by Andrea Fedder | Dec 14, 2019
This painting is sold
(artist retains all rights to print reproductions of this painting)
Derivative work created with permission from the photographer
Inspiration: photography of Andre Fiedeldey
ORIGINAL COPY POSTED ON INSTAGRAM DURING THE CHALLENGE
Best reason to not quite finish a painting?
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I’ll give you a hint: it’s TWO cute for f***ing words! 🙈😆Swipe to find out! .
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I really did try to get a better photo of them but also not very hard because *kittens!!*
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This painting is inspired by a photo my uncle took- I’m still working on how to get the minimalism to really evoke peace 😍.
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The new additions to the miniNature studio family are 2-3 week old rescues who were in pretty bad shape and taken from their mommy by kids who just didn’t know better. They still don’t have names so when they do and they can sit still for one friggin second – I’ll do proper introductions. Needless to say Phoebe (the Goldie) is very perplexed by the stumbling and squeaking dust bunnies. In Afrikaans ‘liefie’ is a term of affection – like lovie. But also sounds like leafies – hence the title of today’s painting . 😊
by Andrea Fedder | Oct 19, 2019
ORIGINAL COPY POSTED ON INSTAGRAM DURING THE CHALLENGE
Perseverance in anything is all kinds of hard. When I feel like I could just drop the ball, my new approach for sanity is to tone down how much of myself I’m giving, but to still sit down and give something. It doesn’t have to be perfect, it doesn’t even have to be complete. But in creative endeavours as in droughts – every droplet counts.
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📸 inspiration found on @Unsplash
(artist retains all rights to print reproductions of this painting)
Inspiration: common license photography
by Andrea Fedder | Oct 3, 2019
The central experience is essential to the consequent unfoldings. Everything we need, our entire life’s future unfolding is already in us. It will unfurl, like the individual tightly rolled leaves of this fern, when it’s time is right to do so.
(artist retains all rights to print reproductions of this painting)
ORIGINAL COPY POSTED ON INSTAGRAM DURING THE CHALLENGE
Could it be that the sacred geometry in nature is more than a divine principle?
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Is it an aesthetic code drawing our attention not only to its existence all around us and in us but as nature’s way of saying ‘look at this, study this, make sense of this.’ I’m sure nature has said this to many people and I’m only now waking up to it.
To me, nature’s sacred geometry is saying this:
‘Understand why it’s significant to your awakening that this pattern governs this creation in this way.’ When I observe the fern’s unfolding, I tap into this:
The reason we can’t suddenly be or have ‘the large unfolded fern’ (having “arrived” by societies definition) is that it takes time to unfold the main stem first. .
The central experience is essential to the consequent unfoldings.
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You can’t skip ahead or the smaller leaves (your achievements) will have nothing to hold onto.
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The central stem is all the seemingly random, “useless” experiences we gather. They are the primary feeding stem to what will come.
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This is why when something comes together down the line of our lives, we often get a sense of ‘hey I’ve come full circle from that thing that happened way back when’. Because you have unfolded many times over.
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If this parallel holds truth – then all future unfoldings of your life were with you from the start, bundled up tightly as the shoot broke through the soil into the world or as the baby broke through its embryo. (Not so coincidentally a foetus contains the Fibonacci spiral too)
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It’s no longer about trusting that everything we need is already in us. Rather, it will unfurl, like this fern, when it’s time is right.
I’m literally baked on miniNature right now!
by Andrea Fedder | Sep 22, 2019
If you want to remain young, keep reaching up toward the en-light-enment and keep learning new things and just like this branch, you’ll keep growing into YOU-th.
(artist retains all rights to print reproductions of this painting)
Inspiration image: artist’s own
ORIGINAL COPY POSTED ON INSTAGRAM DURING THE CHALLENGE
One of the trees growing in our garden is knobbly, long-limbed Eucalyptus cinerea or silver dollar. Their sage-green leaves are often used in flower arrangements. I’m super lucky to have one and always use it for cuttings in our home, come pruning time.
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While trimming branches, I noticed one stem containing the full spectrum of growth – dark, brittle, leaves at the base with curled brown tips, deep vibrant leaves in the middle – perky and full of confidence and tender, mint green buds shooting out from the very end.
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Omg – ‘this branch is how we actually age?!’ I said to my cat. She didn’t seem to care so I’m going to tell you instead.
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Our society (while slowly shifting – wooohoo) still favours youth. And since those years only last briefly at the start of our lives, we have a tendency to cling to our past with romanticized longing while resenting the fading allure of our ageing, physical selves.
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But in truth, in each new chapter you undertake, you are sprouting new, vibrant leaves. As you grow through it those leaves age and become part of your sturdy undergrowth.
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It is only our young selves that age. Every day, every season, every undertaking is a new spurt of you-th that grows from your old, young self.
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If you want to experience age – curl your branches backwards, starve them of light, lament on what was and you will stagnate in your present.
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But if you want to remain young, keep reaching up toward the en-light-enment and keep learning new things and just like this branch, you’ll keep growing into YOU-th.
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Ironically Eucalyptus oil heals a myriad of health problems. Maybe it really is the tree of youth?
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