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A little sketching, a little wine

I went  to see some friends this afternoon, and to paint, with watercolors. I made a mess of things. The wine didn’t have anything to do with it, I swear. Out of frustration I pulled out my iPad and made this drawing. Than I gave a drawing lesson to a cat. No, really I did. See the photos below the drawing.

A little sketching, a little wine (Michael Liebhaber, digital on iPad, 8x10in, 2013)
A little sketching, a little wine (Michael Liebhaber, digital on iPad, 8x10in, 2013)

Giving a Drawing Lesson to Elvis, the Cat

I think Elvis was more interested in the stylus than in learning how to draw.

Giving Evis a drawing lesson
Giving Evis a drawing lesson

ElvisDrawing2cr443

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Thinking about Voyager 1 – Repurposing Paintings into Planetary Landscapes

The spacecraft, Voyager 1, was launched 36 years ago – and now it’s gone! It is the first human-built object to leave our solar system – a heck of a long way. Click to see the story at Voyager-NASA.

In honor of  Voyager’s milestone, I am repurposing previous paintings into a series of “planetary” digital images. Like Voyager 1, the original paintings are long gone, only the images remain.

Martian Sandstorm (Michael Liebhaber, oil on panel, 9x12in, 2007)
Martian Sandstorm (Michael Liebhaber, digital print from oil on panel, 9x12in, 2013)

 

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Spinnrädl Restaurant – A Favorite

I am putting together a show of my iPad digital sketches of old Kaiserslaltern, Germany. The Spinnrädl Restaurant is one my favorite iPad paintings, and places to eat. That’s me in front of it a couple of days ago, and my painting to the right.

The original photo that I worked from is below. It was taken by Peter Turgetto of the Kaiserslautern Media Center (which he founded) sometime in the late 1930s (best guess). Spinnrädl is one of the older buildings in Kaiserslautern, however, the building with the archway in the original photo was even older. Unfortunately, it was demoloshed to make room for a (tacky) new building.

Spinnrädl Wine Bar, Pub, and Restaurant: Schillerstraße 1;   http://www.spinnraedl.de

    

 

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That reminds me of when I was surrounded by coyotes

These sensational news headlines got me thinking…

  • Campers rescued after coyotes surround campsite
  • Animal Control Looking For Coyotes That Surrounded Woman, Dogs
  • I Shouldn’t Be Alive – Trapped and Surrounded by Coyotes

I thought… what the? I’ve been surrounded by coyotes, more than once. Really surrounded. I thought it was cool. Maybe I’m the one who’s nuts? Being surrounded by a herd of javelina and being face-to-face with a young mountain lion – those situations were a little more dicey. But my personal worst scare was when I came head to head with two very large Brahman bulls on open rangeland in Mexico. I gave them a wide berth, slowly. They were waaaay bigger than me.

Regardless, I was reminded of when I was surrounded by coyotes. I was surrounded on one occasion for the same reason many people are “surrounded”, because I had food. I was in college, and was working on a biological survey of wild rodent populations in the deserts of southern Arizona.  I normally worked with with a biology graduate student, but I was alone this dark night. Almost 200 traps were set out (the mice were caught alive, we recorded their vital statistics, then let them go). Unfortunately for the mice, the weather was unseasonably cool.  I began to check the traps at 11pm, and many of the trapped mice were in a state of torpor (a hibernation-like state to conserve energy). What to do?

Not to worry. This has happened before. When I came upon a torpid mouse, I put him or her in one of my pockets until he or she warmed up and started to wiggle around. Quite amusing. I wonder if it was the mouse equivalent of waking up and having a “Where am I? I don’t remember drinking that much” feeling. When the mice were re-animated enough, I took them back near where I picked them up and let them go.

Enter the coyotes. I heard coyotes barking earlier in the night; quite common and I thought nothing of it. But after about a half hour into my two plus hour check, I noticed that I keep hearing noises just beyond the range of my headlamp. I became a bit more vigilant. There were creatures out there that could do me in quite easily. Eventually, I began to catch glimpses of coyotes flashing by in the darkness; one, two, or was that three? They were running circles around me. I was literally surrounded!

coyotes at night
Coyotes at night, Michael Liebhaber, Digital drawing, 6.25 x 3.5″, 2012

Coyotes, not a mountain lion, I was okay, I said to myself. I’m not sure what happened, but all of a sudden it dawned on me why I was so popular with the coyotes on this night. Seeing coyotes was not a big deal, but having them stick aournd was a bit unusual. The reason they followed me – I was setting down mice that were fairly easy targets in their less-than-alert states. I was potentially serving dinner to the coyotes. Duh.

So I started keeping the mice in my pockets a little longer to make sure they were fully awake. Some became quite fiesty, epecially when there was more than one mouse in a pocket! Then I placed them near a hole or under thick brush. I felt sorry for them, but I also did not want to lose any future data. Desert mice can live quite long lives, in mouse years. I didn’t want to lose one to a coyote. My “two hour” check lasted almost until dawn. The coyotes stayed with me until the first hint of sunlight. It was quite an interesting experience; a big dog-and-mouse game.

So I was surrounded by coyotes, but I didn’t make the headlines. Sigh.