I have felt more or less stuck in amber since my leg injury in February. It has been a challenging time. Since March, of course, we've all been in a stuck-in-amberish situation with the Covid 19 pandemic.
But now, big new life changes are in the offing and I have shaken my torpor of these last months!
I have mentioned here that my husband and I plan to downsize and leave the beautiful house and garden that we designed and built for our blended family 26 years ago. We have loved it, but it was time for a change.
We have now found our new dream house for the next phase of our lives and it's all a surprise to us! I did not imagine we'd live in Hillsborough, much as we love it, and much as we love our many friends who live there! But since nothing had come up in the areas we targeted for house-searching, we added Hillsborough to the search parameters. Within two days, this house came on the market. We went to see it and that very night, we put in an offer for it. Our offer was accepted. There is work to be done on the house, so it will be about eight weeks after closing that we will move in.
Let me show you something of the new place!
This is the Burkett Jones House, aka the Simon B Jones House, built in 1850 or 1860 or 1880.... sources vary in dating the house, though most say 1850 or 1860.
A farmhouse from Smithfield, NC, it was moved in 1997 to its present location, about 30 minutes from our house in Chapel Hill, to escape demolition at the expansion of the Smithfield airport.
I love the emerald green lawn, typical of houses in the area, but I will switch to organic maintenance methods as soon as I can. I LOVE the fact that the house has vast open sky, with a perimeter of mature trees. Soon I can stargaze to my heart's content, simply by stepping outside and looking up!
Above is a closer look at the front of the house. And below is the front porch.
The area I will establish for the main garden in is a narrowish strip stretching from the back of the house to the property line, bordered on the eastern side by deer fencing and mixed shrubs and trees. I have lots of ideas for plantings, as you can imagine!
Below you also see the two-car garage that will be made into my studio! I am ecstatic! I have never had a full-sized studio. Now I can make big paintings, I can hold workshops, I can be free in my movements!
Below are raised beds made by the current owners, along the northern edge of the lawn. I will eliminate those to have that space for my new design.
Below, we are standing at the northern edge of the property, looking back to the house, with the garage/studio to the right.
A two-story log cabin, seen below, is on the western edge of the 1.4 acre property.
If I were a writer instead of a painter, I'd have my workspace already, as you can see above!
With this move, I can return to an idea I'd had a couple of years ago, to make paint out of soil in the places I love. Unfortunately, I was not able to fully realize this at the time, because the places I love were/are northern Norway, Wales, Alaska... hard to collect soil in large quantities, absent a long stay in one place.
The painting below is a study I made on corrugated cardboard, using paint made of Chatham County soil, acrylic paint and medium. This will be a point of departure for a new series I have in mind, using soil from Johnston County, where our new house was built, as well as soil from Orange County, where our new house now is.
Analogous to my desire to use mostly native plants in the garden, is my interest in drawing and painting with local, natural materials in some of my work, such as here below. I drew with charcoal made of burnt blueberry bush from a fire pit and two kinds of pigments made from different soils, both collected at the Alamance County farm of two good friends.
Below is a sketch I made using soil found near St Non's Well near St Davids, Pembrokeshire, Wales and the juice of blackberries growing on a hedge nearby.
I'm eager to know as much as I can about the history of our new place, so David and I will drive east to visit Johnston County Heritage Center next week. We will ask the researchers there to help us discover who exactly built the house and who lived there over the 170 years following. In my own research, I have learned where the Burkett Jones family cemetery is and I want to go and pay my respects to these intrepid 19th-century North Carolinians, whose home an improbable, gadabout, traveling eurocentric 21st century couple will claim as their own. I will take a bucket and trowel and hope to get permission to dig up soil on the property, now near the airport, where my house lived for most of its life. I want to make of this an art piece to honor our predecessors in the house.
I will post what I learn about the house in the next installment of the story of our new life.
I'd love to have your company.
Carol, it’s so wonderful having you along on this adventure! I really appreciate you!
Posted by: Laura Frankstone | June 12, 2020 at 03:09 AM
Again, how exciting! I can't wait to be along for your journey.
Posted by: Carol Collier | June 12, 2020 at 12:10 AM
Thank you, David ❤️❤️❤️
Posted by: Laura Frankstone | June 11, 2020 at 09:55 PM
Gosh, Kate, a reply I made to your comment has disappeared! I just wanted to say that I had long admired your own cabin so we are even now! I feel very grateful for how things are turning out at this point. I just hope we can sell this house quickly and get on the other side of this long series of challenges. Thank you for your support as always XOXO
Posted by: Laura Frankstone | June 11, 2020 at 09:53 PM
It is an amazing house soon to be filled with Laura’s enthusiasm and spirit ‼️‼️
Posted by: David | June 11, 2020 at 09:41 PM
OMIGOSH I didn't know about the log cabin! Serious lust...and how wonderful to watch this unforld, thank you dear friend. I am SO happy for you!
Posted by: Cathy Johnson (Kate) | June 11, 2020 at 07:22 PM