Saturday, March 12, 2016

The Dashboard Diary: A Waltz Across Texas




The Alliswells have taken a lot of trips over the years. Sometimes for work, sometimes for play, some- times for both. On this trip we flew to Dallas for the American Museum Conference. We went to work for a couple of days in Fort Worth, both of us looking forward to the part we love most: the-explore-the-area-after-party, aka "Yahoo, Road Trip!!!"


We are both sketchers. It's natural for us each to pack our sketchbooks along on trips, but on this jaunt we decided to try something different: team sketching. Our format was a clipboard loaded with simple typing paper. Our method was to draw the route as we drove. We sketched whatever showed up along the trail that caught our fancy.  The 
plan was to trade driving and 
sketching across east Texas, 
Arkansas and Oklahoma. 

We rented a car, then 
headed out, driving slow
and drawing fast.  We 
recorded whatever crazy, 
odd, interesting things 
the back roads had to offer.
We had a lot of laughs 
along the way.



I don’t recall much stopping to draw… except for the amazing fence of whirly gigs surrounding a little house in in Hawkins, Texas.  The noise as they spun in the breeze was deafening. I will always regret we didn't stop and inquire about buying one to take home.








We did pause to gather some 
of Lady Bird Johnson's roadside 
wild flowers. She made it her 
personal project to sow the 
highways with glorious 
banks of native flowers. 
We were dazzled with the vivid results of her 
campaign.





We took notes on music lyrics, folk art, and curious phenomena like the forests of Kudzu, armadillos crossing the road and “Texas Hair”.
We collected town names like Fate, Hope, Horsehead 
and Smackover.


The page making formula was 
simple. Map the highways.
Illustrate the day as you go. Collect stuff along the way.
LA cut and pasted some of these bits in place. We added color later. Looking back, I see some of those pages never got colored. 
No matter, even in black and white, the memories are vivid.

Taking to time to draw along the way had some 
interesting results. We 
discovered that both of us 
were more awake (it's a 
perfect antidote to the
mind numbing effect of just driving.) Our memory of this journey is quite bright because drawing made the highways and byways of Texarkana mentally stick. 


In case we do forget, our Dashboard Diary is a great document to jog our memories. Remembering
the trip is almost as much
fun as taking it. 

The Dashboard Diary:  800 miles, 4 days, 18 pages. 

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

A Diary Delivered by Post: The Cards of Leonore Tawney

Leonore Tawney, fiber artist, also created a series of wondrous postcards. 

Each card is a tiny, stand-alone work of art. She uses photos, text torn from books, bird wings, tiny notations in black ink, quotes, comments, sheet music, drawings, stamps.  She addresses the cards playfully. The post office collaborates delivering her posts to their destinations.  Her cards are so inventive and breathtakingly beautiful the recipients of her mail art could not bear to throw them away. Seen as a series, her cards are a visual journal of destinations she visited, both in the physical world and the world of her spirit.




A collection of her montage postcards has been assembled by Harold Cotter and published by Pomegranate Press in an inspiring book called  Lenore Tawney: Signs on the Wind: Postcard Collages.

Anyone who keeps a visual journal or who enjoys the art of the collage and the surprise of odd juxtapositions will find this book a source of inspiration.