Tag: grass valley

  • Kathryn Wronski: How I Met Your Mother Dog Artist Lives in Grass Valley

    How-I-met-your-mother-dog-painting-kathryn-wronski

    Dazed from "How I Met Your Mother" by Kathryn Wronski, print available here

    Kathryn Wronski, the artist who painted the dog painting on the set of  "How I Met Your Mother"  lives in my town of Grass Valley, California (population 12,840).   I frequently get visitors here on Dog Art Today searching for her, so I wanted to get that information out of the way.  You can purchase a print of the dog with the green nose painting in Lily and Marshall's apartment here

    The alternative title to this post is:

    "How to be the Alpha Dog Artist in Your Town" 

    Kathryn Wronski is as talented at marketing as she is at painting.  Her work is ubiquitous in Grass Valley and neighboring town, Nevada City (population 3,064), and her name is synonymous with dog art.  In fact, it is rare when I meet someone and tell them what I do that the person doesn't respond, "You must know Kathryn Wronski."  I did know her through her high-profile presence at Nevada County art openings and marketing seminars, but I decided I needed to get to know her better and find out how she has cultivated her dog-art eminence in a place with more artists per capita than any county in California.

    We met for coffee and an interview at the dog-friendly Broad Street Bistro In Nevada City.

     

    Kathryn_wronski_dog_artist_celebration

    Celebration

    Moira McLaughlin: How did you begin you career as an artist?

    Kathryn Wronski: I actually got my degree in business and tried to make that work for some years.  But I wasn't happy in that world.   I think I wasn't suited for it because I grew up helping out in my family's flower business in Boston, making bouquets and learning about color and composition at a young age.  I missed being creative.   So, about 15 years ago after moving to California and raising two children, I started taking private painting lessons and really responded to it.

    I knew I needed a solid foundation to pursue being an artist, so I began taking art classes and studied for four years our community college, Sierra College, which has some excellent courses by the way.

    MM: Did you begin your studies painting dogs?

    KW: No, but when I did, I felt very silly.  I was taking an oil painting class with highly-regarded local landscape artist, Phil Brown, and everyone was painting bowls of fruit or the river, and I walk in with this large portrait of my parents' dog, Maggie.  I felt like I wasn't being a serious artist.  Phil noticed my discomfort and took me aside and told me to only paint dogs for the rest of the semester.   He could see in my painting my passion for the subject, and I credit Phil for giving me permission to pursue what made me happy.

    Kathryn-wronski-grass-valley-dog-artist-blue-studio

    Blue, work in progress

    Kathryn-wronski-grass-valley-dog-artist-blue

    Blue


    MM: It seems that everyone in our county knows you or your work.  How have you established yourself as the premier dog artist in our area?

    KW:  The most important thing is creating a connection.   People want to feel connected to the work and to the artist.  I've learned to pay attention to exhibiting my art in places that want me to flourish and that means I had to get over the idea that my work necessarily had to be in a prestigious gallery to sell.   For example, being in vets' offices has been great for me.  And one to the best outlets for my work has been The Gray Goose in Nevada City, a gift shop that allows dogs.

    Also, I have a painting behind the front desk at the Emma Nevada House bed and breakfast, so out-of-towners see my work.  I'm very active at two galleries in Grass Valley, ASiF and Art Works.  This year I participated in the Soroptmist International of the Sierra Foothills' garden tour.  And recently I began showing my work down the hill in Sacramento at Gallery 2110.

    Kathryn-wronski-grass-valley-dog-artist-winnie-emma-nevada-house

    Winnie hangs behind the front desk at the Emma Nevada House


    MM: I am in awe at how prolific you are.   How often do you paint?

    KW: Usually six hours a day. I like to paint at night when there are no interruptions.  Also, if there is a day when I don't feel like painting, I make myself go into my studio and just work for 20 minutes.   I usually find that gets the creative juices going and I stay.


    MM: Do you work on more than one painting at a time?

    KW:  Yes, I usually have ten going at once.


    MM: In terms of the products you offer, what are your biggest sellers these days?

    KW: Greeting cards at the galleries do well especially for collectors who are obsessed with a certain breed. Prints are harder to sell because people want to buy something that looks exactly like their own dog.  My magnets are not big money makers because I make them by hand and they are time consuming, but they are invaluable for commissions.  People don't usually decide to commission a piece of art on the spur of the moment.   They need to think about it.  So, if a magnet of my artwork is on their refrigerator, it's a constant reminder of who I am and what I do.

    MM: In addition to people seeing your work all over town on their daily errands.

    KW: Exactly.

    MM: Do you know there are people who have been searching for you ever since "How I Met Your Mother" began airing?  I searched myself when I lived in Los Angeles and I saw your painting on the set of the TV show.   I wanted to know who painted the awesome dog painting, and I couldn't find you.  I am hoping this post on Dog Art Today changes that.

    KW: It's so funny.   I've never even seen the show.

    MM: How did your dog painting end up on a hit TV series?

    KW: The set decorator saw my work and bought some paintings when she was visiting Truckee.

    MM: At a gallery?

    KW:  No, it was a dog grooming place.

    MM:  I see what you mean.  Retail might be a dog artist's best friend.  Do you have any other pieces of advice for dog artists who are trying to establish or grow their business?

    KW: As artists, it's hard not to take things personally.   So make "the personal" work for you.   Find places to exhibit your art that want you to flourish, and remember that the connections you make in your daily life have have a huge value for your business.

    MM:  After so many years, are you still happy painting dogs?

    KW:  Yes, but I love farm animals too.  A pig is a dog with a better nose.

    Kathryn_wronski_dog_artist_yo

    Yo

    Kathryn_wronski_dog_artist_babs

    Ringo

    Kathryn_wronski_dog_artist_freedom

    Freedom


    Thank you, Kathryn. You are a dog art star.

    Visit Kathryn Wronski's website.

    P.S.  Today, September 29, 2012, Sacramento's PBS station KVIE is presenting one of Kathryn Wronski's dog paintings in their annual fundraising auction.  You can view it here, number 14A Babs and Bubbles.  And you can bid on it live on KVIE at 2:30 pm – 3:00 pm, PST.

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    Babs and Bubbles by Kathryn Wronski, 14A on the KVIE auction
  • Sandy Lindblad: Backyards to Barnyards

     

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    Sally Wally

    I've put off featuring Grass Valley artist Sandy Lindblad because I fist discovered her work at my vet's office when Darby was dying.  At every visit during his last week, I ended up in the examining room with Sandy's Donna Wanna

     

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    Donna Wanna

    But, when I ran into Sandy this weekend at a local shopping center where she was promoting her art, and I could look at Donna Wanna without bursting into tears, I decided it's time.  Also, right now Sandy's work is on view at a one-woman show called "Backyards to Barnyards" at the Yuba-Sutter Regional Arts Council in Marysville, California. 

    I talk a lot on this blog about the fact that art matters.  Sometimes that mantra hits me in new ways.  Sandy's art was a great comfort to me during one of the hardest times of my life.  And when I saw it again, I felt surprisingly connected to Darby.  It was bittersweet.  But mostly sweet.

    If you've been thinking about putting your work in your local vet's office.  Maybe you should.  Art matters.

    Here are some of my favorite pieces of Sandy's.  Her work is as warm as she is.

     

    Sandy_lindblad_happy_dog

     

    Happy Dog

    Sandy_lindblad_onery_one

     

    Ornery One

    Sandy_lindblad_snacks

     

    Snacks

    Sandy_lindblad_carol_jean

     

    Carol Jean

    Like many of you, Sandy also does goats…

     

    Sandy_lindblad_happy_goats

     

    Happy Goats

    See Sandy Lindblad's work at "Backyards to Barnyards" at the Yuba-Sutter Regional Arts Council, on view until July 13, 2012.

    Visit Lindblad Studios for more information.

     

  • April Collage: Love Chakra Darby

     

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    About 30 minutes from Grass Valley is a place called Ananda Village.   According to its website it is "a cooperative spiritual community dedicated to the teachings of Paramhansa Yogananda, founded by his direct disciple, Swami Kriyananda."   I've heard it referred to as a commune and a former cult.   Today, 250 people live there on 900 acres and devote themselves following the advice from the Swami's book How to Be Happy All the Time through "simple living and high thinking."

    I've been fascinated by this place for a while.  In fact, the truth is Ananda Village is one of the reasons I moved to Grass Valley.  No, I didn't want to join the commune.  Although the yoga, the lack of one true religion, and the people-are-more-important-than-things-philosophy appeal to me, it was the tulips that drew me here.   When my sister, Sheila, who moved here first, started sending me photos of the tulips I was in awe.  When she explained that the photos were nothing, and there was no way to describe the beauty of this terraced garden overlooking the gorge of the South Yuba River, and that the gardens were open to the public only once a year in April, something sparked in me.  I had to see this place that sounded like a cross between Willy Wonka and The Wizard of Oz.   Shortly after that, I decided to move.

    Ananda_maroon

    Ananda_pink_yellow

    Ananda_view

    Surprisingly, I didn't see the tulips the first year I moved here.    April got filled up and I missed the window.  This year, I didn't let that happen and I went twice, once with friends and kids on the opening weekend and once with Sheila and her mother-in-law on a weekday.  Both visits were powerful; the first for the unbridled energy we all felt with the kids running around (and the special maple-glazed scones one of the member's bakes for the visitors), and the second for the feeling of being in the garden alone.  It was just us and two other people

    I still don't exactly know what goes on there year-round.  But the people I met at Ananda Village did seem happy, really happy, in a way I couldn't get a bead on.  They weren't hippie-ish.   They looked like suburbanites who shopped the Lands' End catalog yearly — crisp, colorful, and pressed.  Ok, the second time I went, there was a guy in a belted pantsuit with a groovy badge.  But mostly the members  just seemed sincere.  What was their angle?   The prices in the gift shop didn't seem to have the standard retail markup.   I'm not even sure if there was any markup.  And the tulips!   Sheila was right, there really is no way to describe them.  Willy Wonka and The Wizard of Oz are technical illusions caught on film.  This is real, with a blossomy breeze and the sound of the river echoing up with a gurgling roar.   The photos here, and all the photos I've ever seen can't capture it.  But know that the members plant 9,000 bulbs every year for five months.  Then, they pull them up, sketch a new garden plan, and start over, like a living mandala.

    Ananda_post_2

    So, as I've been making my way through the months for my Longhaired Dachshund Calendar starring my dog, Darby, I knew I wanted the April collage to be about the Ananda tulips.   Both times, before we went, I asked my sister Sheila to take photos for me.   And I brought my camera too and tried my best…

    Ananda_moira

    Between us we had some great shots.  But I felt defeated.  Anything layered or intricate would pale in comparison.    So I decided to go in the opposite direction.  I went for concentration instead of intricasy.  As I mentioned, in the Ed Ruscha post on Friday, I decided to make a silhouette.  When I completed it, I flashed on something someone said on our second visit.  It was a woman who was with the pantsuit-guy.  She entered the garden and looked out over the view and said, "It really opens up your love chakra, doesn't it?"  So that inspired the name for the April collage…

     

    Darby_april_post


    Open Up Your Love Chakra


    I did a little research after the piece was finished and was happy to find the colors that represent the love chakra are green and pink.  Also, I think it's interesting that one of the most beloved books, and now movies, about dog-love is J.R. Ackerley's My Dog Tulip .  Anyone who has one knows that nothing opens up your love chakra like a dog, but every April in Nevada County 9,000 tulips come close.

     

    On to May.  It's still freezing up here.  Got to get more firewood.

  • Dispatch from Dog Bar: Living in Circles

     

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    Shortly after I moved to Grass Valley, I heard two poets on our local radio station KVMR discussing the Rainer Maria Rilke poem I Live My Life in Widening Circles.  They talked as if everyone knew this poem.  I had never heard it, but it stayed with me.  I thought I would share it today with some images from 2010.

     

    I live my life in widening circles
    that reach out across the world.
    I may not complete this last one
    but I give myself to it.

    I circle around God, around the primordial tower.
    I've been circling for thousands of years
    and I still don't know: am I a falcon,
    a storm, or a great song?

    – Rainer Maria Rilke

    Mushroom_post_2

     

    Darby_wine_post

     

    Easter_basket_2

     

    Tomatoes_post

     

    Front_porch_post

     

    Pasta_peppers_post

     

    Deer_wheelbarrow

     

    Birds_nest_post

     

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    Thank you for reading, commenting, and sharing my blog with other dog art lovers. Wishing you a happy new year as you circle into 2011.

    Best,

    Moira and Darby

    P.S. Yes, I do make resolutions. This year I plan to:

    make art
    grow friends
    SUP on a Boga

  • Grass Valley Charter School’s Dog Art Fundraiser

    Grass_vally_dogs_collage

    Kath Schad and the parents at Grass Valley Charter School continue to amaze.  Remember when I wrote about how Kath spearheaded the effort to teach every first and second grader at Grass Valley Charter how to paint dog portrais?   And then, how she set up a Zazzle store so the young artists could purchase their works on t-shirts and mugs and give them as Christmas gifts?  And then, how she organized an exhibition of all the paintings at a local bakery?  Well Kath Schad's year-long-dog-art-a-palooza reaches a crescendo on May 1, 2010 with a dog art raffle and silent auction to raise money for Grass Valley Charter's Library.  Kath christened the event "Dog W.A.G." which stands for "wine, art, and goodies."  If you're in Nevada County please come and support the artists and their library.  Details are at the bottom of this post.

    If you can't make it but would like to contribute, please consider buying a raffle ticket for the two handmade quilts featuring all of the pet portraits created by local quilter Rebecca De Rock with fabric printed by NC Tees.

    Raffle tickets for the quilts are $5 each.  Email Kath Schad to purchase.  "We are crew" is the school's motto…

    Grass_valley_dog_quilt

    Dog_quilt_2

    I will be donating several prints of my collages and three months of advertising on Dog Art Today.  If you are a dog artist who would like to donate, email Kath Schad this week. 

    Dog W.A.G. information:

    What: Silent auction and raffle benefiting Grass Valley Charter School's Library

    When: Saturday, May 1, 2010, 5pm – 8pm

    Where: Grass Valley Holiday Inn, 121 Bank Street, Grass Valley, CA 95945

    Tickets: $15 in advance, $20 at the door

  • Spring Has Sprung

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    Darby and his Easter basket with flowers from my yard

    I am trying to get better at integrating my life into my blog.  Some people seem to do it so effortlessly.  Hopefully you won’t mind as I experiment with more photography and more images from Grass Valley.  I started off strong last summer with my Dispatches from Dog Bar and have neglected them since September.  Now that spring is here and I am headed back into the garden, I am going to get back on track.  Stay tuned. 

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    Easter Basket at Dog Bar

    Have a great weekend!

  • Grass Valley Charter’s Glorious Dogs

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    Bianca's Chihuahua

    I first met Katherine Schad at the farm stand she established at the Grass Valley Charter School to raise money for their new library.  Families donated bounty from their gardens and "customers" like me could pick up organic produce by putting a donation of a few dollars into the jar.  I was flummoxed about how much to give, and Katherine guided me through the nuances of the honor system.  In the process, she noticed my DreamDogsArt baseball cap and realized she knew my blog.  In fact, she had submitted artwork to last summer's Dog Art Today wine label contest.  I remembered her work and was thrilled to meet one of my readers and we started chatting about all things dog art related.  Little did I know that Kath — as she likes to be called — was in the process of coordinating one of the most ambitious and inspiring dog art projects I have ever covered.  She had decided to oversee the creation of two pet portraits for each of Grass Valley Charter's 1st and 2nd graders.  That's 22 students per class for a total of 88 dog paintings.

    To understand the scope of this project, you must also know that Kath has no formal art background and she is not a teacher.  She is simply an involved parent, and when she learned that her two children, who are in first and second grade, would be studying dogs and coyotes with their expeditions this year (different grades have different themes that run throughout their studies for the year), she decided to mount this pet portrait project.  She donated the 12 x 12 canvases and the paints and with the help of the teachers, Audrey Hight and Lori Davis, used an overhead projector to enable the children to trace and shade the contours of their dogs on to the panels before painting them with acrylics.

    When Kath first shared her vision with me, I was intrigued.  But nothing prepared me for the passion and exuberance of these dog paintings.  The works are so fun, immediate, and original, they are a reminder that everyone is an artist before they are taught that the sky must be blue and a heart red.  They also remind us that a great teacher is someone who can figure out how to harness that originality with the perfect balance of parameters and freedom, someone who may or may not have a teaching certificate or an art degree.

    When I look at this project I see inspiration manifest; by a mother with the courage to take an idea and make it real, by the the childrens' fearless use of color, and by a school that sees creativity as a worthy investment for their students' futures.  Kath says "that when the children see what they have been able to create, they just beam."  I beam too when I look at these works.  I see the pride in the young faces and I see that dog art can change the world.  I am in awe.

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    Marin sketches her dog

    Grass_valley_dog_art_brennan

    Brennan
    and Hurley

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    Ori's Chihuaha

    Grass_valley_dog_art_sidney

    Sidney's work

    Wolfie_2

    Wolfie by Suraya

    Grass_valley_dog_art_zach

    Zach's work

    Grass_Valley_


    Parker beams

    I will be following the Grass Valley Charter School Dog Art Project as it evolves.  Kath has plans for a gallery exhibition and a fundraiser for the library.  Stay tuned. 

    As always, I would love to hear your thoughts.

  • Carlie: A Star is Born

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    Carlie and Erin Cummisky

    One of my goals with my move to Grass Valley is to open up my blog and my life to dog art from the community.  I didn't know the first dog artist I'd be featuring from my new town would actually be a dog.  Meet Carlie, one of the stars of PAG's presentation of The Wizard of Oz, Frank Baum's classic creatively re-imagined by Mila Johansen.

    I first heard of Carlie from my neighbors, Tangerine and Plum Wilkin, who are both a part of the play (Tangerine is a magnificent Wicked Witch of the West and Plum has worked tirelessly behind the scenes).  They tried to explain the interpretation that Ms. Johansen gives Oz, and did a pretty good job selling me on it.   But when they told me that there was a real dog playing Toto, a dog with no training or theater background who is on stage for almost two hours, I knew I had to see this for myself.  Well, I probably would have gone to see Tangerine, but Toto sealed it for me.

    The play is as whimsical and vibrant as the movie, and all the children are impressive as much for their acting as for their dedication and exhubarence.  And Carlie…Carlie is a superstar!  She is calm and poised.  She follows the Yellow Brick Road without being tugged or restrained, and it actually looks like she is reacting to the other actors' lines.  I mean it Carlie is acting!

    Carlie_2

    Carlie and Jonathan Willis

    I had a chance to interview her owner, Jonathan Willis (who is terrific as The Wizard), to find out more about her…

    Moira McLaughlin:  How old is Carlie and what breed?

    Jonathan Willis:  She is a 5-year-old Cairn Terrier

    MM: What kind of training did she have?  Theater background?  Obedience school?

    JW: She never had puppy training school.  And she has never been in a play before.  She does sit, jump, and stand for treats and when she does those all together it looks like a routine.  But that is about all she knows.

    MM:  Are treats used on stage to get her to stay, walk, and respond?

    JW:  No, the only time treats are used is in the picnic scene, because that seemed like a time a dog would be begging for food. 

    MM:  How did she get the part?

    JW:  Paulette (Rudolph, the Director) and Mila (Johansen, the Artistic Director and Writer) had an open call.  Two dogs auditioned.  I was skeptical about Carlie's chances because she is often excited by new people, but when she walked on the stage she did such a good job, she got the part immediately.

    MM:  Have there been any mishaps?  Accidents?

    JW:  No.  None during the play.  But during a dress rehearsal, she barked at a little girl in the audience who ran in front of the stage.

    MM: Do you think she likes acting?

    Jonathan's mother, Janet Moore, answered:  Yes.  She seems happier.  Before, she was often home alone because I work.  She would be depressed and mopey and sleep 20 hours a day.  Now, she gets off the couch and is more outgoing.  Barking to express herself.  And she has worn a track in our yard where she runs back and forth next to the fence to say hi to all the neighbors.

    MM:  Greeting her fans!

    Janet:  Exactly!

    MM:  What are her plans for the future?

    Janet:  I hope she gets discovered so she can support us all.
    Jonathan:  I hope she doesn't get discovered because then she would be taken from us.
    Janet: You could be her manager.

    Jonathan didn't answer, he just pet Carlie and held her closer.  I didn't tell him that I was from Hollywood and that he was right.   I was glad I was in a place where I didn't have to.

    The Wizard of Oz final shows are this weekend:

    Center_for_the_arts

    Visit The Center for the Arts for more information. 

    Thank you Karen Busse for the use of your photographs.  Karen will be selling CD photo compilations from the play this weekend in the lobby after the shows.

  • Dispatch from Dog Bar: Part I

    Moira_winery

    Dog Bar is the name of the main road that snakes through my new neighborhood here in Grass Valley.  It has a history that goes back to at least 1850 as one of the main turnpikes into the gold fields and it was probably named for the dog-leg bend in the nearby Bear River.  I see it as good omen for my relocation of Dog Art Today, and I love that I can see the Dog Bar Road signpost as I look out my window and attempt to capture what it feels like to live up here in Gold Country.  A wormhole (a hypothetical tunnel connecting two different parts in spacetime) is the best analogy I have come up with.  But I still can't decide if I have gone back in time to wood-burning stoves or forward in time to post-apocalyptic self-sufficiency.  Or perhaps I have simply popped up in a parallel universe.  Needless to say, I am still getting my bearings.

    Overall I love it here.  Things are quiet, but intense.  There is so much activity that I have joked that I need to get back to the city to find some relaxation.  You see people here are "do-ers."  For example on July 4th they don't serve hot dogs and hamburgers, they roast a whole pig or a side of beef.  There are farmers' markets every two days and a street fair once a week.  Swimming in the river or a hike in the mines might fill up a slow morning.

    Sometimes I can't help but feeling like a lazy barbarian with my Saran Wrap and my desire to have heat installed before the first frost.  I step on the hose when I water, and I am not sure what to do with the compost pile accumulating in my back yard.  I had a meltdown at K-Mart when I had to choose a nozzle.  The nozzle, you see, is a very personal decision each gardener must make for herself.  I call myself a gardener because yesterday I planted eight tomato seedlings.  They were given to me by my neighbor who has a magnificent garden, but one day aspires to farm several acres using a horse and plow — can you see my confusion about which direction I have traveled?

    The above photo was taken Saturday night at the Naggiar Winery, several miles up the road.  I went with my sister and brother-in-law to a screening of "Bottle Shock", a film about the 1976 triumph of California wines at a blind tasting in Paris.  We picnicked, enjoyed discovering our new favorite white wine (Viognier) and oooooed and ahhhed at the double rainbows arcing above us.  I felt like I was in Italy.  But it was better than Italy, because I was home.

    Once I find my camera in the boxes still to be unpacked, Darby and I will head out on some adventures and post about them here in my new series, "Dispatches from Dog Bar."  Any tips from local readers would be greatly appreciated. 

  • Dog Art Today Moves to Grass Valley

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    Drawing of Grass Valley, artist unknown,
    1858 .  Via Sierra College.

    I found a miner's cabin overlooking a vineyard that feels like the perfect place to blog about dogs and make art.  So this July, I am moving Dog Art Today headquarters to Grass Valley, CA. 

    The town is spectacular, with history, community, and an infectious pioneer spirit.  Everyone seems to be planting vegetable gardens and sharing their crops.   I have a pen where I can raise goats.  There are communes that plant tulips and saloons that stay open around the clock.   And my sister and brother-in-law raising their two little girls whom I adore.  Friends Cindy and Jack too.  I am thrilled!

    Now for more dog art…I missed my blog.