The Divining Deck

After my morning practice of meditating and reading beautiful books by my mentors (Campbell, Hafiz, Lao Tsu, Agnes Martin, Thich Nhat Hanh, Tolle, Bell), I make drawings that reflect the reading I am ingesting. I am trying to visualize some of the concepts of No-thing and No-mind and time not being linear. I mean, come on, these are tough nuggets. I guess that is why Lao Tsu says one cannot know, one can only be. But drawings are a way to get at things around the fuzzy periphery of words.

I keep a journal as well during my morning ritual. I track ideas and concepts in quotes, but more importantly in my own words. Please do read the authors I have mentioned. They are the masters, I am merely a pupil.


Also at the beginning of the development of my morning practice, I used a beautiful art card deck called Moon Angels by Ryan Rebekah Eren (Sweat & Tears Press, 2014) , full of affirmations and gorgeous drawings. I would pull a card at random and ponder how this might relate to my studies or any other issue that was occupying my monkey mind. It was fun and the abstract artwork was beautiful to meditate upon. So I decided to make a deck with my own drawings and writings hoping to ease some suffering during these seemingly apocalyptic times.

I hope these bring you joy, peace, at the very least, a smile.

Here is the first one from a deck of 33 cards. Soon coming out analogue in book and card deck form. Stay tuned!

T1_it will pass image.jpg

T.01 IT WILL PASS

Consider all the events
that hastened to occur
for this moment to be
curious, messy or pure.

Is it pain or pleasure?
Is it dull or profound?
Is it what you desired?
Tell me what you have found.

A painful dullness?
It’s OK
it won’t last.

A profound pleasure?
Enjoy it fully
for it too will pass

(next time you have an itch, don’t scratch it. See what happens)

unintendeds

The great benefits of having a dog is the amount of time I now spend outside walking in my neighborhood. Over the past 7 years, I have begun to enjoy the mess of graffiti hidden in lost corners rarely passed by. I call these images the "unintendeds". The true intention was to mark and claim territory; to speak to a tribe of which I am not a part. But although not intended for me, they do speak to me in color and texture and form and therefore, beauty.

habitats: the work of christine chaney (part 1)

Here is the first installation from a book about my design work that I published through the online publisher Blurb. I have divided the book into five parts. Here is Part 1: Introduction, Intent & Inspiration. Upcoming will be Part 2: Wabi Sabi. Part 3: Space & Layering. Part 4: Theme/Variation & Structure. Part 5: Suspension & Movement. I hope you find inspiration and a brightened perception of habitation. http://www.blurb.com/b/4004839-habitats. Please enjoy.

lythe marking

So now that I am over 50, I realize how important it is to be concise; simplifying so I can experience all that is IN my life. I want to be able to touch all corners without exhaustion.  One concept I would like to incorporate into my life is the idea of "lythe marking"; limited effort for maximum effect. Here is a little Chaney Chat I created to illuminate this concept.

WabiSabi

Wabi sabi, an illusive term derived from Japanese aesthetics. Loosely it refers to the inherent beauty in the humble, the worn, the impermanent, the mercurial nature of our ever-changing material world. I have always been drawn to things expressive of use, wear, history. This faded, blurred, worn and even broken quality has a lushness I appreciate on a visceral level. It binds me to my humanness. It’s brushstrokes are irregular and painterly; it’s voice cracked and breathless. It makes me appreciate my “aliveness” within it’s decay.