Studio Eidolons
Their studios were not the plush carpeted ateliers of successful academic artists, but the spare ascetic quarters of brownstone tenements, the forerunners of today’s manufacturing-loft studios.
Barbara Rose, American Art Since 1900
As the Sunday morning sun floods my Studio Eidolons, I revel in the warmth and splendor of early 2026 stirrings of art in east Texas. Last week thrilled me as I sat among creatives at Hideaway Art League and enjoyed the verbal exchanges. There was a warm dynamic and enthusiasm over the current possibilities of art gatherings in the area. And it was an echo of what I’ve been reading in art history concerning our early twentieth-century stirrings in this culture.
Besides my Wednesday watercolor classes coming up at Gracie Lane (https://www.gracielanecollection.com/art-workshops-arlington-tx), I anticipate with gladness the opportunity of a demo at Palette of Roses Art League in Tyler, Texas February 19, participation in the Annual Dogwood Festival Art Pavilion in Palestine, Texas March 20-21, and a workshop in Paris, Texas April 1.
I still harbor the sentiment of a New Byzantium in East Texas, even though I no longer own The Gallery at Redlands. I’m grateful to have my space in Studio 48 at Gracie Lane Boutique in Arlington, and of course, my own Studio Eidolons here in our home. My intentions in 2026 include strengthening my relationships with the art organizations and galleries in this corner of the state. My “Byzantium” notion was inspired by the Irish poet William Butler Yeats. In response to his poem “Sailing to Byzantium” he once wrote:
I think if I could be given a month of Antiquity and leave to spend it where I chose, I would spend it in Byzantium a little before Justinian opened St. Sophia and closed the Academy of Plato. . . . I think that in early Byzantium, maybe never before or since in recorded history, religious, aesthetic and practical life were one, that architect and artificers spoke to the multitude and few alike. The painter, the mosaic worker, the worker in gold and silver, the illuminator of sacred books, were almost impersonal, almost perhaps without the consciousness of individual design, absorbed in their subject-matter and that the vision of a whole people.
I see our current culture as chaotic and directionless. I am not saying that Art is the answer for today’s woes; I merely say that creatives gathering to share their visions and planning public events to display their works are not hurting anybody. On the contrary, the creatives are merely trying to spread the joy of artful pursuits. I feel that east Texas could contribute to such an environment, and I am proud to join their ranks.
Thanks for reading.
















