Author Archives: Bev Byrnes

Tea and patience

© Bev Byrnes

The art of making tea is, among other things, the practice of learning appreciation for natural rhythms and listening to subtlety. The pursuit of a good pot of tea involves more than just steeping leaves. Skill is essential of course, developing slowly over time with dedicated practice. Materials plays a big role, also; not just the tea, but the cup, the kettle, the water, the teapot. An enjoyable pot of tea then becomes the play and interaction of skill and knowledge of materials.

So it is with learning to paint. I’m reminded every morning as I sit for tea of the value of dedicated practice and of developing an intimacy with one’s materials.

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. . .

“Asher Lev, an artist is a person first. He is an individual. If there is no person, there is no artist. It is of no importance to me whether you wear your payos behind your ears or whether you cut off your hair entirely and go around bald. I am not a defender of payos. Great artists will not give a damn about your payos; they will only give a damn about your art. The artists who will care about your payos are not worth caring about.”

— Chaim Potok, from “My Name is Asher Lev”

 

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. . .

“Ideas are like fish. If you want to catch little fish, you can stay in the shallow water. But if you want to catch the big fish, you’ve got to go deeper. Down deep, the fish are more powerful and more pure. They’re huge and abstract. And they’re beautiful.”

~David Lynch

morning fog at Magnuson Park, Seattle

morning fog at Magnuson Park, Seattle

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. . .

“One night, in a phosphorescent sea, he marveled at the sight of some whales spouting luminous water; and later, lying on the deck of his boat gazing at the immense, starry sky, the tiny mouse Amos, a little speck of a living thing in the vast living universe, felt thoroughly akin to it all. Overwhelmed by the beauty and mystery of everything he rolled over and over and right off the deck of his boat and into the sea.”

— William Steig, from “Amos & Boris”

early morning fog, Magnuson Park, Seattle

early morning fog, Magnuson Park, Seattle

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