This piece, Bee, 2009, I created at the beginning of my gardening stages, and toward the beginning of the period of work I'm currently in -- depicting animals and insects I encounter everyday, ones that speak to me at pivotal times, and put them in a setting that includes the four natural elements; the animals I represent always have a totem significance in Native American cultures, and I often juxtapose meanings, or use them in combination.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhR0qfwqJKr9NshiRIP7xufBzLsPQ-oIVZOJiBci0YHxFdhecVZl5Sl0gKzvRpNhAnN_xP2atQVizx8I5yXg2wddhDezNlN2u67SgYeOLJ9Ov5uKQOlExlQXs0eZD7nsjDlapwkcfv4YGtE/s400/bee+copyright.jpg)
While the garden this summer has been taking much of my time away from artistic pursuits, it seems that art was not left far behind. This is the first summer I have tried to grow flowers amongst my vegetables, and up sprouted a beautiful purple zinnia, which I took home. That day I rearranged the furniture (unplanned), putting my dining table below the framed original of the Bee. It wasn't until I stepped back several hours later that I realized what I had done -- I had created in my life something I had represented two years ago in my artwork.
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