  • Sacred (3)
  • Sacrifice (4)
  • Safe (1)
  • Sally Field (1)
  • Salman Rushdie (1)
  • Salvation (1)
  • Sam Harris (1)
  • Sam Savage (1)
  • Samuel Butler (1)
  • Sanity (1)
  • Santoka Taneda (1)
  • Saul Bellow (1)
  • Schools (1)
  • Scott Adams (1)
  • Sculptor (2)
  • Seasons (2)
  • Secrets (1)
  • Seeing (10)
  • Self-Image (3)
  • Seneca (1)
  • Service (5)
  • Sex (2)
  • Shadows (1)
  • Shape (1)
  • Sharon Olds (1)
  • Short Stories (5)
  • Silence (12)
  • Simone Weil (1)
  • Simplicity (3)
  • Singing (1)
  • Sky (1)
  • Sleeping Preacher (1)
  • Smiles (1)
  • Snow (1)
  • Socrates (1)
  • Soil (2)
  • Song (2)
  • Sophocles (1)
  • Soren Kierkegaard (2)
  • Sorrows (2)
  • Soul (14)
  • Sound (3)
  • South African Writers (1)
  • Sowing Seeds (3)
  • Spanish Artists (6)
  • Spanish Musicians (1)
  • Spanish Writers (2)
  • Speaker (4)
  • Spirit (11)
  • Spiritual (16)
  • spitball (1)
  • Spring Cleaning (1)
  • Squirrels (2)
  • St. Louis Cardinals (1)
  • Stan Musial (1)
  • Standing Ovations (1)
  • Stanley Kubrick (1)
  • Stanley Spencer (1)
  • Stephen King (1)
  • Stephen Wilkes (1)
  • Steve Jobs (3)
  • Steve Martin (1)
  • Storms (2)
  • story (16)
  • Storyteller (6)
  • Strength (5)
  • Stumbling Blocks (6)
  • Style (1)
  • Subconscious (3)
  • Subjects (2)
  • Substance (2)
  • Success (27)
  • Suffering (2)
  • Sunrise (2)
  • Sunset (2)
  • Support (2)
  • Surprise (1)
  • Susan Ertz (1)
  • Susan Minot (1)
  • Susan Sontag (1)
  • Swedish Artists (1)
  • Swedish Authors (2)
  • Swiss Artists (2)
  • Swiss Writers (3)
  • T. S. Elliot (2)
  • Talent (8)
  • Talking (2)
  • Taylor Swift (1)
  • Teacher (6)
  • Technique (3)
  • Tecumseh (1)
  • Tennessee Williams (1)
  • Terry Fox (1)
  • Terry McMillan (1)
  • Terry Pratchett (2)
  • The Journey (2)
  • Theft (1)
  • Themes (1)
  • Theodore Hesburgh (1)
  • Theodore Isaac Rubin (1)
  • Theodore Roosevelt (1)
  • Thomas Carlyle (1)
  • Thomas Cole (1)
  • Thomas Edison (2)
  • Thomas Kinkade (1)
  • Thomas Merton (1)
  • Thought (4)
  • Time (8)
  • Titles (1)
  • Tom Robbins (1)
  • Tomas Karkalis (1)
  • Tomas Transtromer (1)
  • Tommy Lasorda (1)
  • Touch (1)
  • Travel (1)
  • Trees (1)
  • Truman Capote (1)
  • Trust (4)
  • Truth (13)
  • Uche Nduka (1)
  • Ugly (1)
  • Unconditional Love (1)
  • Unfinished (1)
  • Unique (1)
  • Universe (5)
  • Vaclav Havel (1)
  • Victor Hugo (1)
  • Villanelle (1)
  • Vincent van Gogh (1)
  • Vision (11)
  • Visual Memory (1)
  • Visualization (2)
  • Voices (5)
  • Vulnerable (2)
  • W. S. Merwin (1)
  • Wallace Stevens (1)
  • Walt Disney (1)
  • Wanda Koop (1)
  • Wassily Kandinsky (2)
  • Wayne Dyer (1)
  • Wayne Thiebaud (1)
  • Weakness (2)
  • Wilfred Grenfell (1)
  • Wilfred Peterson (1)
  • William Faulkner (1)
  • William Holman Hunt (1)
  • William Plomer (1)
  • William Ralph Inge (1)
  • William Sloan Coffin (1)
  • William Trevor (1)
  • Wilson Mizner (1)
  • Winners (5)
  • Winston Churchill (1)
  • Winter (3)
  • Wisdom (12)
  • Witness (1)
  • Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1)
  • Word (7)
  • Work (20)
  • Work Habits (37)
  • world (3)
  • Worry (2)
  • Writer (2)
  • Writer's Block (6)
  • Writing (42)
  • Yo-Yo Ma (1)
  • Youth (2)
  • Zen (1)
  • Zig Ziglar (2)

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (37)
    • ►  September (2)
    • ►  August (4)
    • ►  July (4)
    • ►  June (4)
    • ►  May (4)
    • ►  April (6)
    • ►  March (4)
    • ▼  February (4)
      • Naomi Shihab Nye
      • Philip Pearlstein
      • Pablo Picasso
      • George D. Green
    • ►  January (5)
  • ►  2012 (243)
    • ►  December (5)
    • ►  November (4)
    • ►  October (5)
    • ►  September (4)
    • ►  August (9)
    • ►  July (31)
    • ►  June (30)
    • ►  May (31)
    • ►  April (30)
    • ►  March (32)
    • ►  February (29)
    • ►  January (33)
  • ►  2011 (220)
    • ►  December (31)
    • ►  November (30)
    • ►  October (30)
    • ►  September (30)
    • ►  August (31)
    • ►  July (30)
    • ►  June (30)
    • ►  May (8)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile