Sunday, November 21, 2010
Thursday, October 14, 2010
by Susi Franco copyright 2010
She climbed out of
The chambered Nautilus of her needing
Reaching one pitifully thin arm
Up
Around the encyclopedia salesman's neck
In a moment of desperate bravado
Cellophaning, She wrapped herself around him
Murmuring "Dance with me...".
Woodenly, he allowed her
To momentarily steer him around the floor
To the waltz heard only in her head.
Poignant, he pitied her
But wooden he remained
Until shame overtook her
And she released him.
A moment of heavy silence
Fell like a dusty purple theater curtain;
She suddenly wept, sobbing from bitter humiliation,
The sole architect of her rejection.
He backed up out of
The Hoover vacuum of her embrace.
There was nowhere to go but away
And the knife edge of her pain
Wanted leaving.
He bowed his head to her
An archaic gesture of deference
But still he left-
Sparkly red party dress
Worn in the happy presumption of
Celebratory togetherness
Which like summer morning fog
He was only selling encyclopediae.
Sunday, November 8, 2009
About SASLA~

I drool over the cool beauty of lace-patterned Sea Sediment Jasper in it's mellow rainbow of colors; Ammolite with it's fiery ancient dazzle, Mosaic Jasper with it's improbable Picasso-esque patterns and colors, Mystic Topaz with it's hypnotic shimmer; they all just blow my socks off and I handle them as Midas might handle his treasure. I pair them with known quantities, stones most jewelry lovers can relate to: Amethyst,Citrine,Topaz,Ruby,Emerald,Opal,Sapphire now and then a small Fancy diamond or two. I get a kick out of introducing gorgeous stones many have not heard of, like Amazonite, Aventurine,Carribean Larimar,Moldavite,Spessartite,Sphene,Boulder Opals, Koroit Opals,Ametrine and more.
I find the geological formation of each stone utterly intriguing. For example, millions of years ago Ammolite was actually living creatures, sort of cretaceous little buggers. Now they glow incandescently, mysteriously in extraordinary little slices of earth history. They happen also to be almost as costly as Opals, very price-y and, there is a limited supply. Ametrine is an uncommon formation wherein Amethyst and Citrine occur in the same crystal rock formation; the resulting polished and cut stone is spectacularly colored deep purple on one end that gradually fades & slips into a golden yellow on the other, just incredible~
Then there's the silver. God, I love the alchemy of silver and making it obey my command; hammering, twisting,wrapping,soldering,melting and re-shaping; simply luscious stuff, yummy to work with if sometimes tempermental.
When I finish a piece, it is a time for reflection, for considering the metaphysical properties of the stones I used and how they complement each other as well as the aesthetic of the piece. I wonder how the buyer will feel wearing it; if she'll feel as pretty and special as I mean each piece to be.
I am very mindful of the properties of each stone as I work. I reccomend to buyers certain stones for certain issues they may have in their lives.For example, Ammolite is known to help with personal protection and insight; great for law enforcement or emergency personnel, soldiers and others whose work puts them at phsycial risk; it is also well known to enhance insight and even to assist childbirth.
Coral is known to help with diplomacy,peace and intuition. ( I use only farmed coral,natural Coral is an endangered species so DON'T BUY IT UNLESS IT'S FARMED !)
Turquoise is known to be an amazing overall healer, fosters insight and serenity, fights infections and opens the Chakra for love and spirituality.
There are amazingly specific uses for each stone and buyers should choose thier jewelry not just for the color or design but mostly for the properties each stone possesses and use them to your best advantage, making your life more of what you wish it to be.
Well, I have a bench full of sparkling darlings waiting on me to give them a new life, a new shape, something to delight and assist their new owner.
My line, Sasla, is named for my great-grandfather's great grandfather, Valentin Sasla Pfost, can be purchased using PayPal or any credit card ( securely, of course). Write me at Circe2001@aol.com for details, extra photos and pricing.
Sunday, February 8, 2009
Great Fakes and Forgeries





NOTE- The ptg above this line is the REAL Gaugin; the "forgery" is the one at the top of the page in a frame.
Long time no blog ! I've been a VERY bad blogger, just too frenzied with painting for an opening, then two big shows AND managing two websites; somehow Life gets in the way of my blogging. sigh~
It's one of my New Year's Resolution to be much more attentive to my blog, so be sure to come back and give me a shot at redeeming myself. :)
I thought it might be fun to show you how a painting gets made, or at least, part of my personal work process. For seven years now, I've been doing a big show titled "Great Fakes and Forgeries" at the famed Spring Bull Gallery in Newport, artist-owned and operated, very classy place.
The objective of the show is to invite artists to copy the Great Masters, either as a dead-on look-alike, or a dead-on look alike with clever little twists. One year a guy did one of Van Gogh's many self-portraits, but added a backwards baseball cap and earring to Vincent. The work was so astonishingly accurate that at first you thought maybe it was actually an undiscovered Van Gogh ! ( okay, maybe for only 20 seconds or so, but you get what I mean. :)
The show is great fun and annually draws a monster crowd from all over New England; it is quite a tradition to attend it each year. Some of the artists start a year in advance working on their "masterpiece". Mine took only two months, but here's how I did it.
Deciding what Master to "do" is always the biggest issue for me. I usually do Van Gogh or Klimt and have good success with them, but wanted to stretch myself a bit more this year. After several days researching online and at the library, I settled on Gaugin. I agonized over which painting of his to attempt; I found five I felt I could do a decent job with, then began narrowing it down to the final one.
I read as much as I could find about Gaugin; reseraching the artist is an absolute imperative to understanding their work. I learned lots I didn't know and that helps inform my work.
I began with a red underpaint; I am very fond of the cadmium reds. I use an acrylic underpaint because it acts as a siccative ( drying agent) for the oils, and does so very effectively. Use of an underpaint helps the work take shape so much more quickly, and I never get any bouts of EWCS ( Empty White Canvas Syndome).
Not much for pencil sketching, I usually employ a thinned dark color, like burnt umber and "sketch" with the brush directly onto canvas.
While that's still damp, I begin to add in my masses and shadows and start working up the values. I let that dry a bit and then begin adding the colors for each object in the work. At the very end of the painting, I add the highlights.
It was a hoot framing this painting.
I was so sure I had a 16"x20" frame in my studio that I could use for this show, that I didn't go check it out. Bad artist gets the dunce cap. The frame I was counting on had alot of "show wear" and dings, and the corner joints had separated a bit, not suitable for use as it was.
I had to fill cracks, sand, paint it with gold paint, then a triple-clear coat after the gold dried. I couldn't get the filled-in cracks to smooth out the way I wanted, even using a Dremel craft sander. Exasperated & determined not to spend amy more $$, I had a brainstorm: I'd use some fancy heavy rag content art paper I'd bought and stashed two years ago, sort of decoupage it over the ugly corner joints. The paper was a gorgeous black and gold marble. It came in large 8" squares, which I cut diagonally into triangles. I saturated each triangle with archival bookbinder's glue, and using a palette knife tip, worked each triangle over & around the corners. I hurried the drying time with a hair dryer.
After putting my label on the back, I noticed the frame was just the teeniest bit tacky, so had the genius idea to lean it close to my gas stove fireplace.
Of course, I went in the bathroom to get my face on, talking to Casey ( a little Brussels Griffon dog I'm fostering) as I dressed.
Maybe 5 minutes into it I smelled wood burning. I realized what it was and did a cartoon-character skid into the living room and snatched the ( very hot) frame away from the stove. To my amazement, it hadn't actually burned at all, but the paint was raised into an ornate sort of Art Nouveau design where the heat had made it blister, in a perfectly straight line across the bottom of the frame. I liked it so much that I decided to do the top edge, too, so I let it "simmer" for just a couple minutes.
( this is SO not a job for the faint of heart !)
Once again, the design raised up in heavy bas relief along the upper edge. The frame that had started out a beat up and ugly duckling had now been transformed into an elegant swan befitting my painting. Laughing so hard I had tears, off to the gallery I went. Of course, they admired my "unusual" frame ~~~~
Here are pics for you, of how I did the Gaugin. The painting I chose is titled "Two Tahitian Women On The Beach". My "forgery" is titled "Two Tahitian Women With Tunes", amd you'll soon see why. :):):):)
If you're in or around Newport for the month of February, do stop by Spring Bull on Bellevue Ave to check out my Great Fake and the unorthodox framing I did for it.
'Til next time, stay open, think creatively.~
Warmly, Susi
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Rainy Days and Mondays---
This little work is part of an 8 painting series I did titled " Rainy Days and Mondays". I had in mind the Mammas and the Pappas, their song. Although the song talks about the melancholy of rain and that dreaded first day of the week, I really liked the lovely melody and the harmonies, and sort of transposed that into the colors I chose. I used a knife and an impasto gel which allowed me to achieve a great deal of texture.
I also employ special iridescent and duochromtaic oils, very price-y but worth the incredible mineral effect they give. If you change positions while viewing the work, the color changes also, from blue to blue-green, or from violet to pink, adds just an amazing dimension to the work.
I wanted to show that rainy days aren't always cold and bleak and grey, that there can be warmth in the rain, that the pit-pat-pit of rain drops is pure music, and inclement weather is beautifully atmospheric, lends to contemplation and serenity.
I always promised myself I'd never become one of those artists that paint the samed durned thing over and over, that I wouldn't get caught up in that obsession. For me and my world, there are just too many wonderful things to paint, to attempt, to prevent ever getting tightly focused onto one subject only.
There are those who'd say painting one subject repeatdely makes you excellent at it. I grasp that concept and even agree, but it just doesn't work for me too often. I'll do series of things, maybe 5 or 6, rarely more than that, and then I'm done with it, onto the next idea, the next challenge.
I think I have Artists's ADD. :):):) .
This 6"x6" work is done on a Gallery-Wrap canvas, a satisfying two inches deep. The sides are painted as well, extending the images around the sides, meaning no framing needed.
This work is 65.00 and may be purchased by emailing Circe2001@aol.com.
I check my mail frequently and will process your secure CC or PayPal transaction asap. Shipping ( in USA) will be 9.95. International buyers email me with postal code for a shipping quote.
Thanks for taking time to look, and hoping you can enjoy some rainy days of your own !!
"The next time it begins to rain, try to forget what your Mother told you about "catching your death of cold", lie down on your belly, nestlke your chin in the grass and get a frog's-eye view of how raindrops fall....raindrops make the blades of grass bend down, then the blade pops back up again....the sight of hundreds of blades of grass bowing down and poppin gup like piano keys strikes me as one of the merriest sights in the world..." -Malcolm Margolin, The Earth Manual-1985
Friday, September 5, 2008
Figuring It All Out....

Tuesday, September 2, 2008
URGENT ARTIST RIGHTS ISSUE

Friday, August 15, 2008

Seneca The Younger said "All Art is but imitation of Nature". Well, at first blush that kinda teed me off when I read it, but then I re-considered. Are we not imitating Nature in the strictest sense, particularly when we create ?
In Nature, there are seasons necessary to creating,to bringing something new into the world. The crops lie fallow and dormant in winter; Spring renews growth, life shoots through the soil, upwards toward the sun; summer brings blossoms and then Fall, the Harvest. The creative process is very similar; we process our ideas and allow them to germinate ( Spring); we allow our ideas to manifest and burst forth, whether on canvas, paper or bronze, ( Summer); we complete the work and once again return to thought for inspiration ( Fall) and the finished work is sold or stored ( Winter).
Our relationships tend to have seasons also. The rush of new love, the deepening of understanding & intimacy, the getting-comfortable-with-each-other, and sometimes, sadly, the end of the relationship either through death or severing of ties. If we could but learn to see these changes in relationships as seasons which are natural as Nature herself, perhaps we could also develop more respect for the weight of the process involved in being a significant other in someone else's life; perhaps then we could all learn to make better ( more relationship-organic) decisions, behave more humanely and lovingly with each other.
Just a thought.
This $65.00 small work ( 6"x6") can be purchased through www.FineArtBySusiFranco.com, or by emailing me directly. I check my emails daily, so you will get a prompt response. Thank you for taking time to share part of your day with me.
Warmly, Susi
Thursday, August 14, 2008
Oscar Wilde and Matters of Art---

...He said "Life has been your Art; you have set yourself to music. Your days are your sonnets".
I especially appreciate Mr. Wilde's observation because it mirrors my own belief that we make our lives a work of art...or not.Every thing you do, every decision you make, small and large, grand or infinitesimal, adds to the tapestry you're creating. I know from my own well-worn path, however, that it is easy to get lost in the quest and lose sight of the value of the journey.
It is important to have life goals, to have an attainable mission for not only each day, but for the long haul. When the quest becomes the sole motivator in your life, though, you are losing yourself incrementally; you are discarding the genuine articles that comprise the landscape of your life.
Sometimes it's about staying grounded, having an anchor that keeps you focused not just on the horizon, but on what's truly precious in your life. For some that may be your significant other or family; for many it may be your work. Sometimes it's as simple as picking up a tomato or a plum.
No, it really doesn't have to be an actual tomato or plum, but just in case you need one to help you achieve feet-planted-in-the-fully-present, here is one I recently painted. At the summer shows, I was amazed at how fast these little fruit and veggie studies got snapped up, almost as fast as I could paint them.
I don't think that was a coincidence. I get the sense people are working at trying to re-connect with the earth, with that which gives balance to the rush-rush-hurry-go of thier frenetic daily hustle. Little paintings like this, product of earth's yield and seasonal movement, seem to be reassuring, engaging because they are so familiar, yet seen in perhaps a novel way that illuminates new thought, renewed appreciation.
"There is not a single work of Art that has not in the end added to the inner freedom of each person that has known and loved it". ( Albert Camus)
I'd like to think that maybe these small works may have an aspect of precious-ness for you; allow you to focus, at least momentarily, on something fully connected to life energy, full of promise and the hope of renewal.
As always, you may purchase this and many others of my work at www.FineArtBySusiFranco.com.
all images and text copyrighted-Susi Franco 2008
Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Thoughts are things; they have a definite energy, a definite force all thier own. Most people reject this concept at first, but think of it this way: you may not know how a microwave works, but it does work and very effectively ! It doesn't require your understanding to do it's work. Thoughts have the same energy, the same capacity for functioning very efficiently, whether you understand their process or not.
The job will come to you, assuming you have kept positive thoughts, not allowed any "NO messages" or self-sabotage to creep in and keep you from right effort, and that you have consistently maintained positive energy in your thoughts on this goal.
Thursday, April 26, 2007
Look Again
I love that a locale that we have perhaps seen ( and overlooked) thousands of times before can suddenly become compelling, viewed from another perspective. The meditation for this painting is "The weed you curse today may tomorrow be a lilly" ( -anon). I have learned it is important to be open to the opportunity to see something or someone in a new way; it can become truly serendipitous. This oil on canvas is 11"x14" and has alot of knife texture built up in the trees. It also features luminescent oils, which have a deep, color-shifting pleasing mineral sort of quality. This work may be purchased at www.FineArtBySusiFranco.com. all work copyrighted 2001-2008 Susi Franco.
Sunday, April 15, 2007
Just seeing those majestic flowers is awe-inspiring, and every year no matter what pain or suffering or disappointment we may have endured, those magical lillies awaken and stir the poet within. This little 6"x6" oil on canvas is my humble homage to the lilly pond that blossoms only once a year. :) I have therefore titled it that, "Only Once A Year" . The meditation for this work is somewhat more lengthy than usual, but most apt....
"And I, who neared the the goal of all my nature, felt my soul at the climax of it's yearning, suddenly as it ought, grow calm with rapture". ( -Dante, The Divine Comedy)
I think too often, in the busyness of everyday living, we lose touch completely with the natural world. Man's spiritual growth and even his survival is intimately interwoven with Nature and to forget that invites peril & catastrophe to our species. The time has come in our world for us to stop the madness, take a breath, return to Nature and all Her healing; the world is too much with us all. I like to think my little lilly painting may be a small step in the right direction. You may go to www.FineArtBySusiFranco.com to purchase this work. All work here copyrighted 2001-2008 Susi Franco.
Friday, April 13, 2007
This little 5"x7" oil on panel is titled "Dreams Grow Here" and features heavy impasto knife texture in the buttery foreground flowers.
I like to think it leads you in, lets you breathe the sweetness of the place. :) The meditation for this work is: "Every exit is an entry somewhere else"- Tom Stoppard
We often think when something has ended in our lives that Life itself must also stop or halt. That mindset utterly obliterates every possibility that is out there waiting for you to discover it.
It is my hope this little painting may remind you to consider the infinite"what-if's" of tomorrow.
As with all my work, this can be purchased securely through www.FineArtBySusiFranco.com. Questions ?...you can write me at Circe2001@aol.com , I'll answer promptly.
Copyright 2001-2008 Susi Franco, all images
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
I know every inch of the horizon and cherish it. When I am troubled or spirit-weary, a walk by the ocean is always my best medicine. I take reference photos often and use them in my studio, and this painting was born from one of those. It is a 6"x6" oil and is titled "Narragansett Saturday"....I think I have captured the clouds and waves well, the angular rocks jutting out low into the water. This work features a bit of impasto done with knife; I very much like using that effect to suggest the foam on waves. I hope it gives you a moment of thought, of peace, a desire to see "My" Narragansett. :) The meditation for this work is:
"Trust to that prompting within you"-Ralph Waldo Emerson.
I didn't think of myself as a plein aire painter til I obeyed the urge to go to the sea wall and paint; now I derive great joy from it, something I was convinced I wouldn't like. It is important for us to listen to that inner voice...most of the time it is instructing us to utilize tools which are organic to our happiness. Any good weather weekend you'll now find me at the beach, easel up and work under way; it is a source of deep satisfaction.
Wednesday, April 4, 2007
Daily Painting-Prairie Palace
It is 8"x10", with sides painted so framing is unnecessary. It features heavy texture done with palette knife and the color just sparkles. You may purchase it securely at www.FineArtBySusiFranco.com.
Sunday, March 18, 2007
It's All DownHill From Here-A Painting A Day
I found I had alot of paint left at the end of the day, so I used what was on my palette to create this brilliantly hued little work that just sings with color and rich texture. It is heavy impasto, lots and lots of built up layers, all done with knife. I find there are techniques I can get from a knife that just can't be delivered with a brush, LOVE that !
This one is considerably looser, much less "structured" than the other works posted here. I enjoy working this way now and then, it is a sort of purge.
This is a 6"x6" oil, sides painted ( as with most all my work) so you needn't frame it. ( unless you feel some deep conviction about framing, that is. :) This work would be such a lovely spot of color on a bookshelf, your office cubicle, on an etagere or mantel, anywhere you want some color to live.
You may purchase it securely through www.FineArtBySusiFranco.com.
Thanks for taking a look, there is more to come~
copyright Susi Franco 2008
Saturday, March 17, 2007
Wishing Tree-Landscape Meditation
The Zen of Italy-heavy impasto, brilliant color
This 11"x14" oil is very heavily impasto'd and has tons of palette knife texture; it was done entirely with knife. Although the original is SOLD, you can purchase a hand-enhanced giclee at www.FineArtBySusiFRanco.com. Thanks for looking~
The Road Home-Ethereal Light and Familiar Feelings
The meditation for this 11"x14" work is " The beginning is always today" (-Mary Wollstonecraft). The times I get hung up in a problem or situation are almost always related to my not being fully present in the moment, worrying about some far off thing not here yet; this painting is a reminder to be grounded in the now, that each new day is an opportunity to start again.
This has alot of knife work, particularly the trees, and features a soft lavender sky; it welcomes the viewer in, maybe reminds you of your own road home. :) This work may be purchased securely at www.FineArtBySusiFranco.com. Enjoy!
Don't forget to check out my book at www.Amazon.com, "Angels With Stethoscopes", and thanks for taking time to look.~ :)
all images copyright protected-2001-2007