Within a month I had more cleaning clients than I had hours for — so I gave the overflow to another person who needed a start, the same way my friend had given her clients to me. The demand didn't dry up. It never does.
Read MoreOn the Mark of Kest
A provenance note on the name, the cartouche, and their evolution
I. The cartouche
Originally, the pharaoh's name was enclosed in an oval — a cartouche meant to encircle and protect the divine king's identity for eternity. Mine has a simpler meaning. The square cartouche of KEST that appears on my pottery and on my paintings mainly highlights the object's handmade quality. A human made this thing. One person, with a name.
You may be curious when and why that name changed. I was always the person who was going to change her name — I knew it from the time I was in my single digits. My father's family name was old world, difficult to pronounce, more difficult still to spell, and I had tired of explaining it over and over across every phone call and transaction that required it. Kest is easier — to say, to spell — and it has a snappiness that I always enjoyed in short last names.
At age 19, I walked into an attorney's office with a check for $400. Three months later, my name was changed in court. I had the middle name struck as well. Such audacity.
I didn’t tell my father's family beforehand. My mother thought I should. But I was over 18, paying my own way through art school, working a full-time factory job, owning a vehicle, renting an apartment — fully adulting, as one might say now. In 1988, a person could actually afford to do all of that simultaneously, which tells you something about both the economy and my stubbornness.
II. The evolution of the mark
Before any published books, long before any pottery or sculptural work came into being, my original mark was a simple script signature: Kest. When I began working as a freelance illustrator, it was cleaner to develop a proper cartouche — two K's set back-to-back inside a rectangle. All straight lines, easy to render cleanly on book covers and fine art pieces. Thirty children's books and several years into a boutique pottery practice, I was still using that mark.
The earliest signature I can find with Kest on it is on this painting, Thumbelina.
The cartouche on my painting, Marine Biology. This mark held fast for a few decades.
That is, until 2019 when a friend asked whether my pottery had ever been confused with a product of Kim Kardashian's — who, it turns out, uses a back-to-back K trademark on her goods. I had been using my back-to-back K's since well before Miss Kardashian wore a training bra, but I had never trademarked it, imagining that thirty years of published work would protect the sign well enough. The universe, apparently, had other ideas.
I'll admit I was briefly peeved. How dare she. I saw one of her delivery trucks rolling down the road with those back-to-back K's printed in enormous letters on the back, and I was briefly more peeved. Then I thought: cats who find themselves suddenly outdoors don't waste time on self-pity. They go about taking care of themselves — undaunted, undeterred. Obstacles are meant to be surmounted.
I designed a better chop.
The new cartouche: K E S T, two letters above and two below, sometimes inside a square. I use it now on all pottery and sculpture, and as a cartouche on my paintings. It is cleaner, more complete because it has the advantage of telling anyone who encounters it my entire name — no confusion with anyone else, no explanation required.
The Kest mark on my painting, Letterlocked.
III. The kestrel
As is my usual way of moving through life, I arrived at the name rather suddenly. I was drawing kestrels one afternoon and made the decision then and there — that would be my new last name. One check of the Lancaster, PA, phone book confirmed it didn't exist locally. I filed the paperwork the following week.
The American kestrel is the smallest falcon in North America — but falcon nonetheless. Not a sparrow that learned some tricks. A raptor, operating at the full capacity of its nature, simply in a more compact form than people expect. The kestrel is also the hovering one: it can hold perfectly still against the wind while it hunts, a fixed point in moving air.
I have seen one hunting exactly once in my entire life. They are resplendently gorgeous — russet and slate, precise and concentrated. That I named myself after a bird I had mostly known from drawings, and that the name turned out to be equally rare and vivid in the world, is something I find quietly satisfying.
Since then, I have seen the name in print, encountered it online, and met a handful of Kests — some of whom seemed genuinely disappointed we weren't related.
Nearly forty years. The name has outlasted the phone book I checked it in, the attorney's office where I paid for it, and at least one K-branded empire.
It's mine. I made it.
Lots of beautiful colors within the tertiary range survived the ruthless culling.
Making Pottery Glazes Part II
In 2022, I wrote about beginning to make my own pottery glazes from raw materials. Commercial bottled glazes were convenient, but expensive, and I had an itch to develop something more personal. Over five years of experimentation, I’ve come to understand the qualities I’m after…
Read MoreMy display wall at IlluXCon where ceramics and 2-d works unabashedly mingle.
IlluXCon 2025
IlluXCon is always a wild, wonderful week—equal parts exhaustion and exhilaration. Held at the GoggleWorks in Reading, it fills three floors with some of the best Imaginative Realism artists working today, and I’m always grateful to be part of that creative storm. 2025 was no exception.
Read MoreA ceramic frame which will eventually have a drawing in the inner space.
More ideas for sigils...
What has become pretty clear to me is this: Artists who use their work or others’ work to train an AI to spit out images for them to paint are completely missing the real value of what they potentially could get from working with an AI assistant.
Read MoreThe tile, Nimue. In Japanese culture, wabi-sabi— to “embrace the imperfect,” is often a rationale for repairing broken pottery (kintsugi). With this philosophy there’s less trauma when damage occurs, often with a highlighting of the imperfection as a kind of journey or experience of the object. This tile had too much fragmentation and still would have to be fired again to stoneware temperatures that I’ve decided to use the pieces as glaze-testing pieces instead.
On Perfectionism
Heartbreak is only temporary pain as I scoop the shattered bits of tiles into the dustpan or repair kiln shelves from the bubbled bits of glass fused to their surfaces. My heart begins to mend from the many failures with every dried bit of greenware I dump back into the clay reclamation bucket. Because with every failure, I earn an experience which teaches me something new about my craft.
Read MoreKlaus' Greenman. 15" x 15". Red stoneware.
Curating a Life
A dear friend of mine passed away last year and he left an enduring mark on my life....
Read MoreDIY Easel Upgrade
My oak easel, bought back in the early 90s when I was just starting out as an illustrator, while sturdy, was really only meant for lightweight canvas duty or for smaller boards. So, when I started working on heavier panels, I had a problem with the tray slipping…
Read MoreThe Meeting. Older women are wonderful mentors.
Mentors
Mentors are super important! If you don’t have one or several, get thee some right away. And if you have the chance to mentor someone else, it could greatly and positively impact their life in ways that can’t be quantified.
Read MoreDepression
The point is, no one knows what their life is going to be like 10, 20, or 30 years from now. But you’ve got to stick around to find out.
Read MoreLittle Kingdom, graphite; Arches mounted to hardboard, 12”. 2023.
Clearing Up A Misconception
I meet someone at a gathering and they find out I’m an Artist. Before I can get even one word out about what kind of work I do, they start telling me about a painting— a painting! they saw at some gallery or show or arts collective. But they didn’t buy it and now it haunts them. They don’t know how to track down the artist but they snapped a photo of the artwork. Breathlessly, with hope in their eyes, they ask me…
Read MoreOn Collaboration
Art collaborations are quite interesting. There’s Warhol & Basquiat, Dali & Buñuel, Björk & Barney, and the list goes on. Artists work together to stretch their abilities and techniques, and to gain important feedback about their work. In a collaborative visual artwork, you’re also “listening” to what the other artist is creating …
Read MoreChickens are Just Tiny Dinosaurs
Holy heckin’ heck. In one month, my life’s been turned upside down. I’ve never been an early morning person, but since we’ve gotten our chickens, getting out of bed at 530 to greet them at rosy-fingered dawn with musical wakey-wakeys and a tray of their favorite things …
Read MoreSun streams in and illuminates the stained glass windows behind the stone sculpture of a saint. St. Joan on Arc Church, Hershey PA. Photo by Christine Chardo.
Culture and Aesthetics
If I wasn’t dozing off, I was taking note of the art in this church. Morning light streamed into the floor-to-ceiling stained glass windows bursting with colored fragments, scattering light everywhere. Can we appreciate the aesthetics even though we no longer engage in the religious culture?
Read MoreWe have been stewards of this dear log house for 20 years.
The Log House
Laura Ingalls’ book and series, Little House on the Prairie, about her life as a pioneer, was an incredibly influential bit of literature for me in an important time in my life. Few books had such a lasting effect on me as this one did.
Read MoreStarting at the corners seems counterintuitive….
The best way to stretch canvases
I found a great way to stretch canvases starting at the corners! According experts in restoration, it’s an archivally sound method that distributes the canvas’ tension evenly so as to avoid tension cracks in the painting’s corners.
Read MoreThe Banshees of Inisherin considers what is the spirit of Ireland and how civil war breaks so much.
Legacy
We sometimes hear people referring to their children and family surname as their “legacy” and this is an oft heralded achievement. But when artists use that word, legacy, it’s suspect. Is it because we’re not dead yet? Because we haven’t yet finished the work? Perhaps legacy is…
Read MoreWonderful Commission Work
A post about a commission of a series of 4 paintings tied together thematically by the “seasons”, done in my usual botanical style and content. So that means the images will be overflowing with plants and animals, particularly bugs, flowers, etc. Everything jockeying for a place onstage, tumbling and vying to be seen, interacting with the environment, living in their niches…
Read MoreMy painting, Natural History, 1999, oil on canvas.
Commitment
In 2023, my keyword is commitment. It’s not a very flashy word inspiring a lot of boldness or risk, but one that speaks of quiet grit. It’s a word that really describes what I feel is an appropriate focal point for my current thought.
You see, I know what burn-out is….
Read MoreWhat jobs taught me as a young person
I started working on weekends and summers when I turned 14. My very first job was cleaning hotel rooms. The cigarette smoke and weird smells of the aerosol cleaners weren’t a great combination (and people can be really gross), but I could walk to work and…
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