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Tuesday was a field trip with a friend to visit the gallery in Burnsville that will be hosting the exhibition for our Book Salon for a month later this year. It’s a lovely space. Coincidentally, Wendy Reid, the owner, serves with me on the Board of HandMade in America. She’s brought in a wonderful selection of art at all price points. I noticed that the gallery participates in several community and philanthropic causes, usually by donating a percentage of sales of specific objects.

We stopped in at the Burnsville Town Center across the street from the gallery to see a quilt that my friend had heard about. It’s amazing. The work of quilt artist Barbara Webster, it portrays key places, people and sights in the history of Yancey County, and surrounds them with representations of the four seasons. She used both old photographs and took over a thousand new ones. it’s a masterpiece of design, and spans the entire lobby wall (the size is 24′ x 7′). It’s well worth making a trip just to see it.

After lunch (which was a delayed birthday treat for me), we traveled on to Penland School of Crafts, so that my friend could visit with a book artist friend she hadn’t seen for nearly 20 years, Jana Pullman, who’s been teaching a two-month class in leather bindings. I planned to visit Annie Fain Liden, who’s currently a teaching assistant in Beth Ross Johnson’s weaving class. Annie Fain is one of my bookmaking teachers as well as a friend, and it was a joy to catch up with her.

It was a long day, and a good one. I’m soooo looking forward to the book arts workshop I’ll be taking at Penland this summer with book artist Laura Wait. I’ve been Googling Laura to learn more about her work and have found many examples of her books, which has made me even more enthusiastic about learning from her.

Well, I didn’t get into the Hedi Kyle workshop at Penland, but did get into Laura Wait’s workshop. I don’t know where I fell in the lottery, so I have no idea how far down on the waiting list I am for the former. I’m disappointed about not getting to study with “the book goddess (my term for her),” but looking forward to the class with Laura Wait. We’ll be doing at least one case-bound book, so I expect it will be very different from what I might have done in Kyle’s class. I am hopeful — and the workshop description seems to indicate — that we’ll spend a fair amount of time on content as well. I’d be more disappointed if I weren’t scheduled to take a class at Arrowmont in August with Carol Barton, who is known for her pop-up and tunnel book structures. That will balance out my summer’s work nicely.

I started my classes at UNCA: ‘Women in the Short Story’ class and ‘The Art of Watching Film.’ They’re both very good (the teacher for the film class is particularly dynamic), and I’m only sorry that I’ll be missing of one each of them, as I have a HandMade in America Board retreat that I’m scheduled to attend (and looking forward to) in a few weeks. We read Irwin Shaw’s ‘The Girls in Their Summer Dresses’ for the first short story class, a little gem of a piece. Luckily, there are no wallflowers in the class, so we had a voluble, spirited discussion. Our film session focused on using literary analysis tools to analyze film, and we watched clips from Blue Velvet, Apocalypse Now, and City Lights, and Buster Keaton’s Sherlock Jr. in its entirety. Almost every class will include one entire movie, to illustrate a theme. To start the class, each student was asked to introduce himself/herself and mention a favorite film. An impossible task. It was a great ice breaker and a good way to get a sense of people through their choices (or at least to delude myself that I was). I simply mentioned two films that I love: Days of Heaven and Bringing up Baby. According to my film-choice disclosure theory, I wonder what that said about me?

Friday, which was to be my Studio Day, turned out to be a play date in Asheville with my friend Carol. We cruised a couple of galleries (including Ariel, where we saw some of Dan Essig’s latest work), stopped in at Early Girl for lunch, Malaprop’s for coffee, and True Blue for art supplies. I haven’t done that in quite a while, and it felt great. The splendid spring day felt as lighthearted as we. Oh, and we located Eaties, the cereal bar, for future reference.

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