Thursday, December 17, 2009

A hardware store to an Artist is a must. A 70 year old mainstay in a historic building-- is a PRIVELEGE! BROWNLEE HARDWARE



As an artist rehabbing a historical building, I'm not sure what is more important to me, internet connection for resources or having a hardware store across the street. It is hard to imagine what life would be like without either. The owner of Brownlee Hardware Co., Mr. Brownlee (Everyone calls him James) is not only knowledgeable, but kind. His staff is attentive, and very helpful. In a time where good old fashion customer service has almost become an extinct artform, it is refreshing to have this luxury across the street from our family.


If good customer service wasn't enough, another amazing thing about this business space is how easy it is to find "repair" parts. I, along with most, am guilty of throwing something that doesn't work away. "Parts" have become a rare thing of the past. At Brownlee they carry pieces and parts to FIX things...Imagine that one! Yes, a hardware store that sells parts that fix broken things that can be repaired and do not have to be replaced. Amazing! Not only do they know how their random doo dads function,  they also give you ideas (simple old fashion ones) that make our complicated life seem simple.Without realizing it, Brownlee's is an eco-friendly "green" store ahead of its time; Standing still made them progressive. Remember the days when you needed a single bolt and you were able to buy only what you needed instead of the entire box that ends up in some random drawer causing clutter and bringing an accustomed additional expense to your pocket book? Well at our neighborhood hardware store (literally), I can buy ONE bolt, ONE hook, and ONE nail. For a family of environmental advocates, this has been a great simple pleasure.


One can only imagine the hair-brained ideas that I concoct in the middle of the night which I attempt to create the next day. When my eyes allow me to see the light of day,  I go in like a deer caught in the headlights trying to explain my random thought process explaining what it is that I am trying to do and they work me thru the concept. By the time I walk out, I feel like I actually know what it is I'm about to attempt and  feel equipped to create my midnight madness vision.


Slowly, I have had the privilege of peeking into nooks and crannies of the building, which are not only breathtaking but full of history and stories. If you get a chance to go in and buy some chain it is worth the experience. To locals, it is just another day in the hood, but to someone coming back home, it's a blast into the past. After being led thru a hundred year old grand door, you walk into a room full of shelves with old labels and amazing ladders. If that wasn't enough to give you vertigo, just look up. The pressed tin is enough to give any antique geek a run for their money. (AND NO...the ceiling is not for sale...So don't even think about asking!) Please-- try to remember why you are back there in the first place...to buy chain, so try to focus when they ask you what size it is that you need. As the size you selected falls out of a container created over 70 years ago, pay close attention to the "cutting" contraption. It's a sculptural masterpiece....sigh. Yes...all this from buying a few feet of chain. 


It's nostalic to imagine how the past has been so perfectly preserved within the Brownlee Hardware store. We sit outside daily and drink coffee on our sidewalk patio area and watch the cars and people ebb and flow. Each individual unknowingly  becomes a part of the buildings past, present and future.  For those who come, they are just buying a piece or a part, to us, they are part of the reason the Brownlee Hardware store has a viable business in our historic Main Street District. They have been operating  for over 70 years this year! Everyone should be as lucky as we are to have a hardware store across the street from them as grand as the Brownlee Hardware Co.
 
Brownlee Hardware Co Inc
131 S Oak St
Pecos, TX 79772
(915)445-2813









Saturday, October 17, 2009

Sherwin Williams White


I can't seem to focus on getting any work done. Currently I am defining work as "Creating a kitchen" in the studio. As "closing" nears we are starting to move out of our temporary space into the studio to save money. The studio is a very large building that is also 100 years old. It was the "Cable Company" for many years. So locally, everyone here refers to it as such. So it's time I start painting  (straight painting.)


I wasn't very excited at the prospect of buying this cracking money pit, but after Jonathan, my architect, stressed that it was crucial to protect our investment, I begrudgingly caved in and decided to purchase it. Since I do not have the budget to "rehab" the building, we hope to win grants along the way and keep it limping along. The back of the building is cracking and caving due to a sink hole. The contractor felt that we basically needed to just slice the dilapidated part off and create a whole new exterior wall. SIGH....but I can't think about that right now, it's too far away and I have too much to think about in the present.


So anyway, here I am trying to get motivated, and somehow, somehow, come up with a wave of energy to start creating a room that will house a "temporary" kitchen that we can survive in. The kitchen is crucial, not only for food, but as a way to boil water to bathe. Yes BATHE, we don't have a shower here. I guess for us it really isn't that big of a deal. We managed to live in Haiti without electricity, or should I say ONE hour in an average 48 hour period, we lived in CHILLY Cusco Peru without heat (lots of sweaters, layers and for Serena, her baby alpaca bears), and we loved our life in Thailand without running water. Remember stories of me running around with buckets catching rain water? So boiling water to bucket bathe isn't that big of a deal, not ideal, but still something we can live easily with.
I can only imagine the therapy bills that will be coming my way from our little princess Diva Serena? Can you see it? "Well, Life was confusing, I remember visiting my dad at his ocean view condo and enjoying the best of Balboa Island, and then coming home to bathe in a bucket in West Texas!" Can you hear it already? Oh well, I guess I better start saving for the therapy bills. :-).........which is really why I need to get off the computer and start to work. lol

Seriously though, I don't even think Serena know what "normal" is. Today she decided that she wanted to hike the Inca Trail again. When I told her that she might have to wait until she was older, she said that it was fine, maybe when she turns 10 she will go again! LOL, she has such a clueless innocence about her.

As I go in to tackle the kitchen I have bought and am starting to live and learn "Sherwin Williams White." This is the color Jonathan wants the exterior and interior of the space! For those who know me well, has there ever been a white wall in my space? NOPE! For those who don't you can see how colorful my world usually is at http://www.2842raleighstreet.com/ So anyway, I'm starting to try to envision a life with Sherwin Williams White (SWW).

I really like what Jonathan is doing with the space and I totally dig it. It's about blending in with the beautiful sky here in the Wild Wild West. It's about creating a living space that floats like a cloud within the natural backdrop of sky blue. As a maximalist, I feel like I need the simplicity in our living space. I can clutter up my studio!


As I am trying to learn to live with SWW, I started creating with it. It's an interesting transition for me, It begins with reversing my color palette. It somehow calls for more simplistic creations. I have a lot of pieces started but I finally finished one piece.

It's a fun place to be.  I'm sure more SWW pieces will be completed in the next month or so.

Well anyway, I should head off and paint our temporary kitchen SWW so can start to understand how to live with it and learn to use objects as paint brush strokes instead of the other way around.

Sherwin Williams White...Here I come!

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Turgo Bastien's Tangerine "Erzulie Freda" Kitchen-A Haitian Outsider Artist

                                                                                                                         http://www.turgoartcreation.com/
Turgo Bastien is one of my all time favorite artists! He created this piece for me and definitely kept in mind my obsession with the color orange.  I just love orange...it's just so Juicy.  I definitely can't wait to hang this piece back up.

The best thing about the building we are restoring (if my loan ever goes to escrow........snooooze) is that we are designing it to have two kitchens (Thanks to Jonathan Card my architect for figuring out a way to give me that great luxury).

 I LOVE FOOD! YES....Love to the point of obsession. When I travel I usually end up  back in the kitchen assisting the cooks/chefs with the preparation of my dish,  or enroll in some random cooking class. I am fascinated with every aspect of food. So it seems natural to have a small 10x10 kitchen upstairs and a HUGE kitchen downstairs.

For those who know me well, You have more than likely been to one of my "Turgo" parties! We start cooking 36 hours in advance and serve everything on real plates, glassware and all that an eco-friendly group should be doing! Feeding close to 200 people starting from 12p.m. to 4 a.m is no small task.  Chef/Artist Turgo always smiles thru the process and the only time he gets a bit antsy is when someone decides to turn down the music to converse better.  Then you usually hear him say "No music...No Food!"

In a strange way I may be designing this kitchen for Turgo. So really ...I shouldn't even be calling it "MY" kitchen. From now on I think that I will refer to the downstairs kitchen as "Turgo's Kitchen." I will refer to the upstairs kitchen as "Mine." :-) OK TURGO...that means you have to come down and cook for us!!
Every time I see this painting I will always remember hanging out drinking many bottle of wines and listening to full blast Reggae  with the outdoor speakers full blast. ("Could you be loved......."....sorry neighbors)














This particular painting is titled "Erzulie Freda" The goddess of love! Erzulie Freda is a lwa of great wealth and  the embodiment of luxury. Turgo blessed me with this piece to oversee me on a day to day basis.







I found this fabulously mod velvet swag lamp in Odessa, Texas.  I am not sure if it's too over the top for the kitchen....but for now it stays.  I just can't imagine parting with it--hmmm, how about in the bathroom?

The chip bowl is a 1950's California pottery find!  Lucky ME!

Don't let them change ya, oh! -
Or even rearrange ya! Oh, no!
We've got a life to live. (ooh, ooh, ooh)
They say: only - only -
only the fittest of the fittest shall survive -
Stay alive! Eh!
Could you be loved... and be loved...
Could you be loved... and be loved...  Bob Marley



I have been finding these heavy pieces of brownish earthware pottery peppered around and cannot for the life of me figure out who created them. The dancing ballerina/flamenco girl is just fab! I figured these could make for fun accent pieces, at least for now if nothing else yummier comes along....and if so, it's off to Etsy! http://www.winkingowl.etsy.com/


This drip glaze orange pitcher will have to be pryed out of my hands!   I dragged this piece in all the way from New Port Beach, California.  I kept looking at in and saying....DON'T....but the temptation was just too much and here she is, in rural Pecos, Texas!


So for now this is where my mind is wondering off to....holding on for my October 15th closing date!  Keeping in mind that my loan has been delayed two times.  So for now I am dreaming and creating vignettes to nail everything down when they are ready to tear down the walls. 

Turgo...I miss you!



------------------------------------------

Turgo Bastien
http://www.turgoartcreation.com/

Known primarily for his paintings in acrylic,he has also acquired skill as a sculptor, using found objects-aluminum,wood,scrap metals and natural fibers-to further explore and explain his vision.


Turgo searches for the light in the ultimate darkness and presents a global vision of truth and reality in each piece. Known primarily for his paintings in acrylic,he has also acquired skill as a sculptor, using found objects-aluminum,wood,scrap metals and natural fibers-to further explore and explain his vision. For the past 20 years, Bastien has maintaind homes and actively worked in studios in Jacmel, Haiti Nassau, Bahamas, and West Palm Beach,Florida. He is also a Co-founder of Art Creation Foundation,(http://www.artforhaitianchildren.org/)  an art school for children that he was instrumental in his native Haiti. His pieces have been exhibited in Museums and galleries world-wide, and have been reviewed in several books and publications; Here...There and beyond, The 303 Magazine, Haitian Art in the Diaspora and many more.

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Bejeweled Road Runner by artist www.sandrarenteria.com

A collage of inspiration


What do you get when you cross an Enid Collins handbag, a Fenton Robin Egg Blue Poppy lamp,  Recycled/Salvaged Cabinet Door and a Pheasant Hen Milk Glass Candy Dish.....?




"THE BEJEWELED ROAD RUNNER"  20"x28"
Can be seen at

THE INSPIRATION BEHIND THE CREATION


Enid Collins- Vintage Purse "Road Runner"


History of Enid Collins--A TEXAS GEM!




More info on the purse at     

"Enid Collins did just what she loved, combining art and fashion, and in doing so she created one of the most recognizable purses of the retro crazes. Her purses exploded on the scene in the glory days of what we now call the "vintage era", the retro craze.

Her two main purses were the wooded mahogany box bag and the canvas bucket bag. The bucket bag had a wooden bottom, leather trim, and made from linen. The backgrounds were often matte-screened or painted by hand.

Her whimsical designs were reminiscent of the Texas landscape and surrounding abundant critter life. The purses were covered with roadrunners, lady bugs, peacocks (raised on nearby farms), horses and the like. You would find her box bags and purses disputing colorful saying of the late 1950's....I can still hear my mother preaching, "Money doesn't grow on trees." only to find money did grow on trees if you owned an Enid Collins!

Husband and wife started out small on their Medina ranch in 1959. Her first purses sold for 100.00 or more and were made of fine leather or Belgian linen.

Enid and Frederic soon found a way to bring cost down. Enid cleverly developed a simple box bag made of wood. The dimensions were 11" by 5 1/2" and cost 10.00 each in 1963. Her husband fashioned the hinges and latches. They started out simply enough with hand paintings and personal art work, but soon a factory developed turning out thousands of purses. From 1966 to 1968 they created paper mache purses at a factory in Puerto Rico. This factory produced the most coveted purses of all.


By 1968, her whimsical purses were in such hot demand that a factory sprung up, turning out purses by the thousands. Remember this - all her original purses were signed and dated. The best purse to have is a pre 1968 purse, in mint condition, signed with the small "ec", the copyright "c", and the date, because these are the times when Mrs. Collins owned the company. Later purses are signed differently. The Tandy Company used the running horse with Collin of Texas logo or a capital "C", which purchased Enid's company in 1970. Although Tandy purses are just as "glittery" as a Collins purse, they are not as desirable in todays vintage market." http://www.retrovintagecollectibles.com/

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Fenton Glass-The Gone with the Wind/Student Lamp "Satin Blue Poppy"



This piece can be seen at 

This fabulous Fenton Glass Robin Egg Blue Satin Milk Glass lamp has really inspired the current color palette that I am working with. I was torn between make this a focal point in my current "white" Living room idea. BUT it didn't blend well, so for now...it goes...but who knows if I will change my mind.
Two months ago I had no idea what "FENTON" was, but after becoming fascinated with "Milk Glass" the word "Fenton" kept showing up. So I bought my first book. "Fenton Glass " by Mark F. Moran. This was a wealth of information. I am so glad I made the investment.

I have also learned quite a bit from http://www.fentonglassusa.com/

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Nesting Milk Glass Hen Candy Dish

This piece can be seen at


I have no idea who made this piece...but I think it is very sweet.

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With all of these combined I have created by own version of the "Jeweled Road Runner"

My work can be seen at http://www.sandrarenteria.com/


http://www.winkingowl.etsy.com/


Please Join our fan page at
http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#/pages/Winking-Owl-Studio/129927372388?ref=ts

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Mid Century Design...A bounty of goods.

After deciding to buy the Fonville building, I was faced with financial design challenges.  Although the building itself had a "sky is the limit" design aspect to it, my budget did not allow for it.  The commercial space where the Fonville family had been selling jewelry out of for over 70 years (great feng shui), had dated lighting and shelving units.  Sadly, I'm just not a fan of verneers and mirrors, but after talking it over with my Architect, Jonathan Card, I decided insteading of trying to re-design, I needed to rethink my vision.  So I decided to go in with a "if you can't beat them, join them" attitude. Thus, we decided to go with Mid-Century design.  If there is one thing that I find amazing about the Wild Wild West is how time has stood still in the design world.  Mid Century pieces are everywhere as long as you have the eye and knowledge to spot them.  So I decided to take the design of our gallery/studio/cafe to a level of extreme.  Somehow I live life that way..it's ALL or NOTHING.

After buying books on Mid-Century design, 1940's to 1960's Home Magazines and surfing the Information Highway to absorb all that I could, I started to buy.  One piece at a time.

As I buy, i just BUY!  The piece doesn't have to have a complete set, it doesn't have to have a destination or a purpose, it just needs to be in our space to see if there is any organic growth to the fruition of the project. 
Along the way I started encouraging Abel and my daughter Serena to study some of the books with me and it has now become a family project.

Serena is the "owl and mushroom" expert.  She can spot those pieces a mile away, she can bring in milk glass and she has a tendency to be attracted to depression glass and Fenton hobnail pieces.  My precocious 8 year old has decided she is going to be a fashion designer when she grows up.  Vintage fabric really rocks her world!

Currently we are still in the "buying" phase of the project.  We are applying for a HUD 203K Rehabilition Construction loan which is very admistrative, but the ONLY loan that was created for our situation, so I have had to learn patience.  Instead of getting frustrated I have used this down time to go on Mid-Century hunts and somewhere in the middle of all of this chaos I decided to open an Etsy Store.  http://www.winkingowl.etsy.com/

Winking Owl is a family venture, Serena likes to "match vignettes", Abel does the photography and I do the listings.  We are in the middle of nowhere so we have some hiccups to deal with but, I think for that exact reason we are finding amazing things that are shaping the sculpting of our living/studio space.  Each piece has the potential to change the design outcome. 


You can see my artwork at http://www.sandrarenteria.com/
Make sure to support a foundation I co-founded  http://www.artforhaitianchidren.org/
http://www.thewinkingowl.com/


http://www.facebook.com/home.php#/pages/Pecos-TX/Preserving-a-Pecos-Tx-Jewel-The-Fonville-Jewelry-Building/212720605267?ref=ts