• Teressa Jackson, Artist
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Teressa Jackson

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Monterey, CA
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Teressa Jackson

  • Teressa Jackson, Artist
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2020 Reflections

January 20, 2021 Teressa Jackson
Detail of Quarantine Queen, completed April 2020 and featured in the September 3, 2020, Tucson Weekly

Detail of Quarantine Queen, completed April 2020 and featured in the September 3, 2020, Tucson Weekly

I might be an artist, but I’m a weirdly analytical one. As a numbers nerd, I always enjoy a little look back at the beginning of a new year, even if I have to hold my nose like I do when I gaze at the stink that was 2020.

Despite the many challenges I do not need to revisit here, 2020 turned out to be my most successful sales year to date as an artist – I actually blew all my other years away. I’m certainly still far from being anything other than a starving artist, but it feels good to make progress on further establishing myself and to know that my work is resonating with people. In all, I created 44 paintings during 2020 and sold 23 of the paintings I created during the year. I sold an additional 33 paintings created in previous years, for a total of 56 paintings that found their forever homes.

My printed merchandise also had a successful year. I sold 65 packs of cards and thirty 2021 calendars. I received proceeds from a variety of items purchased with my designs on them via Redbubble (p.s. - I’m generally open to adding additional artwork on there. If you are looking for a specific design, just email me and let me know: me@teressaljackson.com). I also collected royalties for sales of my photography on AdobeStock. The approach around here is all about multiple streams of income!

In more of a qualitative realm, I changed artistic styles a bit during 2020, straying from realism and returning to some of my traditional loves of bright color and bold pattern, an approach that dates back to my high school years, if not before. I’d like to think I’m incorporating more of myself into this work, and that this is resonating with people. Regardless, I’m having fun creating it!

Despite the pandemic, I did enjoy a few opportunities to show my work. Before the coronavirus hit, I had a solo exhibition at Industrious Scottsdale Fashion Square and had a painting in Salon Forty Eight, a group exhibition at Mood Room in Phoenix. Unfortunately, my solo show at Agua Caliente Ranch House Gallery in Tucson that had been scheduled for March 2020 was postponed, and remains postponed indefinitely. During the pandemic, I participated in three virtual exhibitions: Raices Taller 222 Art Gallery & Workshop’s Corazones Unidos and Regalitos shows and the Arizona Watercolor Association’s COVID Virtual Show.

Lola dog, because she’s cute!

Last but not least, I did enjoy some media exposure in 2020. I was featured in a ShoutoutArizona feature and had my Quarantine Queen painting featured on the cover of and reviewed in the September 3, 2020, Tucson Weekly.

Personally, it was a sometimes (many times?) challenging year. Like most people, I felt stressed, depressed, disheartened, unmotivated, and dehumanized at various points. The Arizona summer was the hottest on record, making it nearly impossible to enjoy time outdoors which is the only real reprieve from a pandemic that seems to exist and one of my greatest joys even in “normal” times. Our dog Lola, adopted in January 2020, provided us with a lot of laughs, a few curse words, many hugs, and abundant cuddles. We purchased a home in Phoenix that gave us more of our own space, a yard, and a neighborhood that has served as a bit of a muse for me.

In closing, I’m not sure what the final score is for 2020. It was actually very good in some ways, but the absolute worst in others. I suppose I will just be grateful that I made it through, that there was some good, and focus on what is ahead of me. That’s all I can really try to control, anyway.

I’d love to hear what the highs and lows of 2020 were for you. I’d also be interested in your thoughts on why this year was such a successful year for my art sales. Let me know in the comments section!

In Art, My Journey Tags 2020, coronavirus, COVID-19, pandemic, Phoenix, Lola, new year, artist, by the numbers, art exhibition, exhibition, art show, art, Tucson Weekly
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My Life & Artwork - September to December 2020

December 29, 2020 Teressa Jackson
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Well, the last few months of 2020 ROCKED!

You think I’m joking, right? 2020 was terrible, wasn’t it? Well, I’m actually mostly serious. Read on to find out why…

Me with the Tucson Weekly cover featuring Quarantine Queen (P.S. Quarantine Queen is still available for purchase as of this blog posting)

September started out with a pretty amazing professional achievement for me. Some might say that having my painting Quarantine Queen grace the cover of the September 3-9, 2020, Tucson Weekly “rocked” – and I would agree with them! This painting was part of Raices Taller 222 Art Gallery & Workshop’s virtual “Corazones Unidos” exhibition, and I am grateful to the folks with Raices Taller for sharing the work with the Tucson Weekly. This resulted in the painting being featured on the cover of the weekly and also reviewed in the arts section. This might just be the true highlight of 2020 for me.

In October, Aaron and I started rockhounding. For anyone who doesn’t know, that means we went out searching for interesting and potentially valuable rocks. We had been talking about doing this for a while, and the weather finally cooled down enough that it was possible to enjoy the desert again. We started out with a well-known site called Saddle Mountain, located on public land that is overseen by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and located about an hour west of our home. Rockhounds have hit Saddle Mountain in search of fire agate for several decades, and although this means the site is relatively picked over, the vastness of the landscape means there are always treasures to be found. And we have indeed found a few. :-)

With rocks dancing in our heads, in early November we took a little trip to the Arizona/New Mexico border near Safford, Arizona. Fire agate was also the target of this excursion, and we enjoyed hunting and scoring some finds at Black Hills Rockhound Area, Round Mountain Rockhound Area, and along a road outside Clifton, Arizona.

November also brought a visit from my dear friend and former college roommate, Jenny. It was her first time in the Grand Canyon State and I couldn’t resist taking her to the Grand Canyon. The greatly reduced crowds (I have NEVER seen so few people at the Grand Canyon, which I would normally equate to Disneyland), we even scored one of the historic cabins on the rim. It was a lovely few days together and I was sad to see her go.

Jenny and me on the way to the Grand Canyon, overlooking Oak Creek Canyon outside Flagstaff

I also made it down to Tucson to see my second cousin Kim and my good friend Ursula. It was nice to be back in the Old Pueblo and to have a little human interaction. Ursula was such a great host and we cooked some delicious food and did some hiking in a couple of beautiful areas around her home in Vail, Arizona. I also enjoyed seeing all of the beautiful art she has been cooking up - check her out at www.ursulaschneider.art.

November’s rockhounding adventures took us to find Apache tears near Superior, Arizona, and on a wild goose chase looking for mine dumps way up the mountains on a crazy dirt road to Crown King, Arizona. We found a lot of Apache tears, which are round(ish) globs of translucent black volcanic glass that form in perlite. A legend of the Apache tribe explains the name: about 75 Apaches and the US Cavalry fought on a mountain overlooking what is now Superior, in the 1870s. As they faced defeat, the outnumbered Apaches rode their horses off the mountain to their deaths rather than be killed. Their wives and families cried when they heard of the tragedy and their tears are said to have turned into stone upon hitting the ground.

In early December we visited a site near Wickenburg, Arizona. It was a beautiful drive but we didn’t make any good finds. We spent most of the rest of December’s rockhounding adventures in the area around Tonopah, Arizona, looking for fire agates, Fourth of July Butte agates, and brightly colored jasper.

A Few Rockhounding Photos

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Our poor pup Lola got very sick in early December. She was lethargic, had no appetite, and was running a fever. The vet ran some tests and she was diagnosed with Valley Fever, a fungal infection that dogs as well as humans sometimes get in the desert if you are unlucky enough to inhale the spores. Thankfully, after a few days of medication, she started doing much better. She still has a cough, but it will go away over time. She has to take medication for an entire year to prevent a relapse!

Around our neighborhood, I located what I named the “Poultry Epicenter,” which turned out to be basically about a block away. Tucked in amongst a few dead-end streets, I had just missed the source of the cock-a-doodle-doing until this time. There is a truly mind-boggling array of fowl in this neighborhood, including peafowl, guinea fowl, and literally hundreds of chickens in all colors and varieties. These are feral birds and they are supposedly protected and grandfathered in from when the area was a chicken and citrus farm many decades ago.

In addition to the Raices Taller show in September, I participated in a virtual exhibition with the Arizona Watercolor Association in November and in “Regalitos,” a second virtual exhibition with Raices Taller in December. I produced a variety of art over these few months which I have included below. Several pieces have sold but there are still a few treasures to be scored if you’re in the mood for art!

Shop for art now ›


September

The Chapel of the Holy Saguaro
14x10”, Gouache on 140 lb. Arches Hot Press Watercolor Paper
For sale as of this blog post - purchase from Raices Taller gallery through January 2 or visit my online shop after that date to purchase (if still available).

Sowing the Seeds of Solidarity
7x5”, Gouache on 140 lb. Arches Hot Pressed Paper
For sale as of this blog post - visit my online shop to purchase.


October

Information Superhighway
8x8”, Gouache on 140 lb. Legion Stonehenge Aqua Coldpress Black Paper
SOLD (Commission).

Magical Mystery Hare
8x8”, Gouache on 140 lb. Legion Stonehenge Aqua Coldpress Black Paper
SOLD (Commission).

Sunflower Sunset
8x8”, Watercolor, Graphite, Ink, & Gel Pen on Paper
SOLD.


November

All You Need Is Love
7x5”, Watercolor on 300 lb. Arches Cold Pressed Watercolor Paper
I created this as a wedding gift for a dear friend.

Superior Secret
3x2”, Watercolor on Paper
For sale as of this blog post - visit my online shop to purchase.

Last Light
3x2”, Watercolor and Gouache on Paper
For sale as of this blog post - visit my online shop to purchase.

Cienega Cottonwoods
3x2”, Watercolor, Gouache, and Ink on Paper
For sale as of this blog post - visit my online shop to purchase.


December

When Life Hands You Lemons, You Make Lemon Eggs
6x4”, Gouache on 300 lb. Cold Press Watercolor Paper
SOLD.

A Quail of a Tale
8x10”, Gouache on 140 lb. Legion Stonehenge Aqua Coldpress Black Paper
SOLD.

Marma-Laid
6x8”, Gouache on 140 lb. Arches Hot Press Watercolor Paper
For sale as of this blog post - visit my online shop to purchase.

Did Someone Say Orange Chicken?
6x4”, Gouache on 300 lb. Cold Press Watercolor Paper
SOLD.

Midcentury Magnate
24x18”, Watercolor on 140 lb. Arches Hot Pressed Paper
Pending submission to upcoming exhibition; contact me for details on purchasing.


Shop for art now ›

In My Journey, Locations, Art Tags rocks, rockhounding, Saddle Mountain, chickens, birds, peafowl, peacocks, guinea fowl, Valley Fever, Arizona, Safford, New Mexico, Raices Taller 222 Art Gallery & Workshop, Apache Indians, Apache tears, Superior, Tucson, Tucson Weekly, Crown King, Wickenburg
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My Life & Artwork - August 2020

September 3, 2020 Teressa Jackson

And just like that - August is here!

As I mentioned last month, it’s been hot, hot, hot here in the Valley of the Sun. Honestly, though, I hadn’t realized just how hot it had been until I saw that we had hit 50 days of 110 degrees or above this year, obliterating the previous record of 33 days in 2011. Thank you, Willis Carrier, for the gift of cool indoor air!

Beautiful Bartlett Lake

We did finally get a monsoon storm this month, and it was pretty epic, with 60 mile per hour winds that nearly took out the large ash tree in my backyard and caused a couple of cactus casualties in my front yard. Cleanup was a bear.

Much like July, August was low-key due to heat and quarantine life. Lola and I enjoyed our early morning walks, and Aaron and I spent the month visiting a lake a weekend. We have now visited Lake Pleasant, Saguaro Lake, Canyon Lake, and Bartlett Lake, all of which are about an hour’s drive from our house. While I enjoyed them all in different ways, the gorgeous scenery at Bartlett Lake made it my favorite and I have officially given it the Best Lake Award.

I got a haircut for the first time since February, and sadly, that now seems like big news. I figured since it had been six months I should get at least that many inches cut off, and chop, chop, chop, I felt like a new woman.

The prickly scene at Usery Mountain Regional Park

The high temperature FINALLY dipped below 100 degrees and I went to Usery Mountain Regional Park for a little hike on the last day of August. It was still pretty warm, but nice to get out in the desert and see how my prickly friends were doing.

As for art, I had two paintings accepted into an upcoming online juried exhibition hosted by Raices Taller 222 Art Gallery & Workshop in Tucson. The show is entitled “Corozones Unidos” (Hearts United) and will run from Sept. 12 to Oct. 24 at raicestaller222.com. One of those paintings, Quarantine Queen, was reviewed by the Tucson Weekly and will be featured on the September 3, 2020, issue cover! I’m so grateful to the Tucson Weekly for the coverage and to Raices Taller for their continued hard work to represent local and regional artists. I’ve had the great fortune to show my work with them several times over the past couple of years.

I created five paintings this month, continuing to focus on desert creatures and my neighborhood surroundings. I’ve decided to include more of a description of each painting alongside each piece in this month’s blog, so please check them out below and learn more about the thought behind them. All of this month’s paintings remain for sale as of this blog posting.

Shop for art now ›


About this painting:

I spent some time this month admiring and learning about hummingbirds, and one of the fascinating things I discovered is that they require spiderwebs to build their nests. These cute little thieves would find their nests coming unglued and their precious TicTac-sized cargo tumbling to the ground if it wasn’t for the hard work of the arachnids around them.

As I put this scene together, I thought about how many ways that we are all networked - from the hummingbirds’ reliance on the spiderweb to the spiderweb itself to the tree roots and the antennae on the mountain in the distance, there’s a lot of give and take to this world. May we always remember that our actions always have impact beyond ourselves!

Network
10x16”, Gouache on 140 lb. Arches Hot Press Watercolor Paper
For sale as of this blog post - visit my online shop to purchase.


About this painting:

I recently discovered that a type of parrot, the rosy-faced lovebird, also known as the rosy-collared or peach-faced lovebird, lives in my neighborhood. I first spotted them at a bird feeder about a block from my house. Now that I’m tuned into them, I have seen them in trees and amongst the blooming Mexican sunflowers. I even counted 19 of them one recent morning!

These critters are native to southwestern Africa but flourish in the Phoenix climate. A sizable number of them apparently live wild in the city and surrounding area. Of course I had to pay tribute to these sweet little creatures in a painting, and dreamed up this scene located in the fictitious locale of “Love Street, Parrotzona.”

Love Street, Parrotzona
10x8”, Gouache on 140 lb. Arches Hot Press Watercolor Paper
For sale as of this blog post - visit my online shop to purchase.


About this painting:

I have a pair of hummingbirds who camp out in the large ash tree in my backyard. They’re such amazing creatures, many of whom make huge migratory journeys. I couldn’t help but envision all that they must see along the way and how those sights have changed over the years, becoming more and more developed.

My tree (which is likely over 70 years old) took a beating in the monsoon storm we had during August and around a third of it either crashed to the ground or had to be removed, but thankfully these wee winged ones made it through just fine. They continue to party out there, getting drunk on sugar water and enjoying their redecorated space.

Mile Marker 2,265
8x10”, Gouache on 140 lb. Arches Hot Press Watercolor Paper
For sale as of this blog post - visit my online shop to purchase.


About this painting:

The rosy-faced lovebird, a type of parrot that is native to Africa, thrives in my Phoenix neighborhood. It’s thought that these brightly-colored birds found their way into the wild here as escaped pets. Ironically enough, they love the Mexican sunflowers that grow in abundance here; these same flowers were exported to Africa as an ornamental plant and fertilizer and are now found in abundance in many locales there. It’s a small world after all.

The Immigrant
5x7”, Gouache on 140 lb. Arches Hot Press Watercolor Paper
For sale as of this blog post - visit my online shop to purchase.


About this painting:

In April 2019, I said “hasta luego” to Tucson and moved up I-10 to the Phoenix metro. I knew I would miss the wildlife outside my door, stunning views, nice people, and amazing culinary scene. Apparently, the javelina decided they were going to miss the culinary scene of my porch and on my last evening in town they had a little adios fiesta and chowed down on my potted plants. This fun and “totally Tucson” memory inspired this painting, entitled Sonoran Salad Bar. I know that salad bars are a big no-no during this whole COVID situation, but I don’t think the javelina care about social distancing, hand washing, or much else other than filling their bellies.

Sonoran Salad Bar
5x7”, Gouache on 140 lb. Arches Hot Press Watercolor Paper
For sale as of this blog post - visit my online shop to purchase.


Shop for art now ›

In Art, My Journey Tags Phoenix, hot, hot weather, air conditioning, monsoon, Lake Pleasant, Saguaro Lake, Canyon Lake, Bartlett Lake, coronavirus, COVID-19, Usery Mountain Regional Park, hiking, Raices Taller 222 Art Gallery & Workshop, Tucson Weekly, Tucson, quarantine, painting, hummingbird, rosy-faced lovebird, lovebird, peach-faced lovebird, rosy-collared lovebird, Mexican sunflowers, city, parrot, javelina
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me@teressaljackson.com • 502.593.2596