JUDE HARZER FINE ART

When we least expect it, life sets us a challenge to test our courage and willingness to change; at such a moment, there is no point in pretending that nothing has happened or in saying that we are not ready. The challenge will not wait. Life does not look back. A week is more than enough time for us to decide whether or not to accept our destiny.”~ Paul Coelho

A young and vital child knows no limit to his own will, and it is the only reality to him. It is not that he wants at the outset to fight other wills, but that they simply do not exist for him. Like the artist, he goes forth to the work of creation, gloriously alone.
Jane Harrison

Jude Harzer Artist/Art Educator

Jude Harzer Artist/Art Educator
My art is a reflection of my effort to recognize and embrace the beauty in the world around me, even when it seems most difficult to find. Contact me at judiharz@aol.com or visit my website at http://www.judeharzerfineart.com

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http://www.judeharzerfineart.com

"Most of us have two lives- the life we live, and the unlived life within us. Between the two stands resistance."Steven Pressfield

"The greatest freedoms are freedom from regret, freedom from fear, freedom from anxiety, and freedom from sorrow."
Thich Nhat Hanh

Monday, January 12, 2026

Fresh Starts! Still.

 







Fresh Starts, Still

I haven’t written a blog post since 2019. That fact alone makes me pause. Have I been asleep all this time? Have the years quietly slipped by while I was busy doing everything else?

Of course not. And of course fresh starts are real—otherwise what would we be doing here, any of us?

Here I am at 62, still harboring ambitions of pursuing my painting practice and a creative path that feels both familiar and unfinished. I’ve been a public school art educator for 25 years. It’s strange how time moves forward, especially when I remember that this career was chosen mostly so I could be available to my children—and with the intention of “just trying it for a year.” Somehow, one year became twenty-five. A life. A rhythm. A devotion.

And yet, the searching never stopped.

2025 was a dramatic year of growth for me. I traveled alone to Amsterdam to immerse myself in history and art—to walk slowly, look closely, and listen to what rises when no one is asking anything of you. Later that summer, I attended a master weaving workshop in Lima, Peru. I went searching—searching for more language, more lineage, more connection to process and purpose. I didn’t go because I lacked something. I went because I wanted to deepen what was already there.

Along the way, I had a small solo exhibition in Asbury Park and participated in other local shows. Quiet milestones, perhaps—but meaningful ones. Evidence that I am still showing up.

Now, I feel ready for more.

I have always said that as I move toward retirement, my commitment and focus will narrow—not shrink, but clarify—around three essential things: my children, my art, and my health. These are not competing priorities. They are the structure that holds everything else.

What I want, more than anything, is to live without the regret of not having tried. Of not knowing what I could actually accomplish with my painting if I gave it my full attention, my patience, my courage.

I am ready to let go of fear—the fear of failure, the fear of having nothing to say, the fear of mediocrity. Fear has been a quiet companion for a long time, and I no longer need it to keep me alert or safe. Curiosity can do that now. Commitment can do that.

This blog is not a declaration of arrival. It’s a return. A willingness to speak again, to reflect in public, to stay awake to the work unfolding in front of me.

So here I am. Still searching. Still beginning.

Jude, Art and Inspiration