Monday, May 25, 2009

To Those Who Served: We Do Remember


Above is a photo of the 24" X 28" sketch I did of my ex-husband's father. Plucked from his family, and his profession, he served his country in a selfless way.

I don't have a photo of my grandfather (that I could sketch from) and I don't know what he looked like. I could only illustrate in words how he was in his last days.  He was in the Death (Bataan) March, WWII, knowing that that would be the end of his life. He would not see his newborn daughter, my mother, again. My grandmother said that he died not instantly , as a bullet and bayonet would have ensured, but had a slow death caused   by dysentery. The soldiers had no food and water, and they just  had to lick the water on the ground. I could only surmise not just the physical suffering he may have had but also the suffering of his soul. His body was never found. Only a few lived to tell the tale.


The very  reason for his  absence now in this world, i.e. giving one's life for one's country,  is pervasive . We mourn for the lost lives and lost souls. Freedom is a dream that  seemed elusive to some but not to them. And that is the very reason they fought for, choose to fight for, and forced to fight for. The war continues and  the dream of freedom lives. 

Life's Simple Pleasures: From The Album "Weekend Matters"





Weekends Spell FUN!

 Aldo Lagasca prepared the ribs.



 ...with  Juliet and Cesar's helping hands..



 ...with some more helping hands from Julius (and I thought Aldo was just pulling my leg when he told me their names).



 Raymond is enjoying the burger.



 Rachel is chatting with Emma, who is a great and generous cook. The Lagascas are a generous, open-hearted  and kind lot. They're a perfect example of a Filipino family.




  Just enjoying the sun (May 25, 2009)



Raymond took a break from his computer (May 24, 2009)



Taking a break from Lea Salong's concert at the Silver Legacy's Grande Expo Hall, May 24, 2009




This dinner is also to celebrate my birthday belatedly. Thank you Emma and Aldo, and my other Filipino friends who are now family.


May 20, 2009 at Tuscany Village, Peppermill., Reno, NV

Saturday, May 16, 2009

THE ARTIST IN ME









HYDRANGEAS

One warm, lazy afternoon in July of 2008, in Atlanta, Georgia, my friend (Linda)' sister visited Meadow Springs and brought this freshly-cut bouquet of hydrangeas. I was so inspired by it's beauty that I started sketching it, with only a 10-cent 2-B pencil on regular 9" X 12" white paper. This may be just a plain old sketch of those beautiful hydrangeas but the emotions it evokes and the memories surrounding it are precious.



THE SAXOPHONE PLAYER"

24" X 28" sketch/drawing of my friend (Emilia)'s saxophone instructor. He lives in NY. I used charcoal, white gouache (for bright values) and regular black pentel/sharpie pen to SHORTEN drawing time. I finished this in 1 1/2 hours. I spent more time, 5 hours, sketching the smaller version, 
9" X 12" because I only used graphite pencil. I gave the original of the latter to my friend Emilia.



DAVID RAPS

24" X 28" portrait of David Raps, my ex-husband's father, done in charcoal, pencil. I achieved lighter values and whites by using pointed erasers. This was covered in glass, thus the reflection. (University Of Nevada School Of Medicine (UNSOM) Exhibit).