Sunday, June 30, 2013

In A Misty Field by Angela Sullivan

In A Misty Field by Angela Sullivan
I could have been a city horse but no I was one of those lucky ones. I was born on a small farm in the deep south. My mom was a race horse and dad...well he just plowed the fields. But we were happy back then and now that I am all grown up I hope I can teach my offspring the same values that my parents taught me. Things about never spit into the wind and always let ladies go first. Oh yes and that sunshine is Gods way of saying I love you...5x7 oil on canvas panel.
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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Steady Girl by Angela Sullivan

Steady Girl by Angela Sullivan
That cowboy was here again today...Can you believe that he keeps saying the funniest things. He squats
down and grabs me well....you know where...says something about milk and I think what he said is Steady Girl and gave me a squeeze. I tell you the truth I kicked him to next Sunday. Milk?  He left here headed to walmart to buy milk. Steady Girl....I bet it will be a month of Sunday's before he says that to me again. 7x5 oil on canvas panel
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Dueling Cherries by Angela Sullivan

Dueling Cherries by Angela Sullivan
We started out just a few cherries but then I bumped into this suspicous looking dude and I knew right off that I just didn't take a liking to him. You see.... He just looked at me with that crooked grin. That is when at that very nmoment that I challenged him to a fight...A duel as a matter of fact. Keep watching I will win this one. 5x7 oil on canvas panel.
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Thursday, June 27, 2013

Crackin The Whip by Angela Sullivan

Crackin The Whip by Angela Sullivan
A few years ago while living in Wyoming We got behind a cattle drive while driving down a country road.
It was indeed one of the most amazing things I have ever seen.7x5 oil on canvas panel.
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Gallery

Off to the Niada Conference!!

Off to the Niada conference!   Hope to see you there!!   This is what I'm bringing for the show and sale....and some Bone Faeries too.  :)






http://www.niada.org/index2.html

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Powell Harbor by Angela Sullivan

Powell Harbor by Angela Sullivan
While camping at Lake Guntersville Alabama we passed this little lighthouse on the river. My daughter Julie was with me and I just so happened to have my Plein Aire setup in the car. I told her I just had to paint this so off we go down a tiny trail of a road. We drive up and Julie jumped out of the car to ask if it was ok to set up there to paint. It was hot and the air was still but I had so much fun. Might I say she was a little more tan when we left. Great fun....
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Frog In The Kitchen by Angela Sullivan

Frog In The Kitchen by Angela Sullivan
I don't know why I am here. I was outside in the garden when I noticed that someone had left the door open. I hopped as fast as I could and reached the front door. Unnoticed I jumped as fast as I could until I was in the kitchen. On the counter was this set of stacked bowls. I leaped up on the table and found my place. I go undetected even now. As people pass by they just think I am some little cute whatnot not a slimy green toad.
6x6 oil on canvas panel.
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Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Down A Secluded Path by Angela Sullivan

                                                  Down A Secluded Path by Angela Sullivan
7x5 oil on canvas panel
I wanted to paint thick and bold again today. As I painted this
 I could only imagine the quietness of this place.
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Monday, June 24, 2013

Sliced Peaches by Angela Sullivan

Sliced Peaches by Angela Sullivan
Another from the pictures of my roses in that Sliced Peach Can. I have also
had this delicate table cloth for years. I bought it in New York six years ago. I knew one day
that it would come in handy for something.
12x12 oil on gallery wrapped canvas.
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Sunday, June 23, 2013

Cut Up by Angela Sullivan

  
Cut Up by Angela Sullivan
I know I know every single day I say how much I enjoyed painting something. Yesterday
I was in my yard and my roses were blooming. I couldn't resist. I went straight into the house, got
the scissors and cut some nice blooms. I was taking pictures of the roses in an empty sliced peach can
when my grand daughter put the scissors against the can and said "Take a picture of this". When I looked at the pictures I just couldn't help but paint it. I really like this one. It has light and dark with which I always seem to struggle. 
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6x6 oil on gallery wrapped canvas.

Saturday, June 22, 2013

A Spray of Color by Angela Sullivan

A Spray of Color by Angela Sullivan
Just a pitcher of flowers you may say. The truth is that is what we started out as a dark and
forboding piece of canvas with nothing but blue and a little purple here and there. Then sprinkles of color
started showing up and flowers formed and as an after thought the pear. Oh yea and who could forget those blue flowers on the pitcher. What I am trying to say is when all is said and done what could be nicer than just a little Spray of Color. It alone changes the world.
20x10 oil on gallery wrapped canvas
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Friday, June 21, 2013

My Grandfathers Guitar by Angela Sullivan

My Grandfathers Guitar by Angela Sullivan
I visit him...The old man. I watch as he gingerly rises from his seat and slowly disappears down the hall.
In moments he returns with an old guitar. Even tho it was in almost perfect condition I could tell it was old. I looked up with surprise as he reached his weathered hands out to me as if he wanted me to take it. I reach out and feel the slick smoothness of the wood. A smile sweeps across his face as he says to me...Baby girl she is yours now. I smile back and realize that this is special. I know that the guitar is one of the most valuable gifts I have ever received. The most special gift  My Grandfathers Guitar. 
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2013 Visible Ink Staged Reading Video

The Visible Ink program at Sloan-Kettering has posted the video from its 2013 staged reading. Here is a link to my piece, "The Guru in the Elevator," being performed by two Broadway actors who I was thrilled hit the sentiment on the head.

Please take the time to watch the others as well. Each showcased piece offers a very unique perspective. If you watch just one other, Mark Jason Williams's play "Recovery - Scene 2 - Bob and Amy" is incredibly moving. 

Enjoy!


Thursday, June 20, 2013

Sitting on The Edge by Angela Sullivan

Sitting on The Edge by Angela Sullian
 We started out among a whole bunch of cherries on the produce isle at Walmart. Thrown
in among the rest we did not seem special at all. Then she walked by with that little plastic bag. She reached down among the dark rich red cherries and picked a handful of us up. Without thought she plopped a few in her mouth and as she savored the rich thick sweetness we shook in our boots. Yes sir re! We scrambled as fast as we could to the bottom of the bag. Now at home on the kitchen table we are trying to decide if we should jump as we find ourselves Sitting Here on the edge wondering whatwill be next.
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Wednesday, June 19, 2013

I Need Love by Angela Sullivan

I Need Love by Angela Sullivan

Just a little stuffed bear you say. Well you are wrong. I am special. Today I was just minding my own business sitting on the shelf where she put me when she walked by and mindlessly reached for me. I could feel myself being lifted into the air and then the art studio. Why? I thought to myself am I going there? She reached down and picked up a tufted fancy place mat and arranged it just right before sitting me on it with a box for a pedestal. She squinted and looked and really measured me up. In the end well.... You can see what I looked like. Every time she paints me I always look different. Why oh why can't she get it right? Do I look fat in this? I thought so. Well at least she painted me unlike that place mat I mentioned it ended up being left out altogether. I guess I am the lucky one.
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In Search of a Raft


Ducking out in the rain with Craig for some 
Thai food to celebrate his birthday between
a very hard-to-swallow doc appointment and
an always-enjoyably claustrophobic MRI. 

June doesn’t seem to be my month this year. Really 2013 in general hasn’t been treating me that well in terms of the whole cancer thang. Everything else in life has been wonderful, but the lymphoma has really been rearing its head far too much. Too many hospitalizations. Too many transfusions. Too many side effects. Too much pain. Too many appointments. Things have not been stable for over six months now, and the up and down is tough. I know I can’t stop the waves and I’m doing my best to ride them instead, but it is getting exhausting. I wish someone would throw me a freakin’ raft I could float on for a while.

Yes, it is confirmed that all of the pain and the fatigue I was having were indicative of cancer growth. I had a PET/CT Scan done of my full body and an MRI to take a close look at my pelvis and there is progression in old spots and new spots have developed. We have to give up on yet another treatment after just two cycles. Goodbye Gemzar. Hello VBM.

VBM is a combination of Vinblastine, Bleomycin, and Methotrexate. I have had both B and V in my frontline ABVD treatment and I’ve also had V as a single-agent therapy when trying to get into remission for my allo transplant. I have never had Methotrexate used as a chemotherapy agent. This is a pretty rough, intense regimen but one that is proven to work. Apparently it is very old school, something that was used before ABVD came to the forefront of Hodgkin Lymphoma therapy and kind of got forgotten about, though it had very good results.

My scans look pretty horrendous and my pain has been equally so. To get me out of this, we started up already with the new treatment. I had my first infusion on Monday after having my PET/CT Scan that morning. Craig had taken me in for an MRI the week prior that kicked this all off. It was how he got to spend his birthday. Then this Monday was a long day in the city for my mom and me. I vow to never again take the train home after receiving treatment. It was pretty unpleasant. The train was extra cold with A/C blasting and extra jostling. I was nauseous, then had a huge onset of pain and then an uncontrollable bout of chills. I wanted to get off the train so bad and cursed the entire 98-minutes. I tried to sleep or read but nothing worked. The last 20 minutes were sheer torture. Then it was still an hour-and-15-minute drive home, though it was much more comfortable to be in my mom’s car on the heated seat. I could barely muster the strength to get from the car to my living room couch.

The post-chemo feelings continue to today. I’m very lethargic, dry-mouthed, swollen feeling. The pain is pretty well controlled, but my stomach is very unhappy and my body pretty angry. If I let myself, I feel as if I could sleep for a week straight. But, I don’t. I’m determined to still be a functioning human being even while being back on very traditional chemo. The process is bringing back familiar feelings of my past and frankly, I hate it. This is not a long-term treatment, but again, trying something to get me out of the woods here. We have to stop this disease from growing and get rid of what’s there so that I can move onto a treatment that is more tolerable and will serve as maintenance to keep everything at bay. But right now it is just too dangerous to put me on anything that is an experimental therapy.

In the meantime, I’ve started the conversation with a transplant doctor at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Seattle about the possibilities of a future second allo transplant so that if the time comes that I do get a remission from this regimen, I know what all of my options are for what to do with that remission. That whole thing is nauseating in itself to think about.

Last week/weekend I attended a writers’ conference at Wesleyan University where I was saturated with teachings about the craft and the business. It was a wonderful distraction and a good dose of much-needed inspiration. It was exhausting commuting back and forth for long days feeling like I was, but it was worth it. I need to have life balance of some sort even if that means pushing it when I barely can.

Also of note: Sunday we celebrated my dad in honor of Father’s Day and also marked my second transplantaversary. June 16, 2011, was the day that I received my sister’s stem cells and began the growth of my new immune system – my “rebirth,” so they say.  It also would have been my friend Steve’s 38thbirthday had HL not finally taken him far too soon. I cried a lot, for him, for his wife, for me and my family and thinking about what we’ve been through. I cried also because I’m so happy to still be here two years after such a traumatic experience. I cried because I’m still not cancer free and that I know there is a lot more to endure. The memories of it all are still very raw: both the ones that make me shudder and the ones that make me smile in triumph.

No, where I am at right now is certainly not ideal. I need a lot of help. But, I am here and that is what matters. I am doing my best to make the most of it and to not allow myself to fall into the pits of discouragement.

Sick or not, I still have to get groceries, cook meals, do laundry, pay bills, keep up our house, research treatments, keep on top of my medicine and appointment schedules. Sick or not, I still want to love on my husband, play with my dog, hang out with friends, spend time with my family, go out to dinners and breakfasts and see movies and plays, listen to poetry, read, write, go for walks and get back into yoga again. Thank goodness for those things or I don’t know where I’d be.

No matter how shitty I feel, the summer weather is still beautiful, the flowers striking, my love for those in my life stronger every day. This is what I tell myself to calm myself down when the fears get to be too much. I know we are teetering on the edge of no options. I’m not sure what the plan is if the disease doesn’t respond to this traditional regimen either. In truth, I am getting scared. I can’t do much else but cling desperately to hope.

In just a couple of weeks – June 29 – I’ll get to celebrate my 31st birthday. 31. I couldn’t be more thrilled to keep reaching these milestones, though I do wish I could be running, not crawling, to them.  

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Sunday's Prize by Angela Sullivan

Sunday's Prize by Angela Sullivan
Hey You!!!  Thats right don't be looking at those roses. Slide your gaze right on down here where it belongs. Yea thats right. We are cherry. We can't be overlooked or we get very upset. In fact due to what we have seen on the news today we have ideas of what to do when we don't get the attention we deserve.
We will stomp and shout and protest! You don't want to make us destroy those beautiful roses now do you? Ok that is better.....Pretty ain't we? Glad ya stopped by.
24x18 oil on gallery wrapped canvas
No longer available
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Monday, June 17, 2013

Little Blossoms by Angela Sullivan

Little Blossoms by Angela Sullivan
Lately I have been thinking that I miss writing those funny little stories that I used to post with each
painting soooooo....... 
We started out on a bush in the sun. there we were one day just minding our own business when one by one we were gently removed from the mother bush. Not knowing our fate we all said our prayers of course. What else could we do? We were all tenderly placed in a basket and carried inside far beyond the reach of the suns warm rays. Afraid we shivered as one by one we were removed from the basket. Tender hands held us as each of us were made to feel like the only rose in the whole wide world. Lovingly we were placed in this cup but not just any cup. The cup was special also. It was held in the  feeble hands of a grandmother. A grandmother who is now only a memory. As this granddaughter looks at us now she remembers and smiles and is oh so pleased. Happy we are just knowing that today we made someone smile. Today a day that started out like any other but this day is different this day ended in happiness.
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Sunday, June 16, 2013

My New Website

My New Website Visit Me Please!  www.asullivanart.com

Just wanted you to have a chance to visit my new website. Of course still working on it but then again do you ever get finished. I think not.

Saturday, June 15, 2013

The Big Apple b Angela Sullivan


The Big Apple by Angela Sullivan
The third painting in a series for my daughter. I really liked the challenge of painting these
and making the subtle changes that make them art. 
8x8oil on canvas panel.

Friday, June 14, 2013

Vacation Cup by Angela Sullivan

 
 Vacation Cup by Angela Sullivan
Another cup in the series for my daughter. She loves them by the way.
8x8 oil on canvas panel.

Thursday, June 13, 2013

Sail Away by Angela Sullivan


 Sail Away by Angela Sullivan
As an artist it is our decision when we choose to change the perspective or color or to add or 
leave something out. My daughter just bought a new home and wants me to paint her a series of 
coffee cups from places she has been. She is retiring from the Marines and will be close to me for the 
first time in a long long time.
8x8 oil on canvas panel. Just thought  would share my inspiration.

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Something For Sale by Angela Sullivan

Something For Sale by Angela Sullivan
Contact me to purchase
$50
6x6 canvas panel
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Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Two Bad Boys by Angela Sullivan

 Two Bad Boys by Angela Sullivan
I just had the urge to paint some farm animals.
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A Complicated Relationship


Hope you enjoy reading my latest piece for The Huffington Post's Generation Why Series: "A Complicated Relationship." This essay personifies the cancer within me and focuses on the diseased relationship I have with this toxic lover that's got a stranglehold on me - the stuff of daytime television drama.

If it sounds familiar it's because it's born from a blog entry I wrote back in 2011, when recently out of my allogeneic stem cell transplant and learning what it was like to be in recovery, thinking that my cancer relationship was finally over. With this reworked piece, I honed in on our complicated relationship status and reworked it to focus on the continued stresses my lover brings.

As always, if you like it, please share it on your Facebook pages, "Like" it, Tweet it, comment here or on the Huffington Post page itself. I'd love to hear your thoughts! Thanks for reading.




Monday, June 10, 2013

Springtime Arrangement by Angela Sullivan

Springtime Arrangement by Angela Sullivan
16x20 oil on gallery wrapped canvas 
All of my followers know that my comfort zone is small but I 
wanted to paint something larger. Today was the day.
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Sunday, June 9, 2013

On A Cherry Tablecloth by Angela Sullivan

On A Cherry Tablecloth by Angela Sullivan
6x6 oil on canvas panel
Two cherries with stems entwined. I really  struggled with the shadows but
finally was ok with them.
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Saturday, June 8, 2013

On The Other Side of The Fence by Angela Sullivan

On The Other Side of The Fence by Angela Sullivan
6x6 oil on canvas panel
You all know that I love painting cows and I could not resist this one.
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JL

Friday, June 7, 2013

Cha Cha Hot by Angela Sullivan

Cha Cha Hot by Angela Sullivan
I love the deep red of peppers.That iswhy I had to paint them.
6x6 oil on gallery wrapped canvas.
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Thursday, June 6, 2013

Baby Sitting by Angela Sullivan

Baby Sitting by Angela Sullivan
Mom wanted me to babysit once again. At first I screamed Nooooooo! but then I thought about how tired she has looked lately. My little sister looked up to me and smiled. I decided I would try it just one more time. I know I will just give her all the milk and cookies that she could possibly want and then some candy. Then she will have to be good right?
10x10 oil on gallery wrapped canvas

I had so much fun painting this. I was thinking about painting and how long I wondered when I would ever see my style as they call it. I think every artist must start out painting like someone else until one day you paint something that is truly yours. Today is one of those days. 

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

My Friends and I by Angela Sullivan


My Friends and I.
 I love Teddy Bears. I have a few of them and occasionally move them from place to place in my house. I cringe when my grandchildren grabs one of them to play with. These are some of them from my collection. A little animated of course. 10x10 oil on gallery wrapped canvas.












I do not have a light box. Of course I want one and have set up several arrangements at different times but really I do need a real one. This is a glimpse of the make shift one I used for this painting. Pretty bad huh?

Place of Rest by Angela Sullivan

Place of Rest by Angela Sullivan
Pillows, pillows, pillows, isn't that what that is all about?
Comfort a place of rest....Wanting to go there right now.
5x7 oil on canvas panel. 
Painted for a challenge at DPW
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Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Best Buddies by Angela Sullivan

Best Buddies by Angela Sullivan
A couple of boats ready to go out for the catch of the day.
14x11 oil on gallery wrapped canvas
                                                                             SOLD

Blue and Green by Angela Sullivan

Blue and Green
just wanted to paint this for the DPW challenge. Used a knife and just went for it. It is what it is. Thanks for looking 5x7 oil on canvas panel. 
SOLD

Pushing Through Like I Said I Would

A throwback photo.

Sometimes I am embarrassed by how I reacted to my initial diagnosis, shocked at how immature and naive I was – invincible! cancer! fighter! At other times, I’m so jealous of who that 26-year-old was. I feel that about other aspects of my life, too, not just dealing with my disease. As time passes and as I age, more difficult things happen, which can leave me guarded, jaded and tired at times.

I feel like things used to be so much simpler, though they probably weren’t, they were just different. But what I can guarantee is that I did not know as much and now that helps or hurts me depending on the situation.

I’ve never been one to say: “ignorance is bliss.” I’m curious, an information gatherer and problem solver almost to a fault. I want to figure everything out and know about not just everything that is happening in my world, but in the greater world around me. I think that’s why I love books and good news coverage and documentaries so much, because these are things that are really happening even if we as people pretend they aren’t.

But right now, in this moment, I know too much. I know that the tremendous pain I’ve been in over the past four days means lymphoma is growing. It is very intense and very concentrated right in my hips and pelvis and sacrum, exactly where it always flares up. It’s at times like this when maybe ignorance would be bliss, and I could just pretend that it’s a fluke – too much squatting when planting our little herb garden.

My doctors and I don’t even need to directly speak it: they know I know and I know they know what’s going on. No one has said: “It’s cancer in your bones that is causing you this pain” just like no one says the ground is wet because it is raining. Why state the obvious, especially when we’re all getting a little tired of acknowledging it?

I’ve been prescribed a new cocktail of pain meds that got me out of the blinding, seething pain that was Sunday and Monday and into the uncomfortable, woozy, nauseating – though pain-free – high that has been last night and today. Tomorrow we will stick with the plan of a higher dose of Gemzar and the addition of the chemotherapy drug, Navelbine. We’ve got to stop the growth as the pain is intolerable.

When I was first diagnosed, I went at this so simplistically. It was a challenge that I would conquer. I knew it wouldn’t be easy, but I never thought it would be impossible. Now, I’m looking back at 26-year-old Karin for some of that old positivity and confidence.

In my post from May 8, 2009, entitled “Diagnosis,” I wrote:
"So it's confirmed. I have been diagnosed with Hodgkin's Lymphoma, a cancer of the immune system.  
I know I'll always remember where I was when the twin towers were hit. In my dorm room at UNH in between classes as our floor mates all started piling into our room to watch the news coverage huddled together. 
 Now I'll always remember where I was when I got this news: with three cocker spaniels, a hot dog dog, a giant poodle, a black and a chocolate lab, two great danes, a furry, white mutt and Sammy at the Granby dog park. With a slobbery baseball in my hand and Sammy wagging her tail at my feet for me to throw it, I got the call from the oncologist. An odd place to receive a life-changing phone call, but the whole thing has been so surreal that it was almost fitting.  I'm feeling better having a diagnosis and am ready to take on this challenge. I'm looking forward to getting better no matter what it takes. My oncologist is "very optimistic" and assures me that the chemotherapy is very effective and that I'm young and strong and will do fine.  A couple more tests scheduled next week then Wednesday is the big "plan of attack" talk with the doc, me and Craig and the first chemo treatment by the end of the week. Feeling overwhelmed by the outpouring of support from so many people, relieved to know what's going on in my body and that there's a treatment, and anxious to zap these cancer cells out of my system.  I will beat this. It's just a matter of pushing through the tough times."

That last statement was at the time so simple and is now so profound to me. I had absolutely no idea what I was in for. My wildest imagination couldn’t have fathomed what “tough times” would mean. But whatever was to come at me, I knew that I just had to push through it, like how we all have to put our pants on one leg at a time. Simple as that.

I guess none of us ever know what we’re in for and because of that, there’s not much we can do but promise ourselves that we’ll work through the tough times because those are part of this good life, too. 

Monday, June 3, 2013

Snow Day by Angela Sullivan

Snow Day by Angela Sullivan
A day of snow leaves the country side splotched with white. I really wanted to paint the road. 
I will be trying some other roads soon I hope.
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Sunday, June 2, 2013

A Bucket Full Of Gold by Angela Sullivan

A Bucket Full Of Gold by Angela Sullivan
A bucket of yellow flowers is just a little more than I could resist. I just had to paint it. And
then I couldn't resist adding the red berries.
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6x6 oil on gallery wrapped canvas