Oddments

Indian Princess
Indian Princess

Oddments

Some of us live surrounded, inundated, overwhelmed, flooded, squished, fascinated, and delighted by oddments in our homes and studios. Different junctures in our lives can be distinguished by our collections, purchases, findings, hoardings and compulsions brought on by oddments. These are the odd little “things” that for some inexplicable reason we are drawn to like hummingbirds to sugar water!

Hong Kong: I recall being awed by delicately carved pale green jade. That started my collection of carved jade “chops” with their intricately engraved Chinese calligraphy. I deliberated for hours on what to have written. Hmmm, I no longer can recall what was inscribed, and lost the cribbed-notes. Denver, Colorado: Completely unexpected, I was gifted with enormous, glass; fish shaped platters— 40 of them! London, England: An inexplicable fascination with marionettes! My “had to have” marionettes now hang by dusty strings and once brilliant India-inspired fabric costumes a faded dull beige-y red. Reno, Nevada: As a young mom I was completely swept away by the metaphor of seashells, as beautifully written in Gift from the Sea by Anne Morrow Lindbergh. Somehow that morphed into a lifelong fascination with seashells. Jars, mantles, shelves are still filled to overflowing with shells from all over the world; some collected by me, others little tokens of love from friends and family.  Anywhere, USA: Once a “collector” of every single Martha Stewart cookbook, the oddment of the time was green Depression glass.  Today, a decade plus later, languishing quietly in a seldom used china cupboard rests multiple tilt-y stacks of green Depression glass, complete with chips and nicks, to prove I used it. Back to China: Every piece of blue and white china, from Delft to Bavaria to Baltimore somehow found a niche in my oddment heart. Roussillon, Provence: Provided the impulse to bring back (via carryon luggage) tall glass jars filled with ocre sienne, ocre havane, ocre rouge, and ocre omare raw-earth pigments. The same earthy pigments used by long admired artists. Today my cloudy jars of mineral colors sit wedged between art books, a testament to the comparative ease it is today to be an artist.

Oddments are tiny little worlds that hold memories and meanings only to the beholder. 

Which leads me to this concluding thought by Wayne Thiebaud, “I try to find things to paint which I feel have been over looked?”

Havre de Grace, Maryland: My goodness, a whole new world of painting awaits me as I fondly recall my treasure trove of oddments.

www.sharonfurner.blogspot.com








Topics: Delicious | Oddments 
Artist Websites by FineArtStudioOnline
Mobile Site | iPhone Site | Regular Site