November 23, 2023


A Place I Used to Go

. . . there cannot be growth without sacrifice and there is no guarantee that what will come tomorrow will be half as precious as what was ours just yesterday.
— Jim Metcalf


We encounter many things as we make our way through life that help steer us along our path, or perhaps set us upon another path entirely. There are people who influence our thoughts and beliefs. There are events that remain with us always. But we also encounter little things that can impact our lives – sometimes without realizing it at the time.

Often times we may hear a song that will take us back to another place in time. I remember my first true awareness of music when I listened to Chet Atkins’ album “Mister Guitar” in the early 1960’s. The album turned me onto music and would lead to my own guitar lessons and a love of music that today includes many varied styles. My every day is filled with music, but when I pull out “Mister Guitar,” I am transported back to where it all began.

During my school years, literature was not to my liking. It did not matter what form or style of literature – if it had words, it was disliked. Everything changed in the mid 1970’s when I picked up Jim Metcalf’s small book of poetry “In Some Quiet Place.” That one book created a love for words that literature classes could not. Although today I read many different forms of writing, I still occasionally pull out one of Jim Metcalf’s books and discover again that first thrill of the printed word.

I have long had a passion for visual art. I owe most of my knowledge and appreciation of art to my uncle, but a turning point came when I purchased the book, “The Art of Andrew Wyeth.” Wyeth’s work fascinated me. His art was realistic in that the scenes and subjects were immediately recognizable, yet they also told a deeper story and created a mood that drew you in and captured you. A high point came in 1980 when I visited a museum show of Andrew Wyeth art. My love of art today embraces many different styles that include the world of craft. But for me the soft tones and quiet melancholy of Andrew Wyeth’s world will forever remain a fascination.

So, excuse me while I get a cup of tea, put on Chet Atkins’ “Mister Guitar,” grab my tattered copy of Jim Metcalf’s “In Some Quiet Place” and “The Art of Andrew Wyeth.” I need to revisit some old friends, drift back to where things began, and dip once again in water from another time.

Dan Hardison


The Wise Owl
Weekly Yarns - Oct 30, 2023


November 17, 2023


Thinking About Circles

        What about the earth,
        the sun and the moon;

        what about morning
        to night and back again;

        what about seasons
        where spring follows winter;

        and then there is life
        from birth to death.

        Are we limited
        to a straight line?


Dan Hardison


The Wise Owl
Daily Verse, November 2023


November 10, 2023


Just One of Those Days

It’s just one of those days you can’t explain
. . .
Some days you write the song
Some days the song writes you
— Guy Clark

When a writer is faced with a blank page and the task of putting words together with a mind that does not want to cooperate it is called writer's block. But artists can face the same problem with a blank canvas. Just getting started can be a difficult task. Then there is the problem when the image that is developing on the canvas does not match the image visualized in the mind. Examples are many where even great artists have painted over sections of canvas that did not suit them, or simply painted a different image on the back of a canvas.

Then there are the times when a work of art has been completed, installed in a place of distinction, and something really goes wrong.

Ben Long has made a career as a teacher and a painter of frescos. He has created stunning frescos in churches and public buildings. Beginning in 1988, Ben Long spent two years creating a very large fresco for historic St. Peter’s Catholic Church in Charlotte, North Carolina. Over 1500 square feet and 30 feet high, the fresco depicted “The Agony in the Garden”, “The Pentecost”, and at the center “The Resurrection”.

In 2002, the unthinkable happened. The entire center section of the fresco crashed to the floor with remaining areas severely damaged. A heart-breaking disaster. While it would be determined that numerous construction projects in the immediate area surrounding the historic downtown church was the cause of the destruction – with the foundation work on a high-rise bank building next door delivering the final blow – the loss was still devastating.

The creation of art can be difficult and often frustrating work. To render an object that reflects one’s thoughts, vision, and passion, can be exhilarating. The late folk artist Sybil Gibson once said, “I have had so many adversities related to my painting – along with some notable successes – that I sometimes wonder at my determined drive to keep trying in the face of some of my disasters. Everything one creates doesn't turn out a masterpiece, but it is such a joyous thrill to bring off something you recognize as being good from your innermost self.”

Dan Hardison


The Wise Owl
November 2023


November 4, 2023


Remembering When

My grandfather was an avid fisherman. He loved fishing the rivers and lakes of Middle Tennessee. Mother would talk of weekends growing up when breakfast would be whatever he caught that morning. And if fishing was not good, there would be frog legs.

        dog-eared page . . .
        returning
        time and again

Dan Hardison


Cattails
October 2023