Tuesday, August 6, 2019

BreyerFest Hangover, 30th anniversary edition

The run-up to BreyerFest this year was one of the most hectic (but also productive) for me in recent memory. For whatever reason, I always get a huge kick of inspiration and a burning need to paint when I know I have trip coming up, even a non-model horse related trip. Some people go on cleanings sprees; I go on ridiculous creative jags. This meant I was already sleep deprived heading into BreyerFest, but on the plus side, I finished and shipped sooooo many commissions. It felt glorious. Here are some of the ponies that galloped out of my studio and back home to their owners in June and July.

Bogucki Bask+++ resin as a portrait of the Godolphin Arabian

Minkiewicz-Breunig Goblin resin in dark mulberry grey based on a real Mustang

Jenner-Bennett Micro Ember in dappled grey

Jenner-Bennett Micro Furia in silver dapple black

McDermott Mini Bunny resin in roan

Rose Mini Khemo resin in flaxen chestnut

Gerhardt Shannondell in bay sabino

Puleo SM TB as portrait of Man O' War
I managed to mail all of these models just in time other than one I hand-delivered at BreyerFest. The weekend before 'Fest, I flew to Atlanta to meet up with my sister so the two of us could drive up to Tennessee for the Hagen-Renaker Collectors Club Fellowship event. We had a great time touring the HR museum, glazing little worry stones, and hanging out with our clinky collecting comrades. We then drove back to Georgia to pick up our parents and our BreyerFest live show string before heading north again. (I'll post about Fellowship and BF on my collectibility blog since that will be more OF oriented.)

I feel like I spent that entire week in a sleep deprived daze, but that is the nature of model horse events, especially BreyerFest. I was excited to hear about the theme for next year though---Celtic Fling! My degrees are in Celtic history and archaeology, so I have begun plotting. Or at least thinking about plotting. After BF, all of my creative mojo crashed hard and I just wanted to sleep for a year.


I have managed to drag myself back into the studio lately however, and I have Accomplished More Things™ in the last few weeks, too, albeit slowly. These lovely boys are going to ship out soon.

True North in flaxen liver chestnut
Minkiewicz-Breunig Fritz resin in flaxen chestnut

I have more models in the works---some commissions, some sales pieces---so I'll try to update this blog accordingly. For more day-to-day updates, keep an eye on my Instagram account. I post a lot of in progress stuff there as well. Thanks for reading!

Thursday, May 30, 2019

Old Friends

After the 2018 Triple Crown hero Justify retired to stud last July, I knew that my sister Sarah and I had to plan a trip to Kentucky to see not just one, but two Triple Crown winners. Who could have predicted that after a 37 wait, we'd have another Triple Crown winner again so soon? Both American Pharoah and Justify stand at Coolmore's American farm, Ashford Stud, and as both stallions shuttle to Australia starting in June, we arranged a visit for the weekend after the Kentucky Derby.

I flew to Atlanta to meet up with Sarah on that Wednesday afternoon, and we spent the evening hanging out with our parents and ogling some of the neat models Mom and Sarah have liberated at estate sales lately. (I'll write a blog about these guys soon.)

Epic Hagen-Renaker score from a local estate sale last November
Very rare Albany Desert Orchid from an estate sale last month
On Thursday, Sarah and I got up early and had breakfast al fresco with her cat, Zipper, before hitting the road to Lexington.


We had no set schedule for the day, so we stopped and checked out antique malls along the way. We didn't find anything, but the sunset at the end of the day was pretty stunning.


Our tour at Ashford on Friday wasn't until 3:00pm, so we decided to spend the morning visiting some old friends at, well, Old Friends.


Buddy the official greeting cat came out to welcome us and get some love.



The tour started inside the gift shop and welcome center with a video about the farm, its residents, and its mission. Old Friends is a retirement home for Thoroughbreds whose racing and/or breeding careers are over. The farm offers tours to visit some of the more famous residents which raises funds to rescue a number of lesser known horses. After the video, we all headed back outside for our walking tour.


Our first stop was to see Sarava, winner of the 2002 Belmont Stakes. At 70-1, he was the biggest upset winner in the history of the race.


Across from Sarava was Nicanor, one of Barbaro's full brothers. Though his racing career started off promisingly with a 15 length score in a turf maiden race, Nicanor was not particularly successful as a racehorse or as a stallion. But he more than makes up for it in terms of looks and personality. If we could have smuggled him home with us, we would have. He is such a sweet, friendly boy.

Nicanor just wants your carrots and your love
One of the best things about Old Friends is that visitors are encouraged to pet and feed carrots to most of the horses.
Sarah and Nicanor
Next, we got to meet Rapid Redux, the tough gelding who holds the American record for most consecutive wins. Though his record of 22 victories in a row has been eclipsed by horses elsewhere in the world (Black Caviar and Winx), it has yet to be equaled here.

Rapid Redux
Rapid Redux didn't seem to care about his impressive record though. He was mostly concerned that his Breeders Cup Sprint winning pasture mate, Amazombie, didn't hog all of the carrots.

Amazombie
Across the lane from Rapid Redux and Amazombie were Little Mike and Game on Dude. Little Mike won several prestigious G1 turf races including the Arlington Million and the Breeders Cup Turf in 2012. Game On Dude won a number of G1 dirt races in his career including the Santa Anita Handicap a record three times. Mike and Dude were very polite about their carrot intake.

Game On Dude (left) and Little Mike (right)
From there, we headed up a hill toward one of the barns. In a pasture behind it was the horse I most wanted to see, War Emblem. Despite being a racing fan all of my life, I didn't get to attend the races until I moved to Chicago for grad school. In 2002, I went to my very first race, the Illinois Derby at the now demolished Sportsman's Park. War Emblem won that day in a runaway performance before going on to win the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness. He was sent to stud in Japan in hopes that he would become a replacement for the late, great Sunday Silence, but it was not meant to be. War Emblem had no interest in breeding and sired only 119 foals in ten years at stud. He was returned to the United States and now lives out his days at Old Friends. He's not the friendliest horse, so we were not allowed to get close, and he wasn't particularly interested in visiting anyway. But it was really wonderful to see the old curmudgeon again.

War Emblem
We continued on into the barn which housed some of the more socially inclined horses including an old favorite of mine, Alphabet Soup. I saw him years ago when he stood at Adena Springs, and it was a pleasure to get to pet him and feed him carrots. Soup's biggest claim to fame was winning the 1996 Breeders Cup Classic in which he upset the mighty Cigar.

Me feeding carrots to Alphabet Soup
Alphabet Soup shares his stall with this adorable little donkey.


Other barn residents were G1 stakes winner Afternoon Deelites...


...the somewhat shy turf stakes winner River Squall...


...and the farm's newest resident, Einstein. A Brazilian-bred son of the Kentucky Derby winner Spend A Buck, Einstein won G1 stakes on dirt and turf before retiring to stud. He's another one I would have happily taken home as a pocket pony.


The smallest resident in the barn, Little Silver Charm, was also the loudest. He is the farm's official spokeshorse, and he was very insistent that he receive his due in the form of carrots. So much so that the vet has ordered him on a diet (which he is not happy about).

Little Silver Charm
We headed out to far end of the barn, stopping briefly to feed carrots to Z Dager, one of the first horses raced by the Zayat family (of American Pharoah fame).

Sarah and Z Dager
And then it was on to see the farm's biggest celebrity, Silver Charm. In 1997, his rivalry with Free House was the talk of the Triple Crown trail. Silver Charm narrowly defeated Free House in both the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness, and the two battled head and head again in the Belmont. Silver Charm finally prevailed only to be caught in the final strides by Touch Gold (who also happens to be an Old Friends retiree). Silver Charm won the Dubai World Cup the following year and was eventually retired to stud at Three Chimneys where both Sarah and I visited him in 2003. Two years later, he was sent to Japan for stud duties with the understanding that he'd be returned to the United States when his breeding career was over. In 2014, he came home and is thriving at the age of twenty-five. When we visited, he was recovering from oral surgery and had just been cleared to eat shredded carrots again. We were delighted to be able to spoil him.


Me and Silver Charm
In the next paddock, we met Special Ring, a turf runner who began his career in France before finding success in California.

Special Ring
He shares his paddock with Popcorn Deelites, a son of Afternoon Deelites. Popcorn raced mainly in claiming races and allowances, but he found lasting fame in the movies. Pop is one of eight horses who played Seabiscuit in the popular movie of the same name. In particular, he was used in scenes breaking from the gate and as the horse playing Seabiscuit in the scene where he defeats War Admiral in their match race. He was also ridiculously friendly and sweet.

Popcorn Deelites
Just down the road from Silver Charm is the horse that denied him the Triple Crown, Touch Gold. He's another one who's a bit too salty to be allowed near visitors, so we admired his bad attitude from a distance. Our fantastic tour guide Lisa gave him some carrots to appease him.

Touch Gold (but don't touch him!)
We then headed back toward the welcome center, stopping to feed treats to Eye of the Tiger, a nice stakes winner who recently retired from stud duties.

Eye of the Tiger and Lisa
We also gave some love to Sun King, Charismatic's most successful son. Though he had a tendency to run second, he still won more than $2 million.

Sun King
A gorgeous view on the way back

The road back took us past the other side of Nicanor's paddock. He wanted more carrots.

Nicanor still being adorable
There are two equine cemeteries at Old Friends---a large one near the back of the farm where most of the residents are eventually laid to rest, and a smaller one near the front of the farm for a few very special horses. Charismatic, who died at Old Friends, is interred there along with several horses who died elsewhere. The remains of the mighty Skip Away were moved to Old Friends when his original resting place, Hopewell Farm, was sold at auction. The headstone for Springsteel, a tough campaigner in the 1930s, was moved from Rockingham Park before the land was developed. Similarly, when the California ranch where champion handicapper Noor died was sold to developers, his remains were disinterred and sent to Old Friends. (Noor is famous for having defeated two Triple Crown winners, Citation and Assault.)

Noor's new resting place
Sarah and I both agreed that Old Friends was one of the most fun horse farm tours we'd ever been on. It really was a treat to be able to feed and pet so many famous horses all in the span of an hour and a half. And our tour guide Lisa was so welcoming and enthusiastic. If you haven't been to Old Friends yet, definitely go. You won't regret it!


After Old Friends, we had a late brunch and hit a few antique stores before heading to Ashford.The only things we liberated were some Derby glasses. Next time, on to Ashford to see the champs (and more old friends)!

Wednesday, January 30, 2019

Return of the Polar Vortex

When I rolled out of bed this morning at the crack of 10:30 AM (I stayed up until the wee hours), the temperature outside was -18 with a wind chill of -45. It's been ugly cold for several days with a fair amount of snow and temps around zero, but today, the weather is so extreme that most of Chicago---schools, businesses, cultural institutions, even the post office---closed up shop and told us all to stay home. 



Because it's been so cold, I haven't been able to do any prepping or painting for about a week. It's just way too cold to be spraying primer or fixative, so commissions have been in a holding pattern temporarily. That said, I have made some progress working in my studio. Or rather, on my studio. Admittedly, "studio" is a rather grandiose word to describe a cheap plywood desk with lots of stuff piled haphazardly on it and near it. And while it worked well enough for years, many of the shelves were just dead space because they weren't sized with model horses or customizing supplies in mind.



 So I cleaned everything out of my tiny work space and demolished the desk...


And installed a much more sturdy and efficient structure!



I even ended up with more storage space on top for my body boxes which I desperately needed. This new set up will make it so much easier for me to work on models in color batches because everything is so much more accessible. I also went through my art supplies and tossed a bunch of worn out brushes and empty paint tubes. Hooray for reducing useless clutter!

The weather shamans are predicting a 60 degree warm up into the 40s this weekend (and 51 on Monday!), so I'm planning to make up for lost time. Prepping-palooza! In addition to commissions, one of the models I'll be working on is my 2019 NaMoPaiMo victim.

Obligatory NaMoPaiMo selfie
The unicorn version of the new-ish Breyer Yasmin mold was cheaper than than the hornless variety, so I'll cut the horn off and save it for use on another model. I'm not sure which one yet, but a fantasy model will be a fun change of pace!

In a continuing effort to paint a color I find challenging for NaMoPaiMo, I wanted to try a brindle this year. I couldn't decide on a model to use though, and I suspect that a brindle would prove difficult to finish in just 28 days. I also didn't want to take time away from working on my commissions, so I settled on a portrait of the part-Arabian mare DA Remote Control (aka Clicker).


I have long been intrigued by her "reverse brindle" coat, and a bay with white markings is a color I can easily rotate into the queue as I work on other bays. (Clicker's coat, while it resembles the stripes found on brindle horses, is the result of a random genetic mutation that essentially turned off the color coding for her hair in certain places.)

I know I've been quite remiss in blogging (on all of my blogs), but I have been steadily working on models. I'm finding that Instagram is a fun place to share my day to day progress that isn't otherwise necessarily blog-worthy. I'll probably post a fair amount of NaMoPaiMo stuff there before writing a wrap-up post here. And that said, I will try to put together a pretty pony pix post here as well in the near future, especially if we get another crazy cold snap like the current one. T.S. Eliot wrote that April is the cruelest month, but he clearly never experienced a Chicago February.