ABOUT DANIELLE FOUSHEE

I am an artist. This website features my work and highlights some of the varied
inspirations that inform my creative practice. Read more about me here.

Check out my facebook page or follow me on twitter at
@ArtistDFoushee.

Monday, April 9, 2012

North Carolina Museum of Art


I went back to North Carolina to visit some family and attend a yoga teacher training course at Duke Integrative Medicine. I went to the North Carolina Museum of Art with my mom and sister to see how their permanent collection looks in the new building.


I’ve been visiting NCMA since high school. When I was a design student at NC State University, I used to go to the art museum to sketch and relax. Back in those days I was always drawn to the Byzantine religious paintings. This time I was more interested in abstraction.

This Frank Stella piece looks a lot better in the new building than it did in its previous home.


I notice now, looking back at the works I chose to photograph, that I was really drawn to geometric curves this time. I wonder if it has to do with experiencing the work in a different, brighter, more contemporary building. It really did seem like the modern and contemporary art fit better in the new space. The older, more historical works actually seemed more out-of-place than I remember them when they were exhibited in the other building.


The interior of the new building is great—it's open, bright, inviting. I wish the exterior was as nice. I was disappointed that the exterior of the building doesn’t seem to incorporate the environment or context of the location very well, not to mention the fact that it kind-of looks like a cheap metal shed. Situated next to the old building, the two seem to fight with each other, visually and experientially. Perhaps museum administrators have future plans to bring the two buildings into a more cohesive, holistic kind of visitor experience. I hope so!

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Autocomplete / Collaboration

Autocomplete: Untitled. A drawing by Kevin White and Danielle Foushée.
7.5 x 9.5 inches. Crayon, ink, and twine on matte board.

My friend from our days at Cranbrook, Maya Drozdz, invited me to be a part of a new exhibition she’s curating, called Autocomplete: A Collaborative Coloring Book Exhibition at Visionaries + Voices Gallery in Cincinnati, Ohio. The exhibition will be on view from May 10 to June 29, 2012.

The Visionaries + Voices Gallery provides artistic and cultural opportunities for artists with disabilities, and builds an inclusive environment where all artists feel valued. They value a world in which artists with disabilities not only create and share their works of art, but also are able to learn, work, collaborate, exhibit, teach, and celebrate with other community members.

I was given the black and white drawing you see above, created by artist Kevin White, and was asked to “complete” the piece. I added the color and the twine to finish it. I always love these kinds of works. What two artists create together is completely different from what each of them would’ve done alone.

Special thanks to Maya for including me in this project. It has been really fun to be a part of it!

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

New Blue Paintings

Vishuddha #11, Ink on Paper, 6x6 inches. 2012.

I just finished a new series of blue and purple paintings. There are 22 of them.

Vishuddha #3, 6, 7, 10, 17, 18, 20, 21, 22.
Ink on paper, 6x6 inches (each), 2012.

My sankalpa (intention) for 2012 is to focus on the idea of integrity—living from my own truth, and from the inside out. After my thyroid cancer diagnosis last fall, I’ve been thinking a lot about the throat chakra and it’s energetic implications on my life. Vishuddha Chakra is generally represented by the color blue. 

To honor my body and my intention this year, I’m focusing on becoming a better communicator. As part of my studies and spiritual practice, I’ve taken on a course in life coaching, which I think will give me skills to become a better speaker and especially a better listener.

Vishuddha #19, Ink on Paper, 6x6 inches. 2012.

I hope I will be able to deepen my personal relationships, improve my own life and the lives of people around me. I’m also looking forward to grounding my art-making work in the ideas that evolve from these explorations. 

I’m giving one of these little guys to each of my classmates in my Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction class at Swedish Hospital in Seattle. I hope it will be a happy little reminder to everyone of what a great experience we had supporting each other together. 

Maybe it will also help keep us on task with staying in the present moment, where everything is always as it should be.

Friday, February 24, 2012

A Yellow Landscape


This new painting I’m working on reminds me of the birds-eye view of Utah I used to get when I would fly back and forth from Los Angeles to Colorado. The land and rock formations are so graphic from above. They signal both stability and change simultaneously. These are concepts that seem to permeate the human condition—at least mine, anyway.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

My Paintings at Home in Los Angeles


Late last year I was commissioned by Umesh Vaghjiani, uber-talented interior designer and owner of Inbox Designs in Los Angeles, to create two new paintings for his client's new bedroom. I was honored to produce the two works you see pictured above the bed in this photo.

I think the room is gorgeous!

It is so gratifying to know that my work is bringing joy to the homeowner each time he enters the sanctuary of his new bedroom.

Thank you, Umesh, for giving me the opportunity to collaborate with you on this project. It was such a pleasure to create these pieces for you and your client!

See the paintings up close here.

Monday, January 30, 2012

I Dreamt of Things: The Oracle

I dreamt I went to see The Oracle. I stood in her kitchen waiting for her sage advice. When she turned to speak to me, her hair stood on end, her fangs came out, and she snarled and growled at me.

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Handmade Typography Underway


I’m working on a new poster for FIDM's summer scholarship promotion. I’m already excited about the direction it’s going! I’m planning to focus on ideas of authenticity/artificiality, natural/unnatural, handmade/digital.

This is a hint, more to come in a few weeks... I have lots of handwork to do in the meantime!

Monday, January 16, 2012

Logotype Concepts for FIDM



I’m working on a new logotype for a program offered by FIDM to help it’s faculty keep their skills up to date. These are three options I’ve come up with so far.

 

I like this purple one the best so far. I can see ways that it can be expanded into a whole system of logotypes for various sub-programs within the FIDM brand.

Friday, December 30, 2011

Peacefulness: My 2011 Sankalpa

Ice Lake in the San Juan Mountains of Colorado is 
my peaceful place. It is where I go in my mind 
whenever I want to feel comfy and free!

01/20/12: An updated version of this article is published for the yoga/spirit/health community at ElephantJournal.com.

Each year, I choose an intention (sankalpa) to focus on. It’s like a new year’s resolution, except there are no specific goals—only an idea or thought that I bring into awareness for the year. I spend the year studying my intention to see how it affects my life and attempt to cultivate more of it. (You can see my past blog entries about sankalpa here.)

2011 was my seventh year doing a sankalpa practice, and this year I focused on peacefulness. There has been a lot of change and upheaval in my life this year, so focusing on peacefulness has been a challenging but worthwhile endeavor.

For some reason my exploration of peacefulness in 2011 brought up a lot of issues about another quality: passion. American culture tells us to “live your passion” and “follow your passion” to find fulfillment and happiness in this life. But after much reflection, I think passion is too strong a word; it doesn’t seem to be a truly positive quality to embrace, especially as an entire culture.

Passion implies a loss of control, a kind of tunnel vision where all the factors of a situation may not be considered. It connotes greed, irrational behavior, and unconcern for consequences of one’s actions—perhaps it’s where the phrase “crime of passion” originated. After considering the prism of passion from many different angles, I realized that at least for me, passion and peace are mutually exclusive.

Now, that doesn’t mean there aren’t things that I don’t care about deeply — family, friends, healthy lifestyles, social justice, creativity, community, yoga, learning, and teaching, the environment, etc.

But passion cannot exist where peacefulness lives.

Passion says that where we are now isn’t good enough or right enough, and we have to keep searching outside ourselves to find self-worth and fulfillment. Passion looks too much into the past and future to the detriment of awareness of the present moment, where true living takes place.

As my sankalpa for 2011 winds down, I have decided to stop living with passion as a value. I would rather have peacefulness in my life than passion. I realized this when I began to describe to a friend how I knew that Matt was “the one”. I told her that unlike other boyfriends, I never felt that crazy teenager feeling of being out of control in my infatuation. When I was/am with Matt, I feel peaceful. I feel a sense of being “home”. I like this feeling of belonging and acceptance. So, choosing Matt was the first of many choices that have prioritized peace over passion over the past 9 years. I will continue to choose peace, because that is where happiness and fulfillment truly reside.

Sunday, December 18, 2011

New Small Works

 Untitled Diptych. 18 x 8 inches. Ink and pastel on paper. 2011.

I just finished pulling together about 50 new small works for a small solo show that’s coming up at Grand Junction City Hall in Colorado. I’ll be posting many of them in the days to come... Here are the first two!

Untitled Quad. 16.5 x 16.5 inches. Ink on paper. 2011.

I’ve been in an introspective mood over the last several months, so it seems fitting that my work has shifted back to the smaller format. Most of them are even smaller than this, some even as small as 4 x 4 inches.

Stay tuned for more to come!

Friday, November 18, 2011

My First Commissioned Work


In the spring, I hosted a booth at the Beverly Hills Affaire in the Garden Art Fair. It was one of my favorite art fairs to date. While there, I met an interior designer and his client who were looking for something special. They loved the spontaneity and whimsey in my work, and they were impressed by the conceptual framework of yoga philosophy that drives much of my creative process.


They commissioned me to create these two new pieces for a new bedroom design. They’ll hang as a pair over a king size bed as a headboard. They are being framed now, and I can't wait to see them in place at their new home! After they’re installed and I get some photos, I'll be sure to share them with you.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

I Dreamt of Things... A Covered Wagon

I dreamt that Matt and I took two horses and a covered wagon on a joyride through the city streets.

Friday, November 11, 2011

Nine Years Ago Today


Nine years ago today was my first hike with Matt: 12 miles round trip from Shortcut Saddle to Vetter Mountain Lookout in the Angeles National Forest. The lookout burned down in the Station Fire of 2009, but Matt and I are still going strong—I love that guy!! You can donate to help rebuild the Vetter Mountain Lookout here.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Inspiration in Barcelona, Spain


There was a plethora of things to get inspired by in Barcelona, and one of my favorite places was the Museu Nacional D'Art de Catalunya. The museum houses an extensive collection of Catalan art from throughout history. Below you’ll see some of my favorite artworks from their current exhibitions.

 View of the Barcelona from the steps of Museu Nacional D'Art de Catalunya

 Painting on the interior dome of the museum

I’ve always had a special affinity for Byzantine paintings. I love the use of gold leaf and dimensional texture in the halos. This is a detail of the Virgin Mary.

 Ballerina, Pao Gargallo

Untitled mural by Xavier Nogues

I laughed out loud when I saw this painting: two bandits and a ginormous glass of red wine. I wonder what mischief they are planning!

 A beautiful eclectic cabinet, Josep M Jujol

 Chandelier, Josep Puig I Cadafalch

 Salvador, Unknown Artist

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Yellow Aster Butte Trail to Gold Run Pass near the Canadian Border

Mt Larrabee (right), American Border Peak (middle), 
and Canadian Border Peak (back)

Matt and I spent this Labor Day hiking up the Yellow Aster Butte Trail in the Mt. Baker Snoqualmie National Forest, near the Canadian border.

View from the top of Gold Run Pass

The hike is short, but steep: about 3.8 miles round trip and 1800' elevation gain. It was a good workout, and once we popped out of the trees the views were spectacular.

 Douglas’ Spiraea

Wildflower season is late this year due to an unusually cool spring.

 Lupine

I was playing with my camera on the “super vivid” setting, just to see what would happen. It really brings out the color, but I think I also lost some depth and midtones.

 Looking back at Mt. Baker from the Yellow Aster Butte Trail.

Mt. Baker is still completely covered in snow, in September! There is still so much snow there, Matt’s co-worker went skiing last weekend.