Roberta Writes – d’Verse, CFFC, Thursday Doors and The Flower Hour

Punam’s d’Verse Poetics Tuesday prompt is Looking back. This freestyle poem is a synopsis of my year.

Sandwich Filling (freestyle poem)

January starts with

an international bond offering

long workdays interspersed

with school collections

Dad, aka au pair, continues

in a rapid downward health spiral

until he reaches a bed bound state

culminating in a series of tests

during a three-day hospitalisation

pulmonary hypertension the diagnosis

untreatable as a condition but

continuous positive airway pressure machine

restores a level of normalcy

***

February, a month of conflict

with legal advisors and underwriters

everyone in my house

succumbs to the latest flu bug

lazily doing the rounds

and laying people low

birthday trip nearly ruined

but I gulp down pills

and try to make the most

of splendid leopard sightings

returning home to work chaos

and a very sick mother

***

March kicks off with Mom

on her fourth antibiotic

I leave my team to manage

bond closure best they can

and rush Mom to the ER

where she is admitted with

pneumonia and a fractured rib

fortune smiles and 24-hour delay

enables me to pick up work pieces

I can’t visit Mom as issuance must close

guilt wrestles relief as colleagues celebrate

***

Sinus operation in early April

much worse than expected

doctor drills a drainage hole

through bone and cartilage

recovery long and difficult

ten full days off work

yet sick leave far too short

I struggle to regain my strength

restorative trip to bush

fraught with unseasonal cold

but I got exceptional misty shots

***

May, a most unhappy month

fall out with work colleague

lack of appreciation soul destroying

I contemplate my future

while absorbing Buddist philosophies

on coping and disengaging

they don’t help me at all

is it time for me to retire?

I finish my buffalo painting

Perhaps I’ll have an exhibition

***

June passes in a flash

both sons writing mid-year exams

stress levels high at home

disillusionment with work increases

TC escapes it all, as usual

a week working in Cape Town

followed by two weeks in Amsterdam

as I hold the home together alone

he offers a holiday in London

and a few days in Brussels

as a peace offering

I take Michael with me

***

July is fabulous

London is vibrant and busy

we visit art galleries and pubs

tour of Flanders cemeteries

bucket item ticked off

horror of World War 1

mitigated by visit to Bruge

and chocolate tour in Brussels

we leave Europe to its summer

and return home to deep winter

***

August is a busy month

final school year dance

students decked out

in eveningwear and finery

champagne corks pop

celebration swings to examinations

preliminary exams followed by finals

days and days of anxiety and stress

24-hour art examination

Michael produces a masterpiece

***

work agitation settles down in September

for once promises made are kept

I feel more settled and happier

maybe I’ll last the further five years

my company is hoping for

I’m not committing though

hope always brings disappointment

Mom finally seems to be rallying

after six months of poor health

she’s so tiny and frail

I’m afraid she’ll disappear down drain

along with the bath water

perhaps I should make her shower

***

October filled with work challenges

another bloody bond issuance

my least favourite of all transactions

lots of lawyers and advisors

this one fraught with challenges

and a team new to these deals

coaching and training take on

a whole new meaning

both boys writing examinations

TC swans off to Japan

for two weeks of work and play

***

November, the heavens open

it rains day and night

the rain in Spain

takes up permanent residence

in South Africa

will the sun ever shine again?

the latest bond finally closes

on the last working day of the month

no rest for the wicked

as year-end rush commences

Michael has three visits to the hospital

and Dad has one

***

December arrives at last

with its promise of yearend shutdown

here I am, practically alone,

holding the fort and resolving

last minute catastrophes

the office shuts tomorrow

will it end, I wonder?

at least there is Christmas

something to look forward to

lots of good food and company

and a holiday to the bush

to watch the turtles hatching

watch this space!

CFFC

Dan’s CFFC prompt is Summer and Winter. You can join in CFFC here: https://nofacilities.com/2025/12/15/cffc-a-look-back-one-year/.

I’m combining CFFC with Thursday Doors this week. You can join in Thursday Doors here: https://nofacilities.com/2025/12/18/more-christmas-from-osv/

These are photographs of paintings by Vincent van Gogh taken by me at the van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam.

It is the amazing Rebecca Budd who inspired me to share my photographs of van Gogh’s paintings. You can find Rebecca in her Reading Room here: https://rebeccasreadingroom.ca/2025/12/16/jane-austen-at-250-emma-and-the-art-of-missteps/

Picture caption: A winter scene painted by van Gogh. This is the only winter painting I photographed.
Picture caption: This picture is a harvest painting by van Gogh so probably autumn. Oh well!
Picture caption: This painting is definitely summer. I really liked it.
Picture caption: This is the cabinet owned by Vincent’s brother, Theo. It is where Theo stored all his letters from Vincent. Lots of doors on this beautiful cabinet.

The Flower Hour

I’ve been saving these red roses for Christmas. You can join in Terri’s The Flower Hour here: https://secondwindleisure.com/2025/12/16/the-flower-hour-11-last-chance-holiday-florals/

I was trying to be artistic with the sun on the raindrops.

Roberta Writes – Drawing and Art Special with Resa McConaghy #art #drawing #fashiondrawing

Today I have a real treat for you. An interview with ultra talented fashion designer, artist, and photographer, Resa McConaghy.

Resa has kindly shared some of her drawing and art secrets and a myriad of her amazing drawings and fashion designs.

Thank you, Resa, for this amazing interview.

Resa is also a talented writer and her book, Nine Black Lives, is available for free download on her blog here: https://graffitiluxandmurals.com/artists/

You can find Resa on her art and murals blog here: https://graffitiluxandmurals.com/

AND

on her amazing Art Gowns blog here: https://artgowns.com/

You have a great talent for drawing figurines and portraits. What attracts you to this particular subject matter?

This begins with my background in fashion design. The college course I took was in Design and Technology, not illustration. However, a tiny part of the course was dedicated to fashion illustration.

During my time in film, I utilized drawing to explain to directors what I was up to. The drawings were only okay, but they got the design across.

It was blog pal, Holly (House of Heart), who got me drawing fictitious characters for fun, via gagging around in comments.

It started with Boogapony Holly, a character who did a Go-Go dance in front of street art and graffiti, then became a new age Love Child.

Above: Boogapony as a Love Child by the Golden Gate Bridge.

From there, Holly and I created a Super Hero – Princess Blue Holly. Drawing had become a lot of fun at this point.

Above – First Princess Blue Holly drawing – 2019 and More recently PBH dominates an evil puppet. PBH changes outfits for each “Gowntoon” mission. Then I began drawing Art Gowns on some blog pals, to become part of the stories.

Above: Models Holly (as RR) Shey and Dale

Above Models – Holly, Gigi and Marina

Do you have a particular method you use for drawing figures? Do you start with any particular body part? Do you complete the outline of the entire figure and then add the details?

Yes!

I start with an oval for the head. Then, it’s the gesture. I do a few swooping lines to capture how the body feels as it poses.

If the feeling is cool, then I do a few lines for shoulders, bust, waist, hips and feet.

If I haven’t ruined the feeling of the gesture a this point, I continue with details. If I lose the feel, I usually stop.

You clothe many of your figures in intricate and detailed dresses, some of which are period designs. How do you go about researching clothing from particular period? I have tried to research clothing for both men and women from varying time periods and have found it quite difficult to get good details and pictures.

So, the study of Fashion Design & Technology included “Fashion History”. So, how did they get the clothes to look like that, in any era? Well, that’s where the technology comes in.

Example: The Renaissance – pattern cutting was not a thing, clothes were draped. So, we learn about “how” they made clothes fit. Lacing up a square over a flowy under piece makes something fit. A corset is laced to make you fit it. The idea of a cup to fit a breast did not come about until the early 20th century.

Many types of pleats, gathers, tucks, etc. were use to make clothes drape over/fit body shapes. With the advent of patterns in the 1800’s, came darts to make clothing fit.

Once the newly formed middle class Victorians got their hands on patterns, they used the patterns over and over. That, along with the invention of the sewing machine, gave them time to go wild with embellishments: embroidery, trapunto, ruffles, flounces, beading, dying, appliqué, etc. Sure, all that was around before, but it was for the rich, only.

Above: Rebeca Budd (Art Gowns’ Gowntoons Art Director & Holly as RR, in Victorian outfits.

Also, Victorian times saw the advent of synthetic dyes, creating eras of popular colours going forth. Until then dyes were naturally derived from mollusk shells, beets, onion skins and various other plants and lifeforms.

Point is when you understand all of this, you can look at a painting from any era and know how they constructed that garment, therefore you can draw it. You can also design and draw whatever you want, from any era.

Portraits

Above: Jim Morrison

I start with a photo of the person, and crop off the head to what I want. I print that out on 8 x10 paper. I draw crosshairs through the photo of the face. I do the same on a page of 11 x 14 drawing paper.

I begin where the crosshairs meet. That is usually where an eye, between the eyes or top of the bridge of the nose is, and rough that in. From there I rough in the rest of the eyes, brows, nose, top of head, lips and chin. I tried using a grid, but that never works for me. I lose the feel of the face, the expression. Without feel the portrait does not become the person.

Then it’s a series of refinements.

Above: Gloria Steinem pencil drawing, photographed with & without & a warm filter.
Most of my portraits are all lead pencil. I use a full range of leads, smudging sticks, facial tissue and various erasers. I did Janis Joplin with water colour pencils, as her days in pop music were a colourful period.

Below is my first full figure portrait. Tina Turner – Pencil sketch photographed & then edited on basic Mac Photos that comes with the laptop.

Does a particular subject matter call to you when you get an idea or see something you want to draw? I find that certain pictures really attract me as an artist and I really want to draw and paint them. Not all ideas attract me as strongly and I only proceed with the projects that call the loudest.

Definitely, I am inspired by various things. The Art Gowns Models or Boogapony drawings are inspired by ideas Holly and I toss around. IE: What would they wear in Miami? Or if they were movie stars in the 1940’s.

When I saw the Tissot exhibit at the AGO, I was wildly inspired to do faux Tissot style Victorian gowns.

Pop culture figures inspire me. Imagining characters from books inspires me.

Above from left to right: Sam from John W. Howell’s Eternal Road series — Lady Kara from Shehanne Moore’s book His Judas Bride — Estelle from Roberta Eaton Cheadle’s book A Ghost and his Gold — Catling (as a teen & with her tattoos) from D. Wallace Peach’s book Catling’s Bane (the Rose Shield series).

Right now I’m working on some drawings inspired by a series of poems Holly writes called – The Sad Café. This will be the second collection. In this collection I expand into full scene drawing.

Above: from the first Sad Café series

Roberta Writes – d’Verse: sep-a-rate, a song parody #songparody #dverse

Melissa‘s challenge is slightly complex this week. She proposed a few artworks by the same artist as picture prompts and asked poets to write a poem expressing the thoughts the picture of their choice evoked. After writing the poem, she suggested we read up about the artist and see if it changed our feelings in respect of our chosen artwork. You can read about the artworks and join the prompt here: https://dversepoets.com/2025/02/18/sep%c2%b7a%c2%b7rate/

I chose this artwork:

My song parody below is intended to be humorous and take the ‘mick’ out of some of the pretentiousness and snobbishness in some art circles. It doesn’t necessary reflect my views on art as I do produce some non-realistic, surrealist work myself.

Why can’t artists choose to create objects of beauty?

Why can’t artists choose to create objects of beauty?

Still life paintings so realistic they almost smell fruity

Why add to the ugliness in this world?

Depicting on paper the endless hatred that unfurls

***

Just look at it

Misery articulated in every line

Flying in the face of all teachings of the Divine

***

You might say I picked a poor example

But did I?

What’s the purpose of a banana taped to a board? Note 1

An over privileged buys it for a price few could afford

How pretentious to call that mockery art

***

I wouldn’t pay a single cent for that

In fact, if it was a gift, I’d send it back

I’d view it as an insult to my sensibilities

Why can’t artists focus on depicting happiness and joy?

***

You’d think purchasers would want to view art with pleasure

Something delightful to brighten up their day

But no, they prefer to wallow in the hideous

Or even worse the clearly sad and piteous

***

Of the banana, I’m not a fan

But it’s better than a painted beer can Note 2

Really, what has art come to?

I’d much rather look at artworks produced by kindergarteners

***

Squiggly line drawings – I ask you what sort of art is that?

It’s this sort of mediocracy that allows AI to compete

AI artworks easily as good as those of modern art elite

Why can’t artists focus on depicting happiness and joy?

***

The attributes of a good piece of art should be well-known

You shouldn’t have to look at splodges and try to guess

Exactly what the intent was behind the colourful mess

An artwork’s content should clearly show what it is

***

As soon as an artist picks up his pencil and starts to work

Viewers should gasp in wonder at the work in progress

That rarely happens with much of the art that does the rounds

Looking at it turns the viewers smiles to frowns

***

A good example is modern surrealist art

What on earth is its purpose to a viewer

It makes me want to poke out my eyes with a skewer

There are even times when art completely disappears

***

Disappears … What is non-art? Why use the word art

In connection with an object that is something else entirely

I can see a photograph is a photograph without any enquiry

Surely everyone can see a stone’s a stone

***

Artists go to school to learn techniques and styles

Just as clothes designers must learn all about textiles

Why do they throw everything they learned away?

I think their attempts to be different lead them astray

***

There is nothing better than a beautiful landscape

There is no need the natural world to reshape

But create a realistic picture and you’re criticised

Why can’t artist focus on depicting happiness and joy?

Note 1: The banana line is based on this article https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/that-viral-banana-duct-taped-to-a-wall-it-just-sold-for-6-2-million-180985523/

Note 2: The beer can line refers to this article: https://abcnews.go.com/International/beer-artwork-accidentally-trashed-museum-worker/story?id=114588747#:~:text=A%20museum%20in%20the%20Netherlands%20has%20recovered%20an,of%20them%20during%20his%20shift%2C%20museum%20officials%20said.

Reading up about the artist didn’t change my dislike of his work, although in saying that I did find this face painting compelling in a dark way. In fact, it made me wonder even more why he is famous. So, my song above remains unchanged. Do you recognise the rhythm and flow? I’ll give you a hint – I went to see My Fair Lady on Sunday evening and the music is still stuck in my head.