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Finding Treasure: The Art of Lisa Bryan
I was happily thrifting in Carmel the other day, when I came across a map. Normally, I am completely uninterested in maps, but this one immediately caught my eye. Delightful images were happily scattered across a very detailed map of Carmel. I had discovered a treasure map! All the places I know and love were depicted so magically, I knew I had to have it! After I purchased the map, I went online to learn more about the artist, Lisa Bryan, and discovered she is also an author. I purchased her book, Sketches of Carmel-by-the-Sea and was smitten. I wanted to learn more about the creator of these lovely pieces of art.
According to her LinkedIn page, Lisa has been painting all her life. She works primarily in oil, watercolors, and ink. She creates not only one of a kind maps of the Carmel area, but also commissioned paintings, including homes, and will even include beloved dogs in her paintings! Her art has been made into posters, calendars, cards, prints, and books. She also creates puzzles and even hand-painted hats! You can see more of her beautiful artwork yourself by visiting Lisa Bryan, or Visit Carmel, I guarantee you will be charmed, just like me!
From the Cottage of Sweets to the Tuck Box to beautiful animals, you will treasure everything Lisa Bryan creates. You can find her items in many shops in Carmel, on her website Lisa Bryan and also online including fine art venues, Amazon, and eBay. Thank you for visiting my blog! You may also enjoy Holiday Charm in Carmel by the Sea. Wishing you peace, love, joy and beautiful vistas.
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The Story of Sister Mary Barbara’s Bunnykins
With Easter rapidly approaching, rabbits are making their annual appearance. One of my all-time favorite rabbit designs is the Bunnykins line by Royal Doulton. This pattern has been around since the 1930s. Bunnykins features a bevy of bunnies cavorting and cute, colorful artwork.. Its popularity exploded worldwide after it was adopted by the British royal family’s young daughters, princesses Elizabeth and Margaret. It is still enjoyed by many today.
Bunnykins were created by Barbara Vernon Bailey, aka Sister Mary Barbara, a Catholic nun. Barbara’s father, Cuthbert Bailey, was the general manager of Doulton. Raised in the Shropshire countryside in England with her siblings, Miss Bailey began drawing and painting at a young age. Barbara loved animals and the family pets, farmyard animals, and wildlife around her, including rabbits, were her favorite subjects. Interestingly, she never received any formal training. Who could have known at this time that her whimsical watercolors would someday launch a line that would charm the world for decades?
Barbara Bailey joined a convent as a nun at just 19 years of age and began to teach at the school there. Shortly after, her father recalled that as a child, Barbara had demonstrated a clever talent for sketching animals. He asked her to illustrate a new line of nursery ware. Although a busy teacher at her convent’s school, she received permission to create the artwork as long as it remained secret and did not interfere with her teaching duties, prayer and devotions. The convent’s prioress also stipulated that neither she nor the convent receive any monetary gain from her work, despite their financial need (they could not even afford electricity!).
The beloved pieces Sister Mary Barbara created featured rabbits and other animals having fun in every day activities, such as eating ice cream, building sand castles, baking with mother bunny, having a picnic, fishing, reading bedtime stories, and other real life activities that children enjoy. The earliest pieces, created in the 1930s, were often signed “Barbara Vernon”, and these pieces are the most valuable. Bunnykins pieces also include figurines, ornaments, banks, etc. As a teacher, Sister Mary Barbara loved helping children learn and grow. She stated that her idea for placing pictures at the bottom of her bowls was to “encourage young children to finish their morning meal”.
Fun facts about Bunnykins china:
- On early pieces, religious references may be found, for example, early mother bunnies often wore blue in honor of Mary, the mother of Jesus.
- Sister Mary Barbara sketched all her bunny scenes by candlelight, either late at night or very early in the morning. It was not just a question of having no electricity. She also was honoring her commitment to the convent to complete all her duties as a nun and teacher. Perhaps this is where the phrase “burning the candle at both ends” comes from?
- Early father bunnies were based on Sister Mary Barbara’s father, often wearing round spectacles and holding a pipe, just as he did in real life.
For more infomation on Bunnykins and Royal Doulton, see Antiques, Royal Doulton, and Barbara Vernon Bailey. You may also enjoy The Charlton Standard Catalogue of Royal Doulton Bunnykins by Jean Dale and Louise Irvine.
Thank you for visiting my blog! I hope you enjoyed learning about Sister Mary Barbara and Bunnykins. You may also enjoy my other posts My Favorite Easter Baskets of 2021, and Rabbit Romance: My Love Affair With Bunnies. Wishing you peace, love, happiness, and a very happy Easter!
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Frida Kahlo Love at Las 2 Fridas
Here in Monterey County, we have been having an unusual heat wave. During the midst of this heat wave, I noticed the cutest place on Fremont Street in Monterey and it was hopping busy. I was immediately drawn to the name: Las 2 Fridas. I am a big Frida Kahlo fan. I loved her before she was as immensely popular as she is today. It started with an art history class I took as a college elective in my early 20s. In this class I learned about her tragic backstory as well as her art.
She was born in 1907 in Mexico City. Polio struck her at age six, causing her right leg to be affected. According to writer Nichola Daunton, Kahlo’s father encouraged her to gain strength through traditionally male activities such as “wrestling and boxing”. Daunton also states that “despite the conservative attitudes of the day and the disapproval of her mother, she spent much of her childhood dressed as a boy”. A trolley accident when she was 18 broke her spine and pelvis and she spent nearly a year in a full-body cast. Pain would become an issue for the rest of her life. Art would become the medium for her to express her suffering as well as her passion.
Frida Kahlo married another Mexican artist, Diego Rivera, in 1929 and the two spent the next 20 years traveling between Mexico and the United States. Frida and her husband formed an unusual couple. Her husband Diego was 20 years her senior and a big, clumsy-looking man. Nonetheless, deeply besotted with Diego, Frida often wrote things in her diary including that he was “her everything” and “your armpit is my refuge.” If the weather was as hot then as it is now, this seems highly unappealing. But who am I to judge?
Back to Las 2 Fridas. I was initially lured in by the super cute pink chairs and tables set up outside featuring sugar skulls and other colorful motifs. I also was hot and thirsty and the sight of people carrying out dishes of ice cream, fresh fruit, and smoothies attracted me like a magnet.
Their website indicates they offer “a variety of Mexican snacks such as spicy fruit, chicharrones, churro sundaes, and tamales”. They also offer other extremely healthy items made fresh, including açaí bowls, juices and smoothies. You can order online for carryout or delivery or sit outside at their cute tables. This is going to be my new favorite!
I hope if you are in the Monterey Area, you get a chance to check it out. For more information, including hours and complete menu, see Las 2 Fridas.
Thank you for visiting my blog! Wishing you peace, love, happiness, and beautiful vistas.