Monday, January 24, 2022


 2017, Landscape on Paper
acrylic in a watercolor manner, 16"x24"



 MY MOTHER'S OPAL RING

Invited by the jewelers, Jack and Ava we were dining at Commander's Palace.  My husband of the time, Richard was flirting with Ava.  That was nothing new, I was uneasily resigned to his idiotic alcohol steeped behavior.  The day was balmy, we were seated on the lovely garden patio.  The food was the best cuisine in food city. I savored crab bisque followed by bread pudding with a luscious sauce.  As we waited for the check, Jack complimented me on my ring and asked to see it.

That opal entranced me.  I would gaze into the stone and my imagination would see in the depths of the jewel an aqua and peach colored world.  My mind is subject to flights of fantasy, visions, dreams, zoning out, I get a lot of channels.

My father had gifted the ring to my mother way back in the day, maybe the 50's.  

I worked off the ring and let Jack look at it.  He said that it was a beautiful stone, but it was dirty and would look better with a careful professional cleaning.

It would look even better!  Thirty years of grime gone.  That sounded good to me.  

DUH!

A few days later, over the phone (the avocado green kind that hung on the kitchen wall back in the 80's) Jack said that the Australian opal was high quality and deserved to be surrounded by diamonds instead of zircons.  

A few more days later, he called to say that the ring had been stolen by one of their workers.  He was so sorry, they would make another ring, just for me, just like my opal.  

He delivered the ring to my house.  It was pretty.  It fit my finger.  I wore it a few times but soon lost it.  I suspect that the opal was man made, not the natural Australian opal of my "real" ring.

I lost the new ring.  It did not enchant me.  I carelessly misplaced the pretty new ring.  But, the old jewel remains with me in my mind.  The colors, the aqua and peach colors with a bit of grey for depth, still show up in my paintings, as you can see in the pictures posted here.



Gold Ribbon, Opal

digital, archival print, 2019




Dancer, Opal

digital, archival print, about 2017


Wednesday, January 19, 2022

POMONA







POMONA
digital, archival prints





close up, head shot



 Pomona is the Roman Goddess of fruitful abundance. 

I named my vegetable garden after her.  The garden is 22'x22', rather small.  It is organic and I tend it with hand tools.  The recent harvest was abundant for the size of the garden.  

The inspiration and reference for this digital painting is an ancient Roman statue.  The statue is approximately 1300 years old.  Prior to this Roman conception, the Greek Goddess Demeter had similar characteristics.  Prior to the Greeks the Sumerians named their goddess of agriculture Nibada.

I enjoy feeling a part of a stream of creations that have been developing for many centuries. 

I hope she will inspire you to be abundant in whatever field you endeavor to cultivate. 

Prints may be ordered from Saatchi Art online:

Janet Boyd Art Artworks | Saatchi Art

A similar acrylic painting may be commissioned by G-mailing me:

lunazure101@gmail.com




Thursday, January 13, 2022

Visions of Joy





ANNA FLOWER
archival digital print, 1/2022

close up



VISION

archival digital print, 1/2022





 close up


Two new pictures completed this new year 2022, a year that we are hoping will be better than the train wreck of 2021.  I am grateful to be an artist in these troublesome times.  Time spent in my studio is an escape from "reality" into the "flow state" of creating.  Making art enriches my life, and I believe that creating beauty makes the world a bit better.  

Who or what are these images that I create?  Are they Goddesses, dreamy earthlings, Angels, figments of my imagination, fantasies??  They are illustrations of the joy that I search for in life.  Metaphors for enlightenment.  

Lately, I have thought of a reply that I can use if someone asks me, "What is your religion?".  My answer is, "I am a Spiritual Seeker".    

I have been wondering "What is belief?"  A mental construct of our minds, that satisfies our earthling needs for reassurance that life has meaning.  Mental scaffolding for our baffling questions about existence.  I think that most religious teachings are metaphors for something, for what? for our basic need to know what we should be doing with our life.  

I believe that there is a spiritual realm.  Something so above our limited verbal capabilities, something beyond words.  The spiritual realm can be experienced in elevated states of consciousness.  The experience may be more accurately communicated through images than words.