Arjen Noordeman (my friend and fellow Cranbrook grad), of ElasticBrand, single-handedly brought CranbrookDesign.com back to life last month, after it had languished for a couple years. I interviewed him about the new site, his work, and his inspirations.
Check it out on CranbrookDesign.com.
ABOUT DANIELLE FOUSHEE
I am an artist. This website features my work and highlights some of the varied
Friday, January 30, 2009
Monday, January 19, 2009
25 Things...
Rules: Once you’ve been tagged, you are supposed to write a note with 25 random things, facts, habits, or goals about you and post it. At the end, choose 5 people to be tagged. If I tagged you, it’s because I want to know more about you.
Thanks, Maya! Thus…
1. I’ve lived in six states so far, and in four different time zones: Alabama, North Carolina, Michigan, Utah, California, and Colorado.
2. Right after college, I spent the entire summer figuring out the right combination of ingredients to make the most perfect tomato salsa. This past summer I figured out how to make an amazing mango salsa to complement it.
3. I attended the North Carolina School of the Arts for high school. I get a kick out of describing it as a real-life experience akin to that 80s television show Fame.
4. I met my husband Matt McGrath on match.com. We hiked 12 miles in the Angeles National Forest on our first date. We’ve been married 5 1/2 years now.
5. I have about 600 hours of yoga teacher training, and have been practicing yoga since 1999. My favorite posture is janu sirsasana.
6. At about seven or eight years old, my mom took me to an art museum for the first time. When it was time to go, I sat down in the floor and pouted until she was finally dragged me out. My favorite artists as a kid were Georgia O’Keefe and Matisse.
7. I lived in an artist’s loft above skid row in Los Angeles for a year. It was hot and loud, it smelled terrible, and there was nowhere to shop or eat out. After a homeless guy pushed me off the sidewalk and into the road in front of oncoming traffic, I knew it was time to move to Glendale.
8. I had a horse named Beast when I was in elementary school. He was the gentlest, sweetest horse imaginable.
9. I get my love of the outdoors from my dad. On the last trip he made to visit me, we went to Joshua Tree National Park, Prescott National Forest in Sedona, and the Grand Canyon. We took a yack-inducing pink jeep “adventure tour” during which our seatbelts got quite a workout and our cheeks ached from laughing — out of pleasure or fear I’ll never be sure.
10. I’m a southpaw. Once in college I was at a dinner party where everyone at the table randomly turned up left-handed.
11. As a kid I always used to think my dad was lying and/or crazy when he said his favorite color was brown. Now I agree with him. I also have an affinity for orange.
12. I believe the planet is gravely overpopulated.
13. My favorite place to recreate is in southern Utah.
14. The things I miss most about living in L.A. are: my yoga community, ethnic food (especially Thai food), dive bars, my girlfriends, Michael Levine’s fabric store, Swains art supplies, and going to the Staples Center to see L.A. Kings hockey games.
15. The things I don’t miss about living in L.A. are: the too-cool hipsters in Los Feliz/Silverlake, the traffic, valet parking, and knowing that I would probably never be able to afford to own my own home.
16. My favorite ice cream combination is Raspberry Sherbet and Peanut Butter & Chocolate from Baskin Robbins. And yes, I like them mixed up in the same cup!
17. I always try avoid paying for parking. I would rather walk half a mile than pay to park.
18. I am extremely sensitive to loud noises. I always cover my ears when an ambulance streaks by. I’m sure people think I’m nuts.
19. I really need to make a separate line item in my budget just for shopping on amazon.com.
20. I love owning a Honda Civic Hybrid. It gets around 47 mpg, and it doesn’t scream “Look at me!” like the Prius does.
21. After taking a horticulture class in college, I tortured my friends and family endlessly by rattling off Latin and common names of about 300 native and ornamental plants.
22. In college, I wanted to double major in graphic design and landscape architecture, but one of my professors discouraged me from landscape architecture. Although I love practicing graphic design, I regretted following his advice.
23. My mom is my favorite shopping companion.
24. My first job was as a roller-skating waitress at a drive-in burger joint.
25. My favorite wild animal is a desert big horn sheep. They are nimble rock-climbers!
And now it’s my turn to tag five innocent people! Here are my victims:
Danielle, my roommate at NC School of the Arts and author of Dreadsky, a blog about her photography.
Victoria, author of Las Angelenas, a blog about fashion, food, and life in Los Angeles.
Kim, the most literary person I know. She posts irregularly at KimSaid.
Peter, who occasionally teases us with cool retro stuff on his blog, The Grant Report.
And last but not least, my WT... Lisa O!
Labels:
Danielle Foushee
Friday, January 16, 2009
Happy Paintings by Ryan Bubnis
Ryan Bubnis is a Portland, Oregon-based artist who works with a variety of media to create these happy little paintings. I love the colors and goofy style of the drawings.
Labels:
Inspiring Artist
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
My Type Designs Featured at GOB Magazine’s Blog
Check out GOB Magazine’s blog. They featured some of my type designs today! These are two original typefaces designed by yours truly. This poster is a short manifesto of my teaching philosophy, and was in the recent exhibition I PROFESS organized by VisuaLingual.
Labels:
Danielle Foushee,
Design
Sunday, January 11, 2009
A Few of My December Paintings
Here are three paintings I finished over our holiday vacation in Boulder, Utah. I’m having trouble thinking of good names for them, so if you have any ideas, please leave me a comment!
I love working with printed fabrics, and the texture of the cardboard is so nice! I’m still pining for access to a laser cutter so I can cut more intricate shapes for my collages.
I love working with printed fabrics, and the texture of the cardboard is so nice! I’m still pining for access to a laser cutter so I can cut more intricate shapes for my collages.
Labels:
Danielle Foushee,
Mixed Media,
Painting
Saturday, January 10, 2009
I Dreamt of Things...
I dreamt that I had a giant Russian Tea Cookie the size of a beach ball. I held it in my arms as I proceeded to gnaw on it like a mouse would a huge piece of cheese.
Here’s my favorite (and easy) recipe for Russian Tea Cookies... These are Matt’s favorite!
1 cup butter
1/2 cup powdered sugar
3/4 cup pecans
2 1/4 cups flour
1/4 tsp salt
1 tsp vanilla
Cream butter and powdered sugar. Add vanilla, then flour, salt, and pecans. Chill for an hour. Roll into balls. Bake at 325° for 25 minutes. Roll in powdered sugar after they have finished baking.
YUM!
Here’s my favorite (and easy) recipe for Russian Tea Cookies... These are Matt’s favorite!
1 cup butter
1/2 cup powdered sugar
3/4 cup pecans
2 1/4 cups flour
1/4 tsp salt
1 tsp vanilla
Cream butter and powdered sugar. Add vanilla, then flour, salt, and pecans. Chill for an hour. Roll into balls. Bake at 325° for 25 minutes. Roll in powdered sugar after they have finished baking.
YUM!
Labels:
Food,
Matt McGrath,
strange dreams
Thursday, January 8, 2009
Student Disrupts Utah Land Grab
Ever since this story came out, I’ve been fascinated. Several hundred thousand acres of public land in southern Utah was essentially being given away to oil and gas developers by the Bush administration. In the waning days of his presidency, Bush was pushing through the sale of huge swaths of sensitive wilderness to developers at flea market prices. Much of the land in question, most notably, is located in and around Arches and Canyonlands National Parks. . . Exactly where Matt and I spent our Christmas vacation!
In fact, each evening as Matt and I left the park(s), we could already see flames shooting out of the earth at current oil and gas development sites dotting the landscape. This was particularly unsettling due to the bitter cold and thick blanket of snow covering the ground.
Enter University of Utah student Tim DeChristopher. He got out of his final exams, and went down to the land auction at the BLM office in Salt Lake City. A testament to the rushed nature of this auction, DeChristopher was able to register and begin bidding on the land immediately. He was able to purchase leases for about 22,000 acres of land around the national parks, and bid up the price for many other parcels before he was arrested.
You can help keep DeChristopher from being charged with fraud by helping him raise the funds to follow through on this purchase of the land leases, thereby protecting some of the amazing wild lands in southern Utah. I wonder what would happen if everyone who wanted to save the planet were as brave as Mr. DeChristopher?
I also joined the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance, a group dedicated to preserving the one-of-a-kind natural places found in southern Utah.
In fact, each evening as Matt and I left the park(s), we could already see flames shooting out of the earth at current oil and gas development sites dotting the landscape. This was particularly unsettling due to the bitter cold and thick blanket of snow covering the ground.
Enter University of Utah student Tim DeChristopher. He got out of his final exams, and went down to the land auction at the BLM office in Salt Lake City. A testament to the rushed nature of this auction, DeChristopher was able to register and begin bidding on the land immediately. He was able to purchase leases for about 22,000 acres of land around the national parks, and bid up the price for many other parcels before he was arrested.
You can help keep DeChristopher from being charged with fraud by helping him raise the funds to follow through on this purchase of the land leases, thereby protecting some of the amazing wild lands in southern Utah. I wonder what would happen if everyone who wanted to save the planet were as brave as Mr. DeChristopher?
I also joined the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance, a group dedicated to preserving the one-of-a-kind natural places found in southern Utah.
Labels:
Conservation,
Nature,
Utah
Monday, January 5, 2009
Canyonlands New Year
I saved up my vacation time all year so that I could have two simultaneous weeks off for the holidays. Matt had some time too, so we got to spend the entire vacation goofing off outside. Interestingly, it took me a week and a half to chill out enough to forget about work and everything else, so I could finally enjoy myself completely. Canyonlands National Park, especially the Needles section, did the trick. We stepped out of the car and onto the Slickrock Foot Trail, into a solitary landscape, and I could finally breathe deeply, relax, and simply BE.
Matt’s and my shadows on the wall of Lower Spring Canyon.
My yoga teacher Jasmine Lieb used to say, “We’re human beings, not human doings!” Why should an idea so simple be so hard to implement in life?
Sunday, January 4, 2009
Amazing Aerials by Alexander Heilner
Ever since I took my first orienteering class in college, I’ve been intrigued by maps. I’ve done a few sketches using maps in some drawings, but nothing has yet borne fruit for me. A few days ago, I showed you some beautiful textile works by Leah Evans that are inspired by maps. I’ve also mentioned some ideas I’ve had as I’ve flown over Utah deserts on my way to Los Angeles from Colorado. There are some beautiful, if disturbing, aerial images of strip mines in Nevada in an earlier post.
Once again, I’ve come across some amazing aerial landscape photos; these are by Alexander Heilner. His website doesn’t go into detail on the thinking or story behind this series, so I’ll just show them to you here. They appear to be images of some kind of evaporation pools, perhaps from mining operations. These photographs create a kind of paradox, because it’s intuitively obvious that these places must be vats of poison, and yet the images are so alluring. The contradiction makes my heart ache.
Once again, I’ve come across some amazing aerial landscape photos; these are by Alexander Heilner. His website doesn’t go into detail on the thinking or story behind this series, so I’ll just show them to you here. They appear to be images of some kind of evaporation pools, perhaps from mining operations. These photographs create a kind of paradox, because it’s intuitively obvious that these places must be vats of poison, and yet the images are so alluring. The contradiction makes my heart ache.
Labels:
Conservation,
Inspiring Artist
Saturday, January 3, 2009
Word of the Week — OSMOSIS
Each week, I close my eyes and choose a random word from the dictionary. I then do an image search for that word online, and choose some of the most interesting, unusual, and unexpected results to share with you.
Labels:
Word of the Week
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