Showing posts with label The Misadventures of Maria the Hutia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Misadventures of Maria the Hutia. Show all posts

Saturday, December 22, 2012

#REVERB12 (Day 22): What was the greatest gift you received in 2012? COLLABORATION!

COLLABORATION IS ONE OF THE GREATEST GIFTS! Here I am with my Chiboogamoo and Paleontologist Barbie on the Georgia Coast! The three of us COLLABORATED on exploring important scientific topics in the PALEONTOLOGIST BARBIE INTERVIEWS.
#REVERB12 (Day 22) PROMPT: What was the greatest gift you received in 2012? What was the greatest gift you gave? What do you intend to give yourself in 2013?

Hallelujah for the GIFT of COLLABORATION! My life has been gifted with talented people who share and toss ideas around playfully like joyful children!

COLLABORATION IMPROV ESL. In 2012, Lesly Fredman gave me the bestest GIFT ever in collaborating on the creation of the IMPROV ESL class at the Georgia Tech Language Institute! (see the blog I started)
COLLABORATING WITH STUDENTS.  Creating this IMPROV ESL class established a way to interact with my students in new and exciting ways. They collaborated in the teaching and learning by bringing themselves to class and actively participating in making things up, taking risks, and saying YES!


As 2012 comes to a close and the beginning of 2013 looms, I will continue to cherish the GIFTS of COLLABORATIONBefore I say good-bye for today, I want to thank Ron Shaklee and Sandy Voegeli for the COLLABORATIVE work we did to make the publishing of The Misadventures of Maria the Hutia happen this past July!

 

Monday, December 10, 2012

#REVERB12 (Day 10): What was the greatest risk you took in 2012?



DECATUR BOOK FESTIVAL 2012

#REVERB12 (Day 10) PROMPT: What was the greatest risk you took in 2012? What was the outcome?


MARIA THE HUTIA (art by Halleujah Truth)
The greatest risk I took in 2012 involves publicly speaking out two times for a Bahamian hutia named Maria and other endangered animals! For several years, I had been creating illustrations for a children's book about this small brown furry rodent's (Maria) "misadventures," written by Ron Shaklee. But since I am not a scientist nor the author of Maria's tale, I found it surprising and, yes, risky I was speaking publicly about this entertaining and educational conservation story. In fact, I am scared of public speaking!




Thursday, November 29, 2012

COFFEE WITH HALLELUJAH: Newly Defined 15 Minutes of Drawing Every Day--An Ongoing Dialogue with My SOUL

Hallelujah Pilgrims and the progression of a DAILY PRACTICE of drawing! After completing the major project of illustrating "The Misadventures of Maria the Hutia" this past summer, I discovered that I had depleted some undefinable resource in my inner vision as a creator of daily drawn images. It was time to redefine my PRACTICE of 15 minutes of creativity every day--the essence of Coffee With Hallelujah.

DAILY DRAWN IMAGE. The Great Mystery is an image I draw almost daily. During this new phase of drawing, SHE has taken the center stage of my focus. Here you see an exciting new direction--using decorative paper. I have opened myself up to collaging in my DAILY PRACTICE(Art by Hallelujah Truth)

I launched this blog with the mission to have coffee with my inner self (Hallelujah) every morning. While I drank my hot beverage, I would draw with the ambition of 15 minutes or longer, whatever I wanted. During the days I was working on images for the book about a Bahamian hutia, I led my creative energy to explore her and the Bahamian animals she journeys with. 

HOME AT LAST. Here is one of the final images in The Misadventures of Maria the Hutia. Maria is the small rodent like creature on Myrtle, the sea turtle's back. She is seated next to Launa, the iguana. She has happily just returned home to her undeveloped island, where her family and friends live. (Art by Hallelujah Truth)
After the publishing of The Misadventures of Maria the Hutia was celebrated, and I had done a book signing, I began working on activity book to support the study of endangered Bahamian animals and the need to protect and conserve the resources of our wonderful EARTH. This activity book is still a work in progress. 

However, as I journeyed forward as a public artist, what I needed was to go back to the origin of my desire to create visual images--to dialogue with my SOUL. Therefore, I set forth on a new goal for Coffee with Hallelujah! Here it is:

I will create a new image every day for the next three months. At the same time, I will be working on all images simultaneously. No one image will be considered completed until the end of my 3-month goal period. Then I will find an exciting way to present all pieces of drawn images to my fellow pilgrims. 

YES! I have been back on my INNER JOURNEY and re-established the connection with my SOUL. The dialogue continues! I have posted one of these images from my Coffee with Hallelujah. And here is another one that I worked on over the Thanksgiving weekend!

COFFEE WITH HALLELUJAH. As a daily practice of creativity, I include the present events of the day into my JOURNEY as a PILGRIM. Here you see the Thanksgiving Turkey held by the Great Mystery. I am the character above the turkey looking at the world with fresh eyes. The words below the turkey are "NOW." I am here NOW doing my work. Are you? (Art by Hallelujah Truth)

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

TEACHING CHILDREN THE SCIENCE OF LOOKING IN THEIR OWN BACKYARD: SEA CAMP SAN SALVADOR, BAHAMAS 2012

SEA CAMP 2012, SAN SALVADOR, BAHAMAS. Standing in Graham’s Harbour, the students and facilitators of the fifth annual Sea Camp stand in the shallow waters where they have the explored the sea grass beds.(photo taken from the BREEF Facebook page)
Hallelujah for this BEAUTIFUL EARTH and our CONNECTION to it! Some of us here in Atlanta, Georgia, USA, practice looking up at the sky when we exit a building because we want to see the clouds above shifting and changing shapes. We might even check to feel which way the wind is blowing and where the sun is in relation to the horizon. In our urban setting, we long to maintain our relationship with NATURE. It is this relationship to NATURE that makes us feel whole and healthy. How are children today forging their own CONNECTIONS with the GREAT and WONDEROUS NATURAL WORLD?

On the island of San Salvador, the farthest island on the Bahamian platform, the children are fostering their CONNECTION to NATURE by looking in their own backyard abundant with coral reefs and mangroves! Guided by their instructors and facilitators of San Salvador SEA CAMP 2012, these Sea Campers engage with their NATURAL ENVIRONMENT up close with hands on experience supported by classroom activities.

On the last day of July, I had the good fortune of hosting and interviewing my good friend Sandy Voegeli, one of the founders of San Salvador SEA CAMP, on her way back from the Bahamas to her home in Carmel Valley, California. She had just completed the fifth successful SEA CAMP at San Salvador.

HALLELUJAH TRUTH:  SEA CAMP takes place on the island of San Salvador, Bahamas, every July for one week. Please tell me in your own words what it is.

SANDY VOEGELISEA CAMP is a wonderful week-long day camp with San Salvador kids ages 8 to 13. It is a collaboration between Bahamian Reef Environment Educational Foundation (BREEF), San Salvador Living Jewels, and Gerace Research Centre.

HALLELUJAH TRUTH: What do they learn there?

SANDY VOEGELI We teach them swimming and snorkeling skills along with marine conservation.
SNORKELING GEAR. Donning snorkel, mask, and vest, Sea Campers take a close look at sea life and identify what they find. (photo taken from the BREEF Facebook page)

HALLELUJAH TRUTH: Can you give me the story of how SEA CAMP came to be?

SANDY VOEGELI: The first SEA CAMP came to be after noticing that many local children could not swim or snorkel, which is not only a safety issue, but also a lack of familiarity with their own backyard environment. You can read about astronauts but never experience space. These children were surrounded by coral reefs and continued to only read about them in the classroom. The experiential learning readily available was not happening.
SAN SALVADOR CHILDREN INVESTIGATING THEIR OWN BACKYARD.  During the week-long SEA CAMP, children learn to appreciate flora and fauna that is literally in their own backyards. Here they are exploring the mangrove ecosystem and learning about its importance to the overall health of their environment. (photo taken by Sandy Voegeli)
HALLELUJAH TRUTH: What is your relationship with the people of San Salvador?

SANDY VOEGELI: I had the unique opportunity to live on Sal Sal for eight years and consider it my second home. It gave me the opportunity to create life-long relationships there. My husband Vince was the director of the Gerace Research Centre, and our two children, Hans and Elyse, attended San Sal schools, providing us with even more connections. We slowly became a part of the local fabric.

HALLELUJAH TRUTH: What did you learn about the children’s education that caused you to understand the need for science conservation studies?

SANDY VOEGELI: Few children knew of the amazing treasures found in their backyard that tourists and scientists travel miles and miles year after year to enjoy and study. Often what happens, is when there is a lack of knowledge, there is also a lack of appreciation and ownership much needed for stewardship.

HALLELUJAH TRUTH: On your part, was there also a sense of urgency about protecting the environment of San Salvador that could be addressed by establishing the SEA CAMP?

SANDY VOEGELI: Yes. Witnessing the decline of these amazing resources concerned me greatly. For example, I watched a noticeable decline in the coral reef ecosystem, such as both fewer and smaller populations of grouper, conch, and lobster. These marine resources are vital to the San Sal economy because of the tourists they bring to the island. Without tourists, the local economy would be devastated. Clearly, these San Sal marine resources need to be managed for sustainability. The children are the future.
FUTURE CARETAKERS OF SAN SALVADOR'S LIVING JEWELS. San Salvador children see their world in a different way at SEA CAMP. They learn to snorkel and identify sea stars, fish, and coral that is in the water right along the major island road they use every day.(photo taken from the BREEF Facebook page)

HALLELUJAH TRUTH: So based on understanding the educational needs of the San Salvador children, what was done specifically to make SEA CAMP happen?

SANDY VOEGELI: In 2007, San Salvador Living Jewels began pursing the idea of a science camp for local kids and obtained grant money from The Nature Conservancy, BREEF, San Salvador Living Jewels, and the Bahamas Education Culture and Science (BECS) Foundation


In 2008, the first SEA CAMP was offered to 38 lucky, local kids who were given a chance to learn swimming and snorkeling skills and to become familiar with their local environment. BREEF provided snorkeling gear and Bahamian expertise with onsite educators. Then Gerace Research Centre supported the local San Salvador community by providing trucks, food, and classrooms. For many San Salvadoran children it was their first time to ride on the big blue trucks that they had only seen college kids riding around the island on for years but never been on themselves.
THE BLUE FIELD STATION TRUCKS.  Children enrolled in SEA CAMP on the island of San Salvador are transported to their outdoor classrooms on their island by the Gerace Research Centre's blue trucks. (photo taken by Sandy Voegeli)
GERACE RESEARCH CENTRE CONFERENCE ROOM. San Salvador children learn many things during their week-long SEA CAMP program. Here, Dr. Thomas Rothfus,  the Centre's executive director, lectures on the history of the GRC. (photo taken from the BREEF Facebook page)
INTEGRATING MAPS OF HOME WITH FLORA AND FAUNA. This photo shows two kinds of maps that San Salvador Sea Campers worked with.MAPS OF SAN SALVADOR. Behind the facilitator is a wall of maps of the island of San Salvador. An activity during the sea camp was to take maps of San Salvador, identify the special habitats and what lives there, and cut out pictures representing them. San Salvador’s Living Jewels Foundation (SSLJ), a legal Bahamian non-profit grass-roots organization, is promoting the establishment of a national land and sea park to protect these special areas identified on the maps. This exercise helps the children get familiar with the wildlife living in their own backyard. For some of the children, it was the first time to look at a map of where they live on San Salvador and understanding the nature that surrounds them.

MAP FROM "THE MISADVENTURE OF MARIA THE HUTIA."  The map on the table, which the Sea Campers are coloring, is a special map of the Bahamas because it is an enlargement of the illustration from a book written about their island habitat and with the intention that they would read it to become better informed about it. Ron Shaklee, the author of this book about a lost hutia, is a geography professor who has been doing research and taking college students to San Salvador for close to 30 years. The illustrations, including this map, were done by yours truly--Hallelujah Truth, aka Ruth Schowalter. 
(photo taken by Sandy Voegeli)

HALLELUJAH TRUTH: Here it is the end of July 2012, and you just completed the 5th  San Sal SEA CAMP. What has the outcome been?

SANDY VOEGELI: Overwhelming success. Many campers have returned each year. Two of our facilitators this year had participated in previous SEA CAMPS. Many past Sea Campers now have strong snorkeling skills and increased knowledge about San Salvador’s treasures, such as sea birds, iguanas, sea grass, mangroves and coral reefs. Our SEA CAMP has been so well received we turn kids away from enrollment in SEA CAMP each year. In addition, many campers have asked us to increase the SEA CAMP to two weeks because it is the highlight of their summer. And very excitingly, the word about science education is out, and many children from other islands want to participate in the San Sal SEA CAMP. In fact, we have had children from other islands participate already. We need one facilitator per four campers for water activities as required by the Ministry of Education. Each facilitator, who comes from abroad, donates their time and transportation costs. At the first SEA CAMP in 2008, we had all non-local facilitators, so it was pretty amazing to have two San Sal kids facilitate this year (2012.)


TWO YOUTHFUL FACILITATORS. Meghan Goffe and Tara Condon, back row, right to left, facilitated the camper group named the “Sharks.” Meghan participated in the first SEA CAMP in 2008. Tara has been a facilitator four years in a row, saving money each year to pay her way to the camp from Montana. (photo taken from the BREEF Facebook page)
HALLELUJAH TRUTH: What creative ways have you found to convey accurate science information and make it fun?

SANDY VOEGELI: By using art, music, photography, acting, and film, we’ve engaged the children’s imaginations to express accurate science information about the environment in their backyard, and the importance of conserving it!

HALLELUJAH TRUTH: Thanks Sandy! In another interview, I would like you to tell me more in-depth about the creative techniques you used in San Salvador's SEA CAMP classroom. That's Coffee with Hallelujah!


SANDY VOEGELI PHOTOGRAPHING A HAWKSBILL SEA TURTLE AT SAN SALVADOR, BAHAMAS (photo by Clare Cottreau)

ABOUT SANDY VOEGELI. Sandy is a divemaster, photographer, and teacher. Sharing the incredible underwater world through her photography, she has sold numerous cards of her work, shown her photos in exhibits in Georgia and Montana, and had her photos published on numerous publication covers. In January 2012, two of her images appeared in the new Bahamain marine stamp series. Her photos taken from around San Salvador provided inspiration to me Hallleluah Truth (aka Ruth Schowalter) for the illustrations I made for educational children's book by Ron Shaklee, The Misadventures of Maria the Hutia. Sandy enjoys sharing information with others through teaching, whether it be math, yoga, marine conservation, or photography. She recently moved to Carmel Valley in California with her husband Vince, and son Hans. Her daughter Elyse is currently studying through Tufts at the University of Ghana in Africa.

HALLELUJAH TRUTH (aka Ruth Schowalter) and SANDY VOEGELI 2012. Sandy Voegeli and I had the good fortune to visit in Atlanta following two important events. On Friday, July 27th, Ron Shaklee and I published the children's book, The Misadventures of Maria the Hutia on Amazon.com. Sandy concluded the fifth annual Sea Camp on San Salvador. She is the one responsible for getting Ron and me together to collaborate on an educational children's book that could be used in the classroom to teach conservation. Photo by Chiboogamoo

OTHER BLOGS RELATED TO SAN SALVADOR, EDUCATIONAL OUTREACH, AND MAKING ILLUSTRATIONS FOR THE MISADVENTURES OF MARIA THE HUTIA


BAHAMIAN MASTER WOOD CARVER: KENNY WHITFIELD OF SAN SALVADOR 


April 1, 2012

PALEONTOLOGIST BARBIE WILLINGLY SACRIFICES HER WINTER HOLIDAY TO DEEPEN EMORY STUDENTS UNDERSTANDING OF THE CONCEPTS OF UNIFORMITARIANISM ON SAN SALVADOR, BAHAMAS AT GERACE FIELD STATION 

April 27, 2012:

COMING HOME AFTER JOURNEYING: THE LEARNING LIFE SPIRAL OF AN ILLUSTRATOR OF THE BAHAMIAN HUTIA 


June 13, 2012: 
UPON FINISHING A SOUL TASK: WHO AM I NOW AFTER ILLUSTRATING THE (MIS)ADVENTURES OF MARIA THE HUTIA?

June 22, 2012: 

ENLARGING ONE'S BEING THROUGH THE ACT OF CREATING: THE MAP OF MARIA THE HUTIA'S MISADVENTURE 

July 29, 2012: 

JOYFUL ACCUMULATION OF 15 MINUTES OF CREATIVITY EVERY DAY: THE PUBLISHING OF MARIA THE HUTIA!





Monday, July 30, 2012

EXPANDING MY COMMUNITY OF CREATIVE SOULS THROUGH SOCIAL MEDIA

HALLELUJAH TRUTH SELF PORTRAIT FOR FAN FACEBOOK PAGE.


HALLELUJAH for SOCIAL MEDIA such as Twitter, Blogspot.com, Facebook and Etsy! Hallelujah for being in the world now, a world that provides a network for like-minded SOULS to connect, share, and even support financially each others' endeavors!


PILGRIMS, I ask for your SUPPORT. I have taken on the goal of learning how to MARKET my HALLELUJAH ARTWORK via the INTERNET! Each quarter with the Artist Conference Network (ACN), we declare a 3-month goal, and I have declared  the goal of daily MARKETING through one of the following: Twitter, Facebook (started a Fan page: Hallelujah Truth), Etsy (Hallelujah Truth Schowalter) or my blog, Coffee with Hallelujah. I am a novice at knowing how to sell my work to support my CREATIVE LIFE.


HELP ME by offering TIPS using the social media I listed above. Is it possible to make money in a way that feels mutual and reciprocal of my joyous creative process. Earlier, I had written a blog entry entitled BLOOD FOR ART OR IUOMA, and that is how strongly I feel about a mutuality in the exchange of my ART for a BUYER's MONEY. I could have written an exchange of SOUL for SOUL. That's what I meant.


As part of my daily Coffee with Hallelujah, I want to imagine a way that is possible to support myself as an ARTIST. I am asking the UNIVERSE to join me in my QUEST! I welcome your suggestions, knowledge, experience, technological expertise!




How do I market this book--The Misadventures of Maria the Hutia?

Sunday, July 29, 2012

JOYFUL ACCUMULATION OF 15 MINUTES OF CREATIVITY EVERY DAY: THE PUBLISHING OF MARIA THE HUTIA!

15 MINUTES OF JOYFULLY CREATING ELABORATED INTO AN ILLUSTRATED BOOK! Being present to myself each morning with my coffee resulted in a wonderful body of work: The Misadventures of Maria the Hutia! Both the hard book copy and the kindle copy are ready for sale, having published it on July 27, 2012! Hallelujah! (photo by Chiboogamoo)

Hallelujah Pilgrims! CREATING for 15 minutes a day over time accumulates a wealth of CREATIVITY! Having COFFEE WITH HALLELUJAH each morning is my time for JOYFULLY drawing, painting, and positively acknowledging that MAGICAL part of MYSELF that resides in the MYSTERY!

DR. RONALD SHAKLEE, MUSICIAN AND WRITER. How fascinating is the world we live in! Although I have never met Professor Ron Shaklee in person, I have collaborated with him to produce The Misadventures of Maria the Hutia!
What happens when you take HALLELUJAH and her morning doses of “coffee” (code word for CREATIVITY) and introduce her to a geography professor, Ron Shaklee, from Youngstown State University who happens to also honor his CREATIVITY by making music and writing fiction? Over time because of our shared concern for the conservation of the natural environment—in this case the Bahamas—we make a book together! Yes, THE MISADVENTURES OF MARIA THE HUTIA!

Today, I want to applaud Professor Shaklee, FELLOW CREATIVE SPIRIT and COLLABORATOR, who this past spring decided to move our collaboration—his story and my 30 images—to CreateSpace.com so that we could self publish our book! On the last Friday night in the month of July 2012, he and I approved the “proof” copy of the book discussing over Skype (since he lives in Ohio and I live in Georgia). Within minutes, he pushed the button and The Misadventures of Maria the Hutia was officially published on July 27, 2012. HURRAY! HALLELUJAH!
NOW AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE! If you want to buy some of my artwork, you can do it by purchasing this book either as a real book or for kindle. 10 percent of the profits go to San Salvador's Living Jewels Foundation.

My message to you DEAR CREATIVE SOULS is this: Give yourself permission to SPEAK THE TRUTH of your SPIRIT, your HEART, your SOUL, whatever you call that AUTHENTICITY that dwells within you. If you practice COFFEE with YOUR HALLELUJAH, you will discover all kinds of things you would have never imagined.

For now, my COFFEE with HALLELUJAH has resulted in the successful publishing of this beautiful book! And much much more in terms of EXPERIENCING the SWEETNESS of a LIFE lived CREATIVELY!

What action will you take today to speak YOUR TRUTH? Soul blog with me at Coffee with Hallelujah!


HOME AT LAST! Maria the Hutia's story is everyone's story! She gets lost, separated from her home and the familiar. She is frightened but manages to succeed on her JOURNEY. Maria learns new things, makes unusual friends and then finds her way home! Ron and I have brought the book HOME AT LAST! We hope you will take the book into your home too! Have fun reading!

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

COMING HOME AFTER JOURNEYING: THE LEARNING LIFE SPIRAL OF AN ILLUSTRATOR OF THE BAHAMIAN HUTIA

MARIA THE HUTIA'S JOURNEY.  Maria the hutia, a small brown furry rodent, rides the back of Myrtle the sea turtle. Maria shares the ride with Launa, the iguana. Amber, the long-tailed tropic bird flies overhead with Maret and Garret, Bahamian parrots. Art by Hallelujah Truth


Hallelujah for JOURNEY, for the hills and valleys that LIFE graciously gives us so that we may THRIVE as we go down under submerged in darkness and discover ways to climb to its exhilarating sunlit peaks. These travails and triumphs are the PILGRIM’S JOURNEY, on which disappointment and failure play just as an important role as joy and success in LEARNING. Yet in the yin-and-yang balance, there is such great FUN in celebrating the SUCCESS. I write to you today at the beginning of June 2012 from the MOUNTAIN TOP of my SOUL. Hallelujah!

I have just SUCCESSFULLY completed 29 illustrations for a children’s book written by Ron Shaklee to teach the children of San Salvador, Bahamas, about the endangerment of their precious habitat through the journeys of the little known and almost extinct Bahamian hutia. These children of San Salvador are the future stewards of the farthest island on the Bahamian platform. It is approximately 180 miles from Nassau, one of the Bahamian islands most visited by tourists.
THE MAP OF MARIA THE HUTIA'S JOURNEY. This map of Maria's journey is the very last image for Ron Shaklee's story, "The Misadventures of Maria the Hutia." It is the culmination of my achievement in learning how to draw. Here I celebrate the characters in the book and the feeling of Maria's journey.  Although there are no hutias on San Salvador, I included the island in an inset on the bottom right hand corner of the map. If it weren't for the Gerace Research Centre, which has brought scientists to its shores for the past 30 years, we wouldn't have this educational scientific story. Art by Hallelujah Truth

At its great distance out at sea, San Salvador used to seem remote from the busy world with its commotion of extensive harvesting of marine life, tourism, and pollution. But dear FELLOW PILGRIMS, we are all connected, and the WORLD IS ONE. Even the health and longevity of San Salvador’s coral reefs, sea turtles and fish, bird-nesting grounds, and a nearby cay with a unique species of iguanas are now being threatened by all of this human activity, including the rising ocean temperatures. The coral reefs of San Salvador are dying, the grouper, conch, and crayfish are being harvested at breeding times or before they mature, the endangered turtles are hunted and eaten. Nature’s abundance is limited! The children of San Salvador can learn more about their precious natural environment through stories like Ron Shaklee’s and thus become protectors of it. The equation is simple:

Humans caused the damage; therefore, humans must own up to the responsibility to make amends, to heal the EARTH before it is impossible to do so.

MARIA TUMBLING IN THE SEA

As the illustrator of Maria the hutia’s story, I JOURNEYED with this furry brown rodent  and shared her SOJOURN of loss and recovery. She is swept away by the ocean from her undeveloped island home where her species thrives only to discover that Bahamian hutias are unknown to other animals and do not exist on other islands. Four years ago in 2008, I said, “YES,” to illustrating “The Misadventures of Maria the Hutia,” and proceeded to step away from my CREATIVE HOME, painting in acrylics on wood to an unfamiliar territory of using pencils, micron pens, India ink, gum erasers, photographs, reference books, the internet, and watercolor, tracing, and graphite papers. You could say I, like Maria the hutia, was lost at sea.

At the time that I began to illustrate Maria the hutia, I did not draw. I did not use paper. I did not look outside myself. In fact, as a Georgia visionary folk artist, I painted from my inner visions and night dreams, often finger painting the genesis of my images. From my perspective as an artist who honors and celebrates Jungian archetypes and the exploration of the subconscious, I believed that to realistically “copy” the LIFE surrounding me did not hold value—“Why not take a photograph?,” I would ask. How could I illustrate Ron Shaklee’s story about Maria the hutia with its cast of real life animal characters in economical to publish black and white pen and ink images and still be me, HALLELUJAH TRUTH?
FROM ACRYLIC ON BOARD TO PEN AND WATERCOLOR PENCIL ON PAPER.  I made the decision to redo the cover art. The painting in front of me is the very first image of Maria the Hutia's journey that I made 4 years ago. This photo shows that I used it for inspiration to "color" the black and white image I had created in pen.  This second piece of art for the cover is the second only Maria image that I have put in color. (photo by Chiboogamoo)

THE NEW PROCESS. Before Maria the Hutia, I would see an image in mind and feel it in my heart and begin painting with my fingers. For Maria, I learned to study images from photos, books, and the internet. I made pencil drawings and worked with them to create designs that resonated with my mystical sense of balance and beauty. Then, using graphite paper, I transferred the image onto paper. Finally, I used micron pens, usually a size 5 tip, to make the image permanent, along with India ink. (photo by Chiboogamoo)

Just like Maria the hutia, as I TRAVELED away from the familiar, I had to engage the help of others to show me how to find my way HOME. Without the use of a map and only through exploration and the help of Myrtle the sea turtle, Amber the long-tailed tropicbird, Launa the iguana and others did Maria the hutia succeed in returning home. As a visionary artist operating as an illustrator, there was no map for me either. I wanted to CREATE from a CENTERED HOME PLACE, but there was no pre-existing route. However, there were numerous PEOPLE. That’s right PEOPLE, who appeared magically to assist me whenever in whatever I needed.

Sandy Voegeli showered me with numerous photographs that she had taken as a master diver from San Salvador. Ron Shaklee sent me a list of ideas that he felt would be suitable to illustrate. He suggested the use of pens in varying tip sizes. Jacq Marie Jack spent countless hours with me, providing me with children’s storybooks, books on using pen and ink, books with beguiling patterns, and beloved visual artists. Then when my images were completed in pencil, Jacq Marie counseled me on how to improve their compositions and perspectives, something as a self-taught artist I had little knowledge of. My brilliant companion and husband, Chiboogamoo, who is also a talented artist, assisted me so frequently the placement of a line or the technical aspects of scanning or photoshopping that we have lived Maria’s journey for these four years (Thank you honey!). There were numerous others who offered help and provided encouragement. How SPECTACULAR! How COMFORTING to know that when we PILGRIMS commit to a vision, PROVIDENCE steps in and helps us in unforeseen ways!






SANDY VOEGELI'S PHOTOGRAPAHS. These are a few examples of Sandy's photos that were key in my portraying the characters in Maria's misadventures. Here you see Launa the Iguana, Rupert the Nassau Grouper, and Myrtle the Sea Turtle. 



Ron Shaklee's Sketch of Maria's Journey
JACQ MARIE JACK'S LIBRARY.  Over the four years of working on the illustrations for Maria the Hutia, these books photographed here are a small sample of the books loaned to me by my friend and fellow artist Jacq Marie. Her constant resourcefulness and support kept me buoyant during my JOURNEY INTO THE UNKOWN.

A JOURNEY of four years is coming to an end for me as we prepare to bring “The Misadventures of Maria the Hutia” to press. Maria gets lost. Before she can return home, she must learn how to survive and make friends in the UNKNOWN. This is our MISSION in life dear FELLOW PILGRIMS. During our lives, we get lost many times, but together with others we will find the HOME we are looking for. As a visionary artist, I have expanded my way of BEING. I am now also an illustrator, one who can look outside her inner self at the large lovely world and find kind generous SOULS who will share the JOURNEY with me. Hallelujah!

As I finish SOUL BLOGGING with you today, I have ask:

Can we JOURNEY together to heal the EARTH? Can we explore unmapped avenues to amend the damaged environments and the vanishing sea life?

Anything is possible when we are united in effort. That’s Coffee with Hallelujah! SOUL BLOG with me about your JOURNEY. What have you lost and recovered?

THIS BLOG ENTRY IS DEDICATED TO BEVERLY CASSELL

Beverly Cassell, founder of the Artist Conference Network (ACN) died on June 10, 2012. This innovative, imaginative artist, who created a national coaching community for the arts, has touched many peoples’ lives deeply and profoundly. She will be missed but not forgotten. Thank you Beverly! Without you, I would have never JOURNEYED this far in my CREATIVE SOJOURN. I would not have illustrated “The Misadventures of Maria the Hutia.” I would not have gained mastery of pen and ink.
BEVERLY CASSELL, ACN FOUNDER
Beverly writes about MASTERY in the beginning of our Artist Conference Network handbook:

Some place within us all, aliveness stirs with innocent mischief. In this embarrassingly child-like place resides the source of our authenticity, our uniqueness, our sweetness, our vision, our maximum potential power. As we align our skills with our full creative power and vision, we gain access to mastery. In mastery, the target is hit before the arrow is released.

Beverly! I know you are in the presence of the GREAT WORLD SOUL and gaining mastery in that realm already!

I will close with a quote that Beverly has us read at every Artist Conference Meeting. It is one that I have referred to indirectly in my blog above about how we are supported in our JOURNEYS:

…the moment one definitely commits oneself, then Providence moves too. All sorts of things occur to help one that would never otherwise have occurred. A whole stream of events issues from the decision, raising in one’s favor all manner of unforeseen incidents and meetings and material assistance, which no man could have dreamt would have come his way. (from W.H. Murray)

CAT ASSISTANCE. Tao has provided steady support for my artistic endeavors since joining our household in December 2011. Here he supervises the making of the final image, the map of Maria the hutia's journey.
CONTINUED CAT SUPERVISION AS THE MAP GETS COMPLETED