at Miss Rita's house, a poem about Monhegan

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Those who follow my work, know I have a special love for Maine. I have painted many summers on Monhegan Island which is 13 miles out to sea. It is a whole different world. One summer, I stayed at Miss Rita’s house.

Miss Rita is one of the oldest residents, born and raised, as they say. It is a wonderful spot in a wonderful place. Her house sits on the gravel road just up from the ferry, just across from the Island Inn.

 I couldn't help but think of her and her life while I stayed there in her house.  Monhegan is a place both isolated and complete.  There is very little there and everything you need.  It is easy to be happy on that piece of earth.

Thank you to Miss Rita for sharing with me.  I had the time of my life and wish you all good things and many years more.

 

 

Miss Rita’s House on Monhegan. Deborah Cavenaugh

At Miss Rita’s house, cotton batiste aprons hang in kitchen windows, 

bleached white, starched crisp and stitched by hand,

they find their second life and new stories to tell of kitchens now and then on Monhegan.

At Miss Rita’s house, watercolor paints spill across kitchen cabinets.

Colors in every hue wait for my hands

to create a little line and tell a little story of the peace and beauty that is Monhegan.

At Miss Rita’s house, Bear, the cat, sounds at the kitchen door.

Soft grey and blazing white, he looks for a way in, and finding my open door,

his story’s in mine now of the home away from home that is Monhegan

At Miss Rita’s house, memories surround.

I think of her in this kitchen ninety years and more,

hands moving in the rhythm of a chop and stir.

She kept her home fires burning in her life that is Monhegan.

At Miss Rita’s house, the sea rocks close.

Whales swim out the window.

Way out on this rock, she’s made a daily life for ninety years and more.

I, pilgrim, come for salvation and the hope of renewal that is Monhegan

“once more and again”

on, on, on I sail this ship of tattered dreams / 17 x 14 / watercolor mixed medium
$1,800.00

17 x 14

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All hearts seek a song of home. Now there are many meanings of home and as many ways to find this place we all seek. We search for where we belong and where we can be the best version of ourselves. We search for a place of love and harmony. We search for a place of acceptance and belonging. We search for a place to grow and thrive. We search for a place that sings home to our hearts. We want to find our place that represents our personal sense of home.

For some, there is the simple love of the place from which you came or the family who brought you up. For others, it’s the discovery of where you feel “right” or where your heart belongs. It's different for all of us and the same for all of us, as well.

All hearts sing the song of home. So does mine. Soon I am off on a journey to discover my home place…once again.

I am expecting good things.  I am expecting a certain harmony for my heart as it sings its sony of home.

first, you must believe in your dreams

first you must believe in your dreams / 9 x 11 / watercolor
$600.00

9 x 11

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I am powering up. I’m choosing to put aside, for now, thinking about the things that just aren’t working. I am choosing to power up where I can make things happen. I am willing to change. I am willing to get moving. I am willing to think about myself in the world in a new way.

I am powering up and taking action where action can be taken. I am letting the things and pieces that I can't affect go...for the moment.

Searching for the way brings the way to you. Asking for the way brings the way to you. Believing in the way opens your eyes to the door.

These are the days to make the changes that must be made and get up and power up and make whatever you can make happen, happen!  I am carrying on.

go-don't-stop

When you're ready, you will fly. That is the truth of it. You have to be ready to live the life you truly desire. You have to be strong and courageous. You must be undaunted and unafraid of the obstacles. You have to get ready...and when you are, you will fly. There's no doubt about it! I see life as this great and never-ending story. A chapter book! And, like any good book, the story grows and expands and surprises you when you least expect it

When I was 40, the chapter was about divorce and loss of identity and not knowing what to do next. Now, at almost 60, I am artist and writer and so many other things that I never was at 40, things I couldn’t even imagine being. Who knew? Certainly not me.

I can’t wait to turn the page and see life’s next twist. I often always like them, I must admit, but in the “one thing leads to another” part of life, if I don’t let life shut me down, well then, it can’t.

I guess what I am saying is don’t be fearful of a twist in your plot. Read on. You could fall through the rabbit hole and land on your feet!

“here I belong to me”

I am believing the way will be made - 24 x 24 - watercolor
$1,600.00

painted on cradleboard and ready to hand - no framing required

 

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There is a longing only the sea can fill. I have returned and returned to this theme in my work--the woman on the island of her own making down by the sea, where everything seems possible. We all live the life of our own creation, one way or the other. I’m not saying you created the economy or weather. I’m saying you created your life. You decided how it would work, what you would do, what you would accept. You decide if you will smile today or only see the half-full glass. All that is only up to you.

A great truth is that we have the power, always, to dream a new life.

By the sea, I feel like I belong to myself. By the sea, we feel free and all our dreams seem likely. It is a place of possibility and longing and dreams. The sea brings this out for me and for so many of us. I think that’s why we struggle to get there so we can plop down and stare at the endless possibilities it represents.

The woman in my paintings is never unhappy or bored or sad. She loves the life she lives. And, why not? It is, after all, her own dream. Yet, she always knows there is more to the world than just her own island. And yes, she sometimes does have a longing for something that she isn't even sure what to call. But that’s ok.  The longing is the fodder of new dreams….

“it all works together for good”

Everything I do is informed by my belief that life is beautiful, there is always goodness, you can have peace. Where else to start but in your own home? When I was much younger, I went to a New Year's Day Meditation for World Peace in a church in my hometown, Washington, DC. As I sat in silence and candlelight, I felt way too small and way too young to figure out, even for a moment, how to meditate for something as large as peace in the entire world. It came to me, as I sat there, that the best way to practice such an intention, was to be vigilant about peace in my own home.

I grew up in a poor and very unpeaceful environment where fear was my most frequent emotion. I remember a day, a particularly bad day, in my childhood when something inside of me awakened. I stood and declared that my children would never endure what my brothers and myself endured. They haven't.

Making choices for peace in your own home can be hard. Home is where we vent and let it out. But, that’s not fair. There are lots of ways to let it go without letting it go in the one place where everyone deserves to feel safe and know peace.

“there is a season”

I've done that long enough / 9 x 12 / mixed medium watercolor
$800.00

9 x 12

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To everything there is a season. I know this to be true now more than anytime in my life. Change is all around. It may be for the good, or it may be for the bad. No matter. Most things are largely out of our control most of the time. We do, however, get to control how we think about it. Will we choose to be happy and go forward?

Will we choose to see possibilities and not just impossibilities?

Will we remember to be grateful for all the beauty and wonder and blessings that even the hardest of times cannot take away from us?

Will we hold on to the truth that no matter the trial, the essential you cannot be taken away?

Hold on to the good you have today. Push from your thinking that which you don't control. Focus on a hopeful tomorrow. Live in the good stuff... it makes every day easier.

Deborah Cavenaugh pictures paint way more than 1,000 words

Article from Wilmington Star News January 4th, 2011 By Lois Carol Wheatley

A certain storybook quality inhabits everything in the studio; fairy tales told in the form of candlesticks, clocks, lamps, glassware, jewelry, picture frames, small furniture, sculptures, cards and prints. “People walk in here and the first thing they say is this place makes me so happy,” said artist Deborah Cavenaugh.

She is the creator of the 2010 StarNews Media Commemorative Cup, a prime example of the storytelling motif of her artwork. Bright colors and a whimsical style depict Mott’s Seafood in Wrightsville Beach, all the way down to the fat cat on the porch and the miniature delivery truck—real details in an otherwise surreal setting.

“I’m a narrative painter, and my interior decorating is a narration,” she said. “I am a lifestyle artist, which means I have a cohesive, complete thought and I put art into everything. I think that home should be beautiful and I think that home should tell your story.”

That story should vary from the family room to the bedroom to the kitchen, and she said that families should build on their unique experiences—collections, souvenirs, heirlooms—to bring artistry to their home and illustrate their lives and their values.

“At the end of the day home is what you have, and it can be beautiful and wonderful and completely about what’s important to you. The reality is that’s often done in the smallest of ways, the perfect mug that you have your evening tea out of. You have fewer things but the things you have are important and beautiful in your eyes.”

She does commissioned paintings based as much on how things look from the exterior as the stories that inhabit their interiors. “I listen to you, I hear what you say and I interpret it into a painting. That’s a story about your family or whatever it is you’ve come to me for, and those go all over the world.”

She specializes in painting family portraits and she’s also portrayed significant scenes like a home or a bridal bouquet. “I take what I think and put it together with what you think. That’s what folks want. They want me to paint a painting of their house, but they want me to paint it like a Deborah Cavenaugh painting, so I bring it forward to a little story level.”

The items in her shop are no such collaborations, but rather her own complete artistic vision. “Everything from a little hand-painted box to a little vase that I’ve added a few jewels to a little table, it all works together. Nothing is out of place. It’s all one thought.”

Many are Wilmington scenes and themes, but some are from various different places and others are not rooted anywhere in particular. “My cards and prints have gone international. I’ve been in shops from Maine to Florida pretty steadily, and from time to time out in the Great Lakes.”

Children are inexorably drawn to her studio and she has about 30 students, an even mix of boys and girls, who come to take lessons and learn to work with their hands in various media. “They are really powerful young artists,” she said. “They’re highly motivated. I push them hard and we get incredible results.”

They don’t necessarily learn to paint bright pictures of happy scenes. “I want to see their point of view. I want to direct them and help them with technical skills but I definitely want them to develop along their own line. I’m very successful with my kids because I find out what they’re good at and as they get better at what they are good at all the other things follow along.”

She raised her own two children by herself and they grew up in her studio, contented to watch, learn and help out. In the sense that her studio is her home, it models what she thinks a home should be.

“What I think you should do in your house is you should build collections, that your house should talk about you, the same way if you’re an artist someone can look at your painting and know something about you. If they can’t you’re not putting much of yourself into your art. You just have good hands but your heart isn’t coming out into it.”

For some colorful illustrations of hand and heart, visit her studio at 4113-E Oleander Drive, call 367-5211, or go online at DeborahCavenaugh.com.

Deborah Cavenaugh Studio

[youtube width="520" height="318"]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9v8q85I4lM[/youtube] I invite you to share in my happiness... I can't help it. I am so very happy about how my new studio has turned out. I think of myself as a life style artist. Everything I do is informed by my belief that life is beautiful, there is always goodness, you can have peace. Where else to start, but in your own home? When I was much younger, I went to a New Years' Day Meditation for World Peace in a church in my hometown, Washington, DC. As I set in silence and candlelight, I felt way too small and way too young to figure out, even for a moment, how to meditate for something as large as peace in the entire world. It came to me, as I sat there, that the best way to practice such an intention, was to be vigilant about peace in my own home. I grew up in a poor and very unpeaceful environment where fear was my most frequent emotion. I remember a day, a particularly bad day, in my childhood when something inside of me woke up. I stood and declared that my children would never endure what my brothers and myself endured. They haven't. I am devoted to a beautiful, peaceful home where all are loved, all are respected, and the way to a good life is evident.

I invite you to share in my happiness... In my studio I have made many things for your home beyond paintings and prints. They reflect who I am and what I believe in. They intend a happy and peaceful home. This is my prayer for all of you, as it is my prayer for myself. I remind you to keep your home beautiful and peaceful and a loving respite for all the trials that are life going on. -Deborah

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