To Bake A Vision In The Cardboard Kitchen
Artists, musicians, writers, chefs and home cooks, or anyone in the midst of a creative endeavor would agree, inspiration is a mystery.
It can feel like floating through a delicious cloud, straining just a little to see an image that suddenly appears above the haze. Or, it can become a thick veil in which we become entangled. We thrash around with obscured vision until we break free and the image, word, flavor combination, musical notes, or theme becomes crystal clear.
So it goes in the cardboard kitchen. I recently found this lovely, deep cherry colored wine box.
What I envisioned was a towering, ambrosial multi- layered torte. My first inspiration was definitely the delicious cloud variety!
However, if there is a consistent theme in using recycled material, it is that cardboard is unpredictable. This beautiful cardboard would not cooperate. I was suddenly thrown into the thickly veiled cloud of inspiration, thrashing around for another image. Just when I was about to put this cardboard aside for another day, a friend gave me a box of Italian cookies. The cookies were so-so, but the box was the epitome of chocolate and vanilla, dusted with gold.
The solution: a scaled down version. I combined these two confection-flavored cardboard ingredients, and baked a ‘Swiss Pastry”. Inspiration also works in mysterious ways.
And, I have lots of the dark cherry cardboard left over, to bake with in the future!
Robin Urton
February 2, 2011 at 4:39 amIt’s just delightful how intertwined your inspiration and materials are. I wish I could think of something so creative to do with a cardboard box! And the drawing the box inspired is also quite beautiful. Bravo!
admin
February 3, 2011 at 8:42 pmThanks so much Robin! I love to hear other artist’s thoughts and ideas.
Vivian C
February 6, 2011 at 7:41 pmIt was great to get a little insight into your process, I’ve always wondered. I also loved the gorgeous drawing and I like how you wove the idea of that into the Swiss pastry, so clever.
If the film “King of Pastry” makes it to your part of the world, I would highly recommend it. I think you’d enjoy it.
admin
February 7, 2011 at 11:00 amThanks for your thoughts on this post Viv! I saw that Pastry Kings playing in Dec here at Siff, but never got a chance to see it. I think I will probably be able to rent it from our local independent video store: Scarecrow. They carry all the independent films. Now that I have a recommendation I am excited to see it!
Pei-Lin
February 27, 2011 at 12:09 pmPattianne, a lovely, inspiring post! I enjoyed reading it and journeying through this drive to more and greater inspirations with you!
As a full-time and private writer, I couldn’t agree with you more: Inspirations are mysterious. When I do get hit by them, I get all ecstatic and panicked at the same time for fear of losing them. Scary, huh! Another downside of me being a writer, a writer for the English language to be exact, I write as a non-native English speaker. (My mother tongue is Chinese, and the national language of my home country is Malay. Occasionally, I do make grammatical mistakes and spelling errors. Oops.) So, you can imagine how my brain twists and turns to translate and “convert” meanings while brainstorming and wading my way in in a sea of words. I just hate the fact that how people perceive writers as walking dictionaries who can write just about anything! Copywriters and journalists are slightly different creatures!
I really love how you merge your love of all things artsy and food together. Keep it up!
And as for your dark-cherry-colored leftovers, what I love about them is they last, which is the opposite of their edible counterparts — food ingredients! Hahaha!
P.S. Have a fab Sunday! I really wish to meet up with you, should you ever get to visit Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia! When I do return to America for a visit, since I do know a bunch of people in Minnesota, I’ll let you know. You’re in the Chicago area, right? My memory can fail me, though, at times. LOL!
admin
February 28, 2011 at 12:06 pmThank you for the sweet comment Pei-Lin. I have several non native English speaking friends that also do English translations. I am always amazed at the ability to negotiate two or more languages, along with the idioms and unspoken meanings. It is an art, and takes lots of intuition…and inspiration. As a ‘language’ artist and a cook, both creative endeavors, I’m sure the mysterious world of inspiration is familiar ground to you.
Keep up the great work. I love following your photo journal.
And thank you for the invite. I am actually on the other coast, in Seattle.