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Amanda Harris Amanda Harris Plus Member
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Flashback

AI edit of a New York bridge.

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Amanda Harris Amanda Harris Plus Member
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Highlight

AI-edited take on a tree with branches.

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Amanda Harris Amanda Harris Plus Member
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Garden

Photo originally taken in 2024.

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Dane Mullen Dane Mullen Plus Member
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Scribbles with Sarah: Christmas Movies

Grandma's prompt: Frosty the Snowman

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Amanda Harris Amanda Harris Plus Member
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Liminal

Shot of a New York street.

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Amanda Harris Amanda Harris Plus Member
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AI Apartment

AI edit of a co-op in New York.

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Amanda Harris Amanda Harris Plus Member
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Anatomy

AI-edited photograph of furniture.

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Amanda Harris Amanda Harris Plus Member
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Untamed

AI-edited photo of Flushing, NY.

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Amanda Harris Amanda Harris Plus Member
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Winter Tree

Photograph of a tree in Winter.

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Dane Mullen Dane Mullen Plus Member
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The Butterflies

One of my biggest supporters and best friend passed away recently. My Grammy. My Grandpa has been gone almost 10 years now. So, in real life, whenever a blue butterfly showed up it was Grandpa coming to check on Grammy. Now, she's a butterfly going to be with him.

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Dean C. Graf Dean C. Graf Plus Member
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Held Still in the Moving World

The lake was busy with light, the grasses busy with wind, but the boat sat quiet against the shore. There is a gift in this tension: to be held still while everything moves, to be carried without effort, to find rest in the very heart of motion.

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Bleu Hope Bleu Hope Plus Member
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“Octopus’s Graveyard”, September 2025.

Like that Beatles song that Ringo sang on, but spookier…

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Dean C. Graf Dean C. Graf Plus Member
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Wabi-Sabi and the Guest of the Moment

Imperfect Lines, Honest Presence This sketch is not perfect—and that’s exactly why it’s alive. The bold figure, the dissolving hat, the tilted chair: all of it feels unfinished, fleeting, caught in motion. It’s what the Japanese call wabi-sabi—finding beauty in the imperfect, the impermanent, the incomplete. But there’s something deeper here too. A quick sketch is not just what the eye records. It’s what the soul permits. To draw without fixing, without polishing, is to admit the world will not hold still for us. Life slips past. The lines break off. And yet, somehow, the essence remains. When you sketch this way, you are not the master of the moment—you are its guest. The pencil does not carve permanence; it pays attention. The act of drawing becomes an act of being present, of honoring what is already vanishing. So here’s a challenge: grab a pencil and sketch someone near you in sixty seconds. Do not erase. Do not perfect. Let the lines falter. When you finish, ask yourself: What truth did the imperfection reveal? Perhaps presence itself is the real art.

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Dane Mullen Dane Mullen Plus Member
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Scribbles with Sarah: Sorcery and Magic

Grandma's prompt: Escape Artist

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Amanda Harris Amanda Harris Plus Member
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Looking Ahead

Photograph taken in Port Washington, NY.

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Gerald Boone Gerald Boone Plus Member
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Harvest of Grapes

Oil on canvas : Harvest of Grapes

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Amanda Harris Amanda Harris Plus Member
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Bee

Capture of a bee crawling up a flower.

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Dane Mullen Dane Mullen Plus Member
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Grayblade (Minish Cap)

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Amanda Harris Amanda Harris Plus Member
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Garden

Potentially failed attempt at Macro.

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Amanda Harris Amanda Harris Plus Member
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Lying There

Macro photography exercise.

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Amanda Harris Amanda Harris Plus Member
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Fake Swans

Realist art with Pop Art influences.

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Amanda Harris Amanda Harris Plus Member
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Clouds

Animated rendering of clouds.

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Amanda Harris Amanda Harris Plus Member
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Almost Unchained

Realism-based image glorifying the ordinary.

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Amanda Harris Amanda Harris Plus Member
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Crushed

Macro picture of a flower.

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Dane Mullen Dane Mullen Plus Member
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Scribbles with Sarah: Faces in Things

Grandfather Clock

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Bleu Hope Bleu Hope Plus Member
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“Wherever You Can You Got To Catch Them All”, May 2025.

Finding random things to photograph on my photo jaunts is one thing but when you find abandoned Pokemon stickers to use for your art? Yes please!

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Dean C. Graf Dean C. Graf Plus Member
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Five Chairs, Holding Space
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Chairs are more than wood or iron. They are metaphors, quiet keepers of what it means to be present. They wait, as Wendell Berry might say, for us to “make a place to sit down. Sit down. Be quiet.” I draw them because they embody the humblest love—affection, as Berry calls it, that “gives itself no airs.” In their stillness, chairs hold the weight of relationships, the churn of thought, the grace of silence. They are where we meet, where we linger, where we become. These three drawings are offerings—sketches of chairs that invite connection, reflection, and the slow work of being. Each is a small sacred place, as Berry reminds us, not desecrated by haste or distraction, but alive with possibility. Drawing 1: The Coffee Shop Chairs Two wooden chairs face each other across a small round table in a coffee shop, their grain worn smooth by years of elbows and whispered truths. The table is a circle, a shape that knows no hierarchy, only intimacy. These chairs are for relationships that dare to deepen—for friends who risk vulnerability, for lovers who speak in glances, for strangers who become less strange. They ask for eye contact, for mugs of coffee grown cold in the heat of conversation. Here, sentences begin, “I’ve always wanted to tell you…” or “What if we…” These chairs shun the clamor of screens, as Berry urges, and invite the “three-dimensioned life” of shared breath. They are the seats of courage, where presence weaves the delicate threads of togetherness. Drawing 2: The Sandwich Café Chairs In a sandwich café, two wooden chairs sit across a small square table, its edges sharp, its surface scarred by crumbs and time. These chairs are angled close, as if conspiring. They are for relationships of a different timbre—perhaps the quick catch-up of old friends, the tentative lunch of colleagues, or the parent and child navigating new distances. The square table speaks of structure, of boundaries, yet the chairs lean in, softening the angles. They wait for laughter that spills over plates, for silences that carry weight, for the small confessions that bind us. These are chairs for the work of relating, for the patience that “joins time to eternity,” as Berry writes. They ask us to stay, to listen, to let the ordinary become profound. Drawing 3: The Patio Chair A lone cast-iron chair rests on a patio, its arms open to the wild nearness of nature—grass creeping close, vines curling at its feet, the air heavy with dusk. This chair is not for dialogue but for solitude, for the slow processing of thought. It is the seat of the poet, the dreamer, the one who sits with what was said—or left unsaid. Here, ideas settle like sediment in a quiet stream; here, the heart sifts through joy or grief. As Berry advises, this chair accepts “what comes from silence,” offering a place to make sense of the world’s noise. Its iron roots it to the earth, unyielding yet tender, a throne for contemplation where one might “make a poem that does not disturb the silence from which it came.” This is the chair for becoming, for growing older, for meeting oneself. These three chairs—one for intimacy, one for the labor of connection, one for solitude—are a trinity of relation. They are not grand, but they are true. They hold space for the conversations that shape us, the silences that heal us, the thoughts that root us. They are, in Berry’s words, sacred places, made holy by the simple act of sitting down. My drawings are but traces of these places—postcards from moments where we might remember how to be with one another, or how to be alone. So, pull up a chair. Or three. Sit down. Be quiet. The world is waiting to soften.

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Bleu Hope Bleu Hope Plus Member
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“Dragon Airs & Graces”, April 2025.
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When your girlfriend gets you more Pokemon plushies and you’re an artist… you know exactly what to do!

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Dane Mullen Dane Mullen Plus Member
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Grandma (Wind Waker)

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Dane Mullen Dane Mullen Plus Member
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Granny (Majoras Mask)

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