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<title>Doretta Bendalin&#039;s Blog</title> 
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	<updated>2012-01-05T15:05:28-05:00</updated> 
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 <entry> 
 <id>tag:blogs.artspan.com,2012-01-05:30982</id>
 <title>Find Joe</title> 
 <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.dorettabendalin.com/blog/content/general/05/find-joe.html" /> 
  
 <updated>2012-01-05T15:05:28-05:00</updated> 
 <summary type="text"> &amp;nbsp; 
  The other day I went to see Find Joe, a movie about Joseph Campbell&#039;s The Hero&#039;s Journey.&amp;nbsp; In case you&#039;re not familiar with his works, Joseph Campbell did extensive research into ...</summary> 
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 <name></name> 
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<dc:subject>
General 
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  &nbsp; 
  The other day I went to see Find Joe, a movie about Joseph Campbell's The Hero's Journey.&nbsp; In case you're not familiar with his works, Joseph Campbell did extensive research into the mythology of early civilizations and beyond, and he found a common story among all mythologies which he calls the The Hero's Journey.&nbsp; The journey begins when a cataclysmic event forces the hero to leave his home.&nbsp;   
 &nbsp; 
  The event that propels the hero is life altering and causes the hero to leave the life he's known to find something new, the Truth that the hero feels he/she must find.&nbsp; The second stage is the hero finding him/her self facing many challenges.&nbsp; And, at the end, the hero returns home to share what he/she has found.  
 &nbsp; 
  I so identified with the story.&nbsp; I've always, since a very young age, felt like I lived my life straddling a fence.&nbsp; On one side was the society I was born into which had rules and ways mapped out to succeed in finding happiness in life.&nbsp; On the other side was the creative part of me that loved my imagination and got lost in my dreams and visions.&nbsp; I managed to live both parts at the same time, one at a time.  
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  During the last 20 years I've had my life turned upside down.&nbsp; Because I was struggling monetarily for the first time in my life, I tried to "make do" without.&nbsp; The loss of financial freedom sent me back to live the other side, the one in which I followed society's map of creating a life full of happiness.&nbsp; It worked for awhile.&nbsp; I was much better off financially, but I got more and more depressed with a job that was becoming more and more stressful.&nbsp; I couldn't find the time or energy to paint. My creative outlet gone, I finally worked up the courage to jump into what Campbell calls The Hero's Journey.&nbsp; I left my job and began to paint full time.  
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  I had enough money in my 401K to get me through at least 6 months without a job.&nbsp; My main focus was Trusting the Process of my journey, which got me through a lot of fear as I painted and marketed my art.&nbsp; As I struggled remembering to Trust whenever the fear of the future came up, I finally got a job substitute teaching and I received some money from some property my brother sold.&nbsp; It was in an estate my mother left to me, my brother and sister.&nbsp; As I continue to face the daily challenges of my life, I keep remembering why I'm doing this.&nbsp; There's no going back.&nbsp; I love the&nbsp; freedom I have now to use my energy to paint and write.  
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  The reason I'm sharing this is because of the movie, Find Joe.&nbsp; It's extraordinary and I fully recommend you see it if you're at all wanting to know more about your own journey.&nbsp; In the coming blog entries, I'll be sharing more about my creative and financial challenges, and how the synchronicities and miracles always seem to come to help me on my journey.&nbsp;  
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 <entry> 
 <id>tag:blogs.artspan.com,2011-12-29:30852</id>
 <title>On Seeing</title> 
 <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.dorettabendalin.com/blog/content/general/29/on-the-newest-painting.html" /> 
  
 <updated>2011-12-29T12:10:36-05:00</updated> 
 <summary type="text"> &amp;nbsp; 
  I painted all day today.&amp;nbsp; I&#039;ve been working on another in my series of painting my grandchildren.&amp;nbsp; The reason for choosing this particular idea stems from my attempts at ...</summary> 
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 <name></name> 
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<dc:subject>
General 
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 <content type="text" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.dorettabendalin.com/blog/content/doretta-bendalins-blog"> 
  &nbsp; 
  I painted all day today.&nbsp; I've been working on another in my series of painting my grandchildren.&nbsp; The reason for choosing this particular idea stems from my attempts at painting a series of Mother and Child a few years ago.&nbsp; When I took the first two paintings in that aborted series to the owner of a gallery in Ruidoso, N.M., he was disappointed. He'd seen some paintings I'd done of my family and those were the ones he was looking forward to hang in his gallery.&nbsp; "You do so much better," he said, "when you work with intimate subjects."  
     
  He did sell one of those paintings I took to him, but his words kept lingering in my mind.&nbsp; Over the next several years I took pictures of my grandchildren as they grew, and I had quite a collection by the time I decided on painting a new series.&nbsp; I had grown tired of rendering landscapes, so I pulled all those pictures out.&nbsp; I dove in and started with the one I'd wanted to paint the most.&nbsp; It was a picture I'd taken while Delaney and I were playing by the river as her Dad and sister jogged on the trail.&nbsp; She'd picked up a piece of dried up wood, holding it like it was her long-lost friend, wearing my daughter's jacket because it was colder than her Dad had anticipated, coming to Albuquerque from Phoenix, and it swam on her.&nbsp; You can see that painting in my gallery. It's the one named Delaney.  
     
  I'm on the 6th painting in that series.&nbsp; It's a close up of Delaney and her sister, Madison.&nbsp; It's the largest painting I've done in this series, 30" X 40".&nbsp; The heads&nbsp; are twice the size of a normal head.&nbsp; Although I did do a large head before, I've never done two large heads in a painting before.&nbsp; As a result of having more space in which to paint the details, it does require more SEEing.&nbsp; By that I mean, when I work on something smaller, I can get away with suggesting a detail such as the corner of the eye, but when working on something at closer range, it requires SEEing more. It requires the ability to Know exactly the curvature of a line of the eye that normally isn't SEEN.  
     
  Which brings me to the point I want to make about my experience with painting.&nbsp; Many years ago I took a workshop with Charles Reid.&nbsp; We painted from a model each day.&nbsp; I was used to short poses and longer ones, up to 3 hours long.&nbsp; On this particular day, Charles had the model take up the same pose after lunch we'd been working on all morning.&nbsp; He encouraged us to stay in the same location and continue working on the same painting I thought I'd finished. "How", I wondered, "am I going to see anything else to paint on the image I've been working on?"&nbsp; I was sure I'd captured all I needed and wanted for the painting.  
     
  The experience turned out to be extraordinary and amazing.&nbsp; I realized the more I looked, the more I SAW.&nbsp; Looking is not SEEing.&nbsp; SEEing is feeling more.&nbsp; It is taking time to compare what looking is to SEEing below the surface.&nbsp; It's what I'm experiencing now in this larger painting.&nbsp; Each time I take a break, I come back with fresh eyes, and SEE what I was missing before.&nbsp; It's always something that answers the question, "How do I resolve this area that I don't like?"&nbsp; It's the magical answer to what's been troubling you about some part of the painting.&nbsp; It's the miracle you've been looking for.&nbsp; SEEing is Believing you're invincible.&nbsp;  
      
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 <entry> 
 <id>tag:blogs.artspan.com,2011-12-24:30804</id>
 <title>On where I&#039;m going with this blog, a new perspective</title> 
 <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.dorettabendalin.com/blog/content/general/24/on-where-i-m-going-with-this-blog-a-new-perspective.html" /> 
  
 <updated>2011-12-24T15:39:02-05:00</updated> 
 <summary type="text"> 
  Wow!&amp;nbsp;  I didn&#039;t realize it&#039;s been 3 months since I last posted on my blog.&amp;nbsp; I  couldn&#039;t decide what to write next and kept waiting for the  inspiration.&amp;nbsp; Finally, because all ...</summary> 
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 <name></name> 
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<dc:subject>
General 
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 <content type="text" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.dorettabendalin.com/blog/content/doretta-bendalins-blog"> 
  
  Wow!&nbsp;  I didn't realize it's been 3 months since I last posted on my blog.&nbsp; I  couldn't decide what to write next and kept waiting for the  inspiration.&nbsp; Finally, because all the ideas that seemed to come up were  so cerebral, I felt overwhelmingly intimidated to go down that path.&nbsp;  That's best left up to art critics to express.&nbsp;  
     
  Producing  art is a spiritual experience and shifting to the intellect to share  the experience gets in the way.&nbsp; I certainly don't want to have to keep  intellectually figuring out what I'm going to share.&nbsp; That would add to  all the blocks I already have to deal with.&nbsp; If you're wondering what  they could possibly be, I will be revealing these blocks as they come  up. :-)&nbsp; In the meantime I'll tell you what led me to this decision  (besides not wanting to intellectualize my creativity).  
     
  I've  always wanted to write a book.&nbsp; Several months ago, I was reading Art  and Fear by David Bayles and Ted Orland.&nbsp; At some point in the book,  they said the best writings on art for other artists are  autobiographical.&nbsp; When I read, "You could write such a book", I took  that personally and thought to myself, "I can".&nbsp; So these blogs are  being written in a chronological order as a biographical account of my  painting experiences during this next year.&nbsp; All the postings will  eventually be included in a book.  
     
  So,  if I'm not going to be analytical, what will I be sharing?&nbsp; I intend to  include all the inspirations, insights, experiences, and blocks that  come up to hinder my productivity, you know, those things I turn to when  I'm fearful and anxious and not trusting my creativity.&nbsp; I'm going to  brutally honest with my readers.&nbsp; I've been writing my morning pages  since I joined a Sacred Circle inspired by The Artist's Way, and I'm  feeling more and more brave about being truthful.&nbsp; The Artist's Way helped me realize I'm not at all different from other creatives.  
 &nbsp; 
  I hope you enjoy these postings and let me know how I'm doing.   
  
</content> 
</entry> 
 
 <entry> 
 <id>tag:blogs.artspan.com,2011-09-30:25191</id>
 <title>On Passion, Logic and Introspection</title> 
 <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.dorettabendalin.com/blog/content/general/30/on-passion-logic-and-introspection.html" /> 
  
 <updated>2011-09-30T18:38:22-04:00</updated> 
 <summary type="text"> Welcome to my new Blog Page! 
 &amp;nbsp; 
 I tried to upload three new paintings to my website today, but the upload page was closed for maintenance.&amp;nbsp; Eager to share, I decided to begin this ...</summary> 
 <author> 
  
 <name></name> 
</author> 
<dc:subject>
General 
</dc:subject> 
 <content type="text" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.dorettabendalin.com/blog/content/doretta-bendalins-blog"> 
  Welcome to my new Blog Page! 
 &nbsp; 
 I tried to upload three new paintings to my website today, but the upload page was closed for maintenance.&nbsp; Eager to share, I decided to begin this blog today instead. 
 &nbsp; 
 I'll be sharing the processes of painting, the logic and introspection that goes on as I create, and the passion that propels the process.&nbsp; By logic, I mean the cognitive thinking that works out the problems I encounter.&nbsp; These can come from either what others would call a mistake, or from trying to convey a feeling that I don't know any technique to use for.&nbsp; And, of course, I plan to share how I get to a solution. 
 &nbsp; 
 By introspection, I mean digging deeper into my feelings, to be able to verbalize what I've only known as an impulse; where it's coming from and why I feel led to follow that need.&nbsp; And we all know what passion is.&nbsp; It's the driving force that makes art.&nbsp; Why else would an artist put up with the struggles, the fears, the aloneness? 
 &nbsp; 
 I'll probably be posting once a week, but if I have the time and I'm dying to share something new, I'll post more often than that. 
 &nbsp; 
 Wishing you a Wonderful Day! 
 &nbsp; 
 Doretta 
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 <entry> 
 <id>tag:blogs.artspan.com,2011-09-30:25161</id>
 <title>Congratulations!</title> 
 <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.dorettabendalin.com/blog/content/general/30/welcome.html" /> 
  
 <updated>2011-09-30T13:49:51-04:00</updated> 
 <summary type="text">If you can read this post, it means that the registration process was successful and that you can start blogging</summary> 
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 <name></name> 
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<dc:subject>
General 
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 <content type="text" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.dorettabendalin.com/blog/content/doretta-bendalins-blog"> 
 If you can read this post, it means that the registration process was successful and that you can start blogging 
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</entry> 
 
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