A Leporello In Celebration of Life color pencils by Meera Rao
Smithsonian Engagement Calendar 2022 -Week 3
During the the past two years because of the pandemic closings, the National Museum for the Women in the Arts has offered an Art Chat every Friday introducing women artists from their collection. I have thoroughly enjoyed attending those online chats rarely missing any. On Friday January 14th, during the art chat we were introduced to book art in Leporello binding and encouraged to fold a sheet of paper and draw along during the event. I took bits and parts, a color or form from each of the artworks from the three artists of the day and filled my page. In book binding, Leporello binding is a concertina folded pages with front and back boards. Leporella fibriata, I learned later because of a lucky spelling error is a hinged orchid from Australia. While contemplating the page for week 3 in the Smithsonian Engagement Calender 2022, I decided to fold my artwork and hinge my leporello like a leporella to the page. Perfect for my 'upcycled' dairy and art journal for sketching the pandemic years!
The painting 'Luck Lines' on the opposite page in the Smithsonian engagement Calendar is by Nicole Eisenman. "Often steeped in allegory yet resistant to easy interpretation, Eisenman's paintings acknowledge the complex social and political structures that shape contemporary identity. 'Luck Lines' foregrounds the line believed by palm readers to reveal one's destiny encouraging us to consider whether our lives are predetermined or shaped by individual will."
My page before folding
A Glorious Sunset watercolor by Meera Rao
Smithsonian Engagement Calendar 2021 Week 3
The photo in the Smithsonian Engagement Calendar 2021 for week 3 was a photograph of the Greek village of Oia, Santorini by LucVI. The caption on the photo reads "Part of the Cyclades, a Greek island chain in the Aegean, Santoni is also renowned for the important archaeological site of the Akrotiri, once a Minoan Bronze Age city buried in volcanic ash in the 16th century BCE." As luck would have it, in my camera roll for that week in 2021 was a glorious sunset from my own backyard :) We may not have a volcano near by, but we have the Chesapeake Bay Meteor Impact Crater - 'worlds best preserved wet-target impact crater.' formed around 35.5 + 0.3 Million years ago in the late Eocene epoch era. Scientists have proof that the continued slumping of the sediments over the rubble of the crater has helped shape the Chesapeake Bay
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