
Our spring has been so wet. I love the feeling of the rain. Sorry, but it brings a wave of poetry on, especially e.e. cummings and Dylan Thomas– puddles, mud, and the green fuse that drives the flower. The image below is absolutely spontaneous, a world created by splashes, generative worlds of watery spring.

What can you do when an art piece is wonderful and you had no part in it? There is nothing to do with this page of the National Geographic, altered by Citra Solv splashed on it and left to dry on a line, other than to toss it into a pile of other paintings as relentlessly beautiful as a pile of autumn leaves.

Many do show these, of course, or mount them and sell them on Etsy. I use them as collage pieces in paintings sometimes. Every single one of them is a delightful gift from a great spring or source somewhere. Of course, they are a combination of someone’s masterful photography and the Geo’s fantastic printing process, so each one contains seed germs of both talent and technology, an aesthetic DNA ready to abstractly bust out.
I think that these little altered National Geographic pictures are just evidence of a great Grace, grace without effort. I find it unfair that these are so beautiful and that I have to work so hard to make paintings. It’s unfair, but unfair in the right direction.
My mother was given a lifetime subscription to National Geographic in 1929, so these magazines have always been a part of my life. Each one is embedded with worlds of adventure in soy-based ink, released on the application of Citra Solv. Do you remember flipping through them as a child, seeking breasts or beasts? Were you forbidden to cut them up or destroy them?
It’s humbling to see what nature, chance, and the hand of others– the photographs we so relentlessly destroy to turn them into something else— can bring. It’s a form of faith rising after destruction. Exhilarating. Spring, after winter.

Studio Notes: In the March Spontaneous Construction class, Judy Ludovise conducted a Citra Solv segment. Thank you so much, Judy! I am fortunate to know two artists who have been featured as CitraSolv’s Artist of the Month, Judy Ludovise and Susan Cornelis. For complete instructions on how to use CitraSolv to alter magazines, please visit the Citra Solv website.

Mythic notes: Here’s a Dylan Thomas poem for spring. There are so many images here of dripping, whirlpools, fountains, and natural accidents of love; this reminds me of painting with water media. I have always loved the phrase “green age.” It’s what we can hope for.
THE FORCE THAT THROUGH THE GREEN FUSE DRIVES THE FLOWER
The force that through the green fuse drives the flower
Drives my green age; that blasts the roots of trees
Is my destroyer.
And I am dumb to tell the crooked rose
My youth is bent by the same wintry fever.The force that drives the water through the rocks
Drives my red blood; that dries the mouthing streams
Turns mine to wax.
And I am dumb to mouth unto my veins
How at the mountain spring the same mouth sucks.The hand that whirls the water in the pool
Stirs the quicksand; that ropes the blowing wind
Hauls my shroud sail.
And I am dumb to tell the hanging man
How of my clay is made the hangman’s lime.The lips of time leech to the fountain head;
Love drips and gathers, but the fallen blood
Shall calm her sores.
And I am dumb to tell a weather’s wind
How time has ticked a heaven round the stars.And I am dumb to tell the lover’s tomb
How at my sheet goes the same crooked worm.
It’s easier to enjoy the rain when you have cute rain boots like your spring green ones.
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Those bright green Ariat Fat Baby boots have been a comfort for many years!
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Thank you for sharing the poetic soul of spring. (As soon as it stops raining) I plan to spend an afternoon in the spring garden sketching, painting, and penning the green.
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Sharing the poetic soul keeps me from feeling restless with so much damp! Maybe it’s just spring fever. Looking forward to more collaboration next week.
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What delightful way to turn a gray soggy day into poetry and color and light! I’d never heard of CitroSolv before this but I’ll have to check it out! The Dylan Thomas poem was wonderful too. Thanks–as always, Suzanne–for helping us see our world with new eyes!
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Thanks, Sandra!
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It seems like National Geographic has changed from beasts and boobs to more contemporary and uninteresting pictures. Also the magazine came with an awful stink that I had to air out outside for several weeks before i could look at it. But I love to pick up the older ones at garage sale for my photo files. I’ll have to try the CitriaSolve thing someday. fun!
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I think the pictures are still okay, but the text has shrunk radically. The older ones are better, I think… we are in a time of loss of rich research in small text. The Encyclopedia Britannica will not republish in paper again… Sometimes the new is not as good as the old. But it makes me feel old to say that. When’s your next monoprint class at Hot Off the Press?
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puddlewonderful
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Glory be to God for splashy things, to paraphrase Gerard Manley Hopkins.
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Hi Suzanne – Your blog post popped up in a google alert. (I am from Citra Solv). Anyway – your post was great – thanks for sharing the “Magic” of the process with others! We would love to see some of your finished pieces that include the papers ( in case you didn’t know about them – we do have art contests and would be excited to have you enter!) Thanks! Melissa
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