Category: Dog Art Books

  • Beasts of Burden and Compassion Arts Festival NYC

     

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    Sacrifice by Jane O'Hara, 2005

     

    New York friends, I wanted to remind you that "Beasts of Burden: Our Complex Relationship with Animals" will be on view October 20 – 22 in NYC. 

    The exhibition is part of the Compassion Arts Festival, a weekend of song, artistry, discussion, film, and performances reflecting our multifaceted relationships with the earth and the animals we share it with.

    There are two "Beast of Burden" events, the art show and a multimedia performance by curator, artist, and activist, Jane O'Hara.

    If there's one piece that exemplifies the show for me, its Jane's Sacrifice (above), a 5-foot tall screen that depicts nine animals wearing vestments of the companies that killed them. It's inspired by iconic paintings of Christian martyrs and the notion that millions of animals sacrifice their lives to powerful forces everyday in similarly barbaric ways.

    I think it will be moving to see this piece in person.

    Also, I'm proud to have my work, Twelve dox-ZENs, included.

     

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    Twelve dox-ZENs by Moira McLaughlin, 2014

    I produced this work in the in the wake of the death of my beloved longhaired Dachshund named Darby. For months, I was crippled by grief and creative paralysis. 

    Finally, I decided to paint dozens of sumi-e ink Darbys on the pages of a deconstructed book, Buddhism and Zen by Nyogen Senzaki and Ruth Strout McCandless. The series is a meditation on the Buddhist concept that the mind is an endless cycle of three processes: craving, acting, and discontentment.  

     

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    dox-ZEN XII

     

    Exhibition: "Beasts of Burden: Our Complex Relationship with Animals"

    TUF Gallery/O’Hara Projects
    208 East 73 St.
    New York, NY 10021

    Opening Reception and Book Signing: Friday, Oct 20, 2017, 5 – 8 pm (vegan friendly & free to the public)

    Gallery Hours: Saturday, Oct. 21 and Saturday, Oct. 22, 11 am – 6pm

    Performance: "Reflections on Beasts of Burden by Jane O'Hara"

    Saturday, October 21, 7:30pm

    Symphony Space/Leonard Nimoy Theatre
    2537 Broadway
    New York, NY10025

    Tickets for Jane's multimedia presentation are $20 in advance and $25 day of show available here.

    Visit Beasts of Burden for more information about this exhibition and performance.

    For information about all the animal-centric events happening this weekend visit Compassion Arts Festival.

    P.S. Sadly I won't be able to attend. If you have a chance to take photos, I would love to see them. Tag me on Instagram and Twitter.

    Thank you so much.  Enjoy!

     

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  • Dog Songs by Mary Oliver

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    Dog Songs by Mary Oliver, Penguin Press 2013

    Pulitzer prize winning poet Mary Oliver's new book, Dog Songs, celebrates dogs.

    The New York Times calls it "a sweet golden retriever of a book that curls up with the reader."  Read the full review here.


    Watch Mary Oliver read her poem "Little Dog's Rhapsody in the Night."  I can't stop thinking about it…

    Click here to view video on Dog Art Today.


    Order Dogs Songs by Mary Oliver at Amazon.


    Hat tip to my cousin Clair Lamb for letting me know about this new book.   Beautiful.

  • Contest: 1000 Dog Portraits Book

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    Modern Dog Design Co.
    , the Seattle-based, internationally acclaimed design studio is accepting submissions for 1000 Dog Portraits, a full-color, 320-page book slated for publication in the spring of 2014.  Sections will include every breed, including mutts and oddballs, with an special introductory emphasis on Beagles.  All mediums are accepted including pen and ink, watercolor, oil, charcoal, digital, mixed media or collage.



    Rockport Publishers
    , a company that specializes in books for design professionals, is sponsoring the contest and will publish the book.

    Click here to submit your dog portraits.  Submission deadline: April 1, 2013, 10pm EST.

    Like them on Facebook.

    Hat tip to Patti Haskins (whose dog portrait graces the contest's Facebook page) and Rachel Petrovich for letting me know about this contest brought to you by "true dog lovers and people who love art, design and kick-ass illustration."

  • Susan Clute: Roxie’s Mom Wins Knitting Book

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    Susan Clute and Roxie by Michael Clute (who's called Jack when he's on his motorcycle)



    Full disclosure, I wanted Susan Clute to win the book Knit Your Own Dog: The Second Litter by Sally Muir and Joanna Osborne. 
    Susan is my friend and neighbor.  She has been knitting for over 50 years. She works at our local yarn shop, MeadowFarm Yarn Studio in Nevada City, California, where she teaches and connects with a talented group of fiber artists in our community.  She owns a spinning wheel.  She and her husband, Mike or Jack,  give me heirloom zucchini seeds and taught me how to make pomegranate jelly.  And, she has a gorgeous, brilliant, willful, funny Wirehaired Dachshund named Roxie. 

    But, this was an official contest.  So I let the website Truly Random Number Generator select the winner.

    Susan won! 

    Congratulations, Roxie's mom.  It was meant to be.

  • Happy Birthday Dog Lover Edith Wharton!

     

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    Edith Jones with Two Dogs, 1884

    Today is the 150th birthday of Edith Jones Wharton, the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for literature for her 1920 novel The Age of Innocence.  She was a prolific writer who averaged a volume a year for forty years.  Her works include novels, novellas, short stories, ghost stories, an autobiography, literary criticism, poetry, plays, and translations, and they cover topics such as war, travel, landscape gardening, Italian architectural history, and interior decorating.  But she is most well known for her juicy, insider novels about the New York society into which she was born.  Today, her taste and insight are as popular as ever.  Edith Wharton is on trend.

    In a New York Times interview, Julian Fellowes, the creator of "Downton Abbey" cites Wharton as one of his influences for his wildly popular PBS series.   And Bill Cunningham recently pointed out that rich Victorian-inspired silks are stealing the show on Paris's runways and made stellar appearances at the opening of the new addition to Boston's Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.  The details about dresses, Parisian designers, upholstery, window treatments, state-of-the-art gas fireplaces that Wharton wrote about with authority and sometimes cattiness make her novels a pleasure to read.   If she was alive today, I am sure she would an über design blogger, a global taste-maker with a sharp tongue and a massive Twitter following.  One of my favorite bits of trivia about her is that her family, specifically her Aunt Elizabeth Schermerhorn Jones, was "the Joneses" as in "Keeping up with the Joneses."

    But my favorite thing about her is that she loved dogs.  Throughout her life, she was often photographed with her pups.  She gave to animal charities.   And she  helped establish the S.P.C.A. in its early days in the United States.  One of my all-time favorite dog quotes is by her.  It's one I think of often as I face my days without Darby, but it has never been so beautiful as when I saw it published as she wrote it, almost as a haiku…

    My little old dog:
    A heart-beat
    At my feet.

    The other bit of trivia I love about her, is that although she staged photos of herself working at her desk, she supposedly wrote in bed with her dogs, throwing the pages onto the floor.   When I discovered that, I realized how she was able to be so prolific.  I have been toying with a new theory about dogs giving humans the space to be artists (in the same way they gave them the space to plant crops and settle down and store fat and think new things with their bigger brains).  I think Edith Wharton proves my theory.  Dogs give you the permission to stay in bed and write, and the incentive to go outside and design your garden, and hang out with your friends on the terrace.  I think Edith Wharton had a beautiful life (though in all honesty it was sometimes heartbreaking), not because she was born into wealth, but because she loved dogs.

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    Edith Wharton with Two Dogs, Newport, RI, 1889

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    Edith Wharton with Dogs on her Shoulders, Newport, RI, 1889

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    Unknown Dog on the Terrace at Edith Wharton's Home The Mount

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    Edith Wharton's Dogs: Milou, Mija, and Nicette

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    Edith Wharton and her Dogs, Toots and Choumai

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    Edith Wharton with Three Small Dogs

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    Edith Wharton with Dogs and Friends

    Photos are from the Yale University Beinecke Book & Manuscript Library.

    The curators at The Mount, Edith Wharton's estate, are asking for birthday wishes, videos, cards and photos on their blog and their Facebook Page.

    Happy Birthday, Edith Wharton!

  • Rin Tin Tin: The Life and Legend by Susan Orlean

     

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    The Orchid Thief by Susan Orlean is one of my favorites, so I am looking forward to reading her most recent book Rin Tin Tin: The Life and Legend.

    Michiko Kakutani of The New York Times gives it a bumpy review.  But Amazon says:

    "At its heart, Rin Tin Tin is a poignant exploration of the enduring bond between humans and animals. But it is also a richly textured history of twentieth-century entertainment and entrepreneurship and the changing role of dogs in the American family and society. Almost ten years in the making, Susan Orlean's first original book since The Orchid Thief is a tour de force of history, human interest, and masterful storytelling—the ultimate must—read for anyone who loves great dogs or great yarns."

    Sounds like my kind of book.  Read more about it and order it here.

  • The Canine Portrait Project

     

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    Stella the Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retriever

    Hawaii artist William Gilliam's Canine Portrait Project began in January 2011 with $5000 he raised through Kickstarter.  His goal is to paint 150 dogs, about the same number recognized by the AKC with a few mutts too, in six months and publish a book of the portraits through Lulu.   A percentage of the portrait and book sales will go to the Big Island Humane Society.  Along the way, Gilliam has been flooded with photos of different breeds to paint.  But, surprisingly, he is still missing many breeds.  He would prefer not to use generic photos to finish his project, so click here to see the list of dog breeds he still needs and submit your dog for consideration.

     

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    Birdie the German Wirehaired Pointer

    SaintBernardweb

     

    Huckleberry the Saint Bernard

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    Jables the Rat Terrier

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    Roxy the Boxer Mix

  • Jonathan Franzen on Snoopy and Dachshunds

     

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    I finished reading Freedom by Jonathan Franzen on Wednesday night and have been crabby ever since.  The book is that good.  Devastatingly good.  I finished it, and now I am mad, bereft, like he broke up with me.  Yesterday, I went to the library to find someone new.  Every book was stupid, like Joey, a character in Freedom, would say.  After two hours I left with Jeanette Winterson's Lighthousekeeping and The Portable Thoreau.   Last night I ignored Jeanette and I started Walden because Thoreau was interested in nature and solitude, just like Jonathan.  I miss him.  This morning, digging around Jonathan's background, I found a dog art connection.  He is a big Snoopy fan and wrote the introduction to The Complete Peanuts, Volume 4: 1957-1958 .  He also wrote about his love of Snoopy in a 2004  article in The New Yorker entitled "The Comfort Zone: Growing Up With Charlie Brown."   The article sheds some light on several characters and events in Freedom and also includes this quote about Dachshunds:

    "We laugh at Dachshunds for humping our legs, but our own species is even more self-centered in its imaginings."
    It made me laugh.

    I know I'll get over him.  But it will take some time.  Anyone have a good book to read?

     

  • Knit Your Own Dog

     

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    West Highland Terrier

     

    Looking for a chic, crafty, low-maintenance dog?   Get out your needles and make your own with the new book Best in Show: Knit Your Own Dog by Sally Muir and Joanna Osborne.  Very clever.

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    Portuguese Water Dog

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    Jack Russell

    Knit_your_own_dog_basset_hound

    Basset Hound

    Knit_your_own_dog_poodle

    Poodle

    Knit_your_own_dog_border_collie

    Border Collie

    Via Nag on the Lake by way of Amusing Planet.