“I’m Here, Loudoun” Mural for Mobile Hope of INOVA

Homeless Children in Loudoun County, Virginia

Public art is often used to beautify spaces in the public domain and/or to convey a message. Recently, I painted and installed a mural painting to bring light to the situation of nearly 700 students that the Loudoun County Public School system has identified as homeless. There are likely hundreds more children, not in the school system, that are homeless. They sleep in cars, the woods, abandoned warehouses, or “couch surf” among their friends. This is currently taking place in one of the wealthiest counties in the United States!

Mobile Hope is a program of INOVA Loudoun Hospital that was born out of this awareness and serves to meet the basic needs of these children through donations of food, clothing, hygiene products, school supplies, medical care and providing other helpful resources.

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The “I’m Here, Loudoun” mural for Mobile Hope is a metaphor for the early difficulty these youth face. It portrays the sequential bloom of the lotus, a flower which grows out of murky darkness to become shining and radiant. Next to the blooming flower is the image of a young child walking next to a supportive adult.

The child’s shirt is a strong red color, symbolizing all of life’s intense emotions, from anger, danger and mourning to strength, love and vitality.

The mural and accompanying poem encompass the often hidden misfortune of homeless children in Loudoun County, yet show that with love and help from others in our community, these children can also grow and thrive.

Being bilingual, I decided to also paint the poem in Spanish, as Loudoun County is home to over 38,000 Latinos, some of whom are also affected by homelessness.

An unopened bud, a hidden soul

Invisible misfortune, does anyone know?

Un capullo cerrado, una alma escondida

¿Hay alguien que sabe de mi invisible agonía?

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See my light, see me grow

Out of the dark, a blooming soul

Ve mi lez, veme crecer

De la oscuridad, voy a florecer

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Lend me your hand, help me to rise

Clean, pure, beautiful, wise

Si me cuidas bien, seré hermosa y luminosa

Si me das tu cariño, seré un día una gran persona

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The “I’m Here, Loudoun” mural is on display for two years in the Mobile Hope donation center at the Village at Leesburg town center, and will later be transferred to the Leesburg Cornwall Hospital for permanent display. I hope that it can be a source of awareness and inspiration!

Click here to purchase a limited-edition print of the “I’m Here, Loudoun” mural. Part of the proceeds go to benefit Mobile Hope.

Spanish bullfighting painting

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Spanish bullfighting painting - 6" by 6" acrylic on artist panel

This Spanish Bullfight painting measures 6″ by 6″ and has a 1/8″ cradle.  I used acrylic paint on an Ampersand artist panel that comes ready to hang, or alternatively can be framed just like a traditional canvas.

Prints of this painting can be purchased through my online store here - http://dave-white-paintings.myshopify.com/collections/global-culture-painting/products/spanish-bullfight

I’ve been painting quite a bit lately on panels instead of canvas.  I like the look of it.  I like the wood with the straight edges and a quality painting surface on top.  I’m going to keep painting on canvas as well, but I like having the option to use panels as part of my repertoire.

Anyone else traveled to Spain?  Do you have a favorite city or town?  I think mine are Madrid, Toledo, Sevilla and Nerja.

Why I Like Spain

Spain -

  • The first country I traveled abroad to (other than crossing the borders into Canada and Mexico).  

    • When I was a senior in high school, our Spanish class took a group trip to Spain and traveled to Madrid, Toledo, Segovia, Córdoba, Granada, Sevilla and Málaga.  I fell in love with the architecture, the food, the music, the beaches, and the girls (I was 18).
  • Where I met my wife.

    • I went back to Spain two years later to study abroad in Sevilla.  This is when I really fell in love with Spain and the province of Andalucía.  I was there for 3 1/2 months but it seemed like 2 years (in a good way).  I met my wife there, who was studying abroad in the same program but coming from a different university (George Mason).  We traveled together to Madrid, Toledo, Cordoba, Granada, Nerja, Maro, Cádiz, Ibiza, Formentera and Morocco.  We went to soccer games, flamenco performances, Semana Santa (Holy Week), Las Ferias de Abril (April festivals), ate lunches by the Guadalquivir river, frequented cafes inside narrow streets, strolled through beautiful city parks…   If this sounds nice, know that I”m not the only one I know who fell in love in Spain!
  • Where I went on my honeymoon

    • Five and a half years later I went back again, this time for my honeymoon!  We had a layover in Madrid, left the airport and went to Puerta del Sol, Plaza Mayor and stopped at a café for bocadillos and coffee.  Then we headed to our destination of Ibiza, an island known for parties, but known to us for it’s calm and beauty.

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  • Where I draw inspiration for artwork

    • I could probably spend a few years making paintings based solely on the cultural influences of Spain.  The other night, I was listening to Niña Pastori, a Spanish singer with a very flamenco-like voice, drinking some Spanish wine, and decided to paint something that is Spanish-influenced.  So I went to our photo albums from studying abroad and saw a cool photo my wife took at a bullfighting event in Sevilla.  A few hours later and I have myself a nice little painting that I’ll reveal tomorrow!

Puerto Viejo, Limon, Costa Rica – beach, soccer, fish, relax

I’ve been going through my photos from the Peace Corps a lot lately and finding inspirations for paintings.  In 2008 I took a little weekend vacation “with the boys” to Puerto Viejo, Limon, on the southern Caribbean side of Costa Rica.  This is may favorite place in Costa Rica.  The Caribbean coast of Costa Rica seems to be less visited by tourists, yet I find it much more appealing.  I think it’s prettier and enjoy the Caribbean culture more.  Reggae music, jerk chicken, coconut rice and beans, slow pace, patua language (a mixture of English, Spanish and French)…

Anyways, we were hanging out and walking along the water one evening and I got this picture of a boy kicking his soccer ball along with a big fish in his hand.  I think this shows a slower-paced lifestyle; go fishing, walk along the beach, play a little soccer…

I just finished it today -

It’s an acrylic on a 6″ by 6″ Ampersand artist panel.  Can be found on eBay here -

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=300578816312

A Toddler’s Innocence and Mangos Painting

A Weekend Trip to the Beach in Nosara

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As I’ve mentioned before in my blog, from 2006 to 2008, I was a Peace Corps Volunteer in Costa Rica in a Community Economic Development program.  While I was living with my host family in 2007, we took a rare weekend trip from our home in La Cruz de Abangares, Monteverde, to my host-mother’s niece’s house on the Pacific coast in Nosara, Guanacaste.  This was my host-mother’s first trip to the beach in her whole life (she was in her late 30′s)!  We were all excited to be going to the beach, almost as if we were going to one of the tourist resorts or something.  I’m surprised we even made it there and back with the condition the car was in!  Turned out that her niece was poorer than we were.  They lived in a small wooden house that I would rank right above a shack.  There were about 6 people living there, with a mean dog tied up on the side of the house, not too far from the outhouse, and a loud rooster outside to wake us up in the morning.  And it was HOT.  I think we planned staying 3 nights but ended up staying 2.  We had a decent time and did go to the beach, but we were just too many people in that house and it wasn’t too comfortable.  Anyways, there was a big field across from the house full of mango and star fruit trees.  One afternoon I got this nice picture of her niece’s toddler outside checking out a carton of fresh mangos on the front patio.  The other day I remembered this picture and thought it’d make a nice painting!

I think this makes a great piece for anybody who appreciates the innocence of babies and toddlers.  If you’ve traveled to or worked in tropical countries, this type of housing may look familiar to you, and I’m sure the mangos do as well!

Musical and Cultural Inspiration for Painting – Vallenato from Colombia

Inspiration from Smithsonian Folklife Festival

This past weekend my wife, a friend and I went to the Smithsonian Folklife Festival in Washington, DC, an annual festival whose goal is to strengthen and preserve diverse, authentic, living traditions – both old and new.  This year has 3 focuses – Rythm and Blues, the Peace Corps (it’s their 50th anniversary) and the culture of Colombia.

I was interested in all three – I like r&b, I was a Peace Corps Volunteer in Costa Rica, and I wanted to learn more about the rich culture of Colombia.

Los Viajes del Viento

A few months ago I saw a Colombian movie called “Los Viajes del Viento” (The Wind Journeys), about a vallenato singer who spent his life travelling the villages of northern Colombia playing vallenato songs on his accordion, which is said to have been cursed by the devil.  After his wife’s sudden death, he swears to never play his accordion again, and begins a journey across the vast Colombian terrain with his young pupil Ferman, to return the accordion to its rightful owner.  Along the way, they are enveloped in the musical diversity of Caribbean culture in Colombia.

It’s a really good movie and seems to me to be very authentic, although I have to admit that I’ve never been to Colombia.  I really liked seeing the beauty of vallenato music and dance.

What is vallenato?

I found this description here -

http://www.vallesounds.com/valle/vallenateng.html

“The vallenato music, as it is known today, is said to have been influenced by a combination of African, European, and Colombian rhythm and folkloric sounds. At first, native people from Valle de Upar played their music with flutes called gaitas made of bamboo and African drums made of hollow wood with goat skins secured by wooden rings and strings.

It is estimated that a century after the invention of the accordion in 1829, Europeans introduced the German Hohner accordion to the northern coast of Colombia where it was primarily used to play European music. Fortunately, the famous German instrument, now most commonly known as the acordeón vallenato, found its way to Valle de Upar where it was adopted as part of the vallenato folklore. According to vallenato historian Tomás D. Gutiérrez Hinojosa (1992: Cultura vallenata: origen, teoría y pruebas ), the European accordion migrated to Valle de Upar not to create music but to be physically and culturally transformed by the vallenato musician so that it can be used to interpret the different vallenato styles.

I Walked Right into my Inspiration for a Painting

Lucky for us, we were walking around the Colombia section and happened onto a spontaneous vallenato performance!  This vallenato was without the accordion – only a gaita (flute made of bamboo), African drums and dancers.  I snapped some photos, knowing that it would make a really cool painting.  Check these out:

I have a few paintings in line to be completed before I start the vallenato ones, but I’m going to do 2 or 3 vallenato-themed oil paintings this summer.

Literature, art and a personal connection. “Facing the Storm,” interpreted from The Catcher in the Rye.

Over the past couple of months, I’ve been writing about the “Catcher in the Rye” custom oil painting I’ve been working on for Jeff, a client of mine.  It’s called “Facing the Storm.”  Alas, I have the completed pictures and story behind the art!

(To purchase a 7″ x 11″ Fine Art Print of this painting for only $45, email me at info@davewhitepaintings.com)

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Facing the Storm

The Scene from the book…

“Anyway, I keep picturing all these little kids playing some game in this big field of rye and all.  Thousands of little kids, and nobody’s around – nobody big, I mean – except me.  And I’m standing on the edge of some crazy cliff.  What I have to do, I have to catch everybody if they start to go over the cliff – I mean if they’re running and they don’t look where they’re going I have to come out from somewhere and catch them.  That’s all I’d do all day.  I’d just be the catcher in the rye and all.  I know it’s crazy, but that’s the only thing I’d really like to be.  I know it’s crazy.”

How it relates personally…

Although I’ve given some explanation into the meaning of this painting, I’d like to reveal a bit more.  When Jeff was a child, his father gave him this book.  On the front cover, he wrote a note – “Jeff, I hope you enjoy this as much as we did.”  ”We” referred to his Dad’s girlfriend at the time.  Jeff still has the book his Dad gave him; it’s actually the same one I read before starting this painting.  Anyways, the book made a significant impression on Jeff, since the main character – Holden Caulfield – reminded him strongly of his Dad.  Jeff’s parents divorced when he was young.  His Dad, who was a drug addict, became increasingly absent from his life starting in high school.  Several years later came a permanent absence – he committed suicide.

In his own words – Jeff describes his father’s last night

“I like to imagine that, on the night before he took his life, my father went to a seedy dive bar for his last hits. His sandy colored hair was unkempt and balding in places that only bald after years of mental anguish. His jacket was dirty and hanging loosely around frail bones, the kind of frailness that only comes from many injections of abuse. His blue eyes, though, were friendly. One side of his lips curled up into a strange but open smile. His face was shining, though it was probably the kind of brightness that comes from two lights in constant tension, one always threatening to overcome the other, each frustrated by the shadows they cause. Taking a stool, he saddled up to the bar and tried to explain himself in the words of my favorite song.

“Bartender, you see, the wine that’s drinking me, comes from the vine that strung Judas from the devil’s tree, its roots deep in the ground.”

Nodding sympathetically, the bartender asked him if he had any kids.

“Two sons,” he answered. “I was close with them when they were boys, but we began losing touch when they got to high school. Now they are in college, and I never speak with them.”

Slowly, the bartender nodded again.

At this point, this virtual stranger gave my dad some of the most honest words he had had in his life. “Your youngest son is getting ready to be a young professional in our nation’s capitol, one of the only cities in the world where he is free to become who he is meant to be. He will be wildly successful. Your oldest is getting ready for graduate school, reading and writing in ways that you could never have imagined. He will spend his career helping other people keep the wine from drinking them too badly. Sir, you have nothing to be ashamed of. You have done a fine job.”

The next night, the darkest of his life, my father held a gray blade and wondered about the bartender’s words. How could it be that, after all the pain and struggle he caused himself and his family, he had done a fine job of raising his sons? Then some final truth dawned on him. Love is not good, simple, and pure. This does not mean that it is its opposite, because neither is love some demon that needs to be exorcised. Always and everywhere, love is both brilliantly optimistic and incomprehensibly execrable. Struggling like every parent does to put it together in just this way, my dad was able to perfectly raise his two children.

Now that my dad’s eyes are closed for good, I realize my own truth, that God did not do this to me. I am not so sure that God does anything at all. Instead, our doomed but bright star allows us to watch, on the clearest twilights, how it must always set. The best thing for us to do is let it go, especially on that one ultimate day when the sun cataclysmically vanishes into itself. Because even on that chilling day, somewhere in the seemingly infinite darkness, two lights will struggle to be seen as one. The first will flicker for understanding, and the other will gradually, painstakingly, start to beam for renewed hope.”

adding our custom touches to the interpretation…

Although Holden Caulfield’s vision of being the Catcher in the Rye is very descriptive, Jeff and I took that vision and added in a few more features that relate to his own story.

  • Most prominently, his Dad took the place of Holden Caulfield on the cliff.  Jeff gave me several photographs of his Dad, which I used to paint a figure resembling him on the cliff.  In the painting, he’s catching and saving a child who is running off of the cliff.
  • Down below in the valley,  you’ll notice someone walking towards the storm.  That figure represents Jeff himself, as Jeff’s Dad never was able to “catch” him.
  • The changing skyskape, from bright and cheery to dark, stormy and dangerous, is also Jeff’s idea.  You’ll notice that the darker side is the  side by the cliff, where Jeff’s Dad is.
  • I added the lush blue rivers that run through the mountains and valley until they abruptly come to an end at a split in the earth.
"The Catcher in the Rye painting", "art with meaning", "dave white art", "custom art"

THERAPEUTIC!

I’m happy to say that Jeff is very pleased with this painting!  He says that it’s very therapeutic for him, and although it depicts a dreary side of his family’s past, he feels peaceful when looking at it.  It was a pleasure to make a painting for someone that carries so much meaning!

Arte, Cultura de Costa Rica, Música, Baile y Fiesta (and mean faces, smile next time!!)

"Costa Rica art", "Peace Corps art", "La Cruz de Abangares", mural, "dave white art"

I came across this photo on Facebook last night of my former students Brad and Itxel, in traditional Guanacaste dress, standing in front of the mural I painted of a Guanacaste man and woman in traditional dress! A few months ago several of my former students got on Facebook all of a sudden after the school was able to get a computer lab.   I can’t hardly believe it…before that, only a few families in town even had a computer, never mind the internet.  I painted this in 2007 when I was a Community Economic Development Advisor with the Peace Corps in Costa Rica. I lived with Brad’s grandmother’s family my first several months in La Cruz, so we saw each other often outside of school. Itxel lived down the street, and was in my English and Junior Achievement classes (and soccer games). They look like they’re ready to go to a fiesta típica and dance to some marimba!  Except for the mean faces. People don’t seem to smile too much in pictures in Costa Rica….in reality, these kids were smiling and laughing all the time. I think Brad is trying to imitate his grandfather Hernan, who always looks like that.  The camera incorrectly dated the picture 2003, it was actually taken in 2010.

2/3 done with painting

Just have to add some more depth with the rye, make the sky a bit darker and more dangerous-looking, and add in the main character (possibly my client’s father, in this case), on the cliff.  Until then, here’s what it looks like right now!

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about 2/3 done!

Progress on painting…a skyscape full of emotions

The sky-scape in the Catcher in the Rye painting I’m working on gradually changes from a sunny, happy temperament to gloomy and bleak.  The darkest part of the painting is on the far right side, where Holden Caulfield will be standing on a cliff.

Holden Caulfield’s unsettled state of mind is revealed in the opening paragraph:

“If you really want to hear about it, the first thing you’ll probably want to know is where I was born, and what my lousy childhood was like, and how my parents were occupied and all before they had me…”

Here are  a couple pictures of the canvas; one of the upper left, sunny side, and one of the upper right, dark side.  I’ll be adding more details as I go, and will be starting soon on the cliff and rye field.

 

"The Catcher in the Rye", "skyskape", "sky painting", "oil painting", "custom art", "custom artist", "art with meaning", "Holden Caulfield", "dave white art", "JD Salinger"

Sunny Skyskape

 

"The Catcher in the Rye", "skyskape", "sky painting", "oil painting", "custom art", "custom artist", "art with meaning", "Holden Caulfield", "dave white art", "JD Salinger"

Bleak, Sad Skyskape