11/24/2017 0 Comments Popping in with a few picturesI have just a few spare moments to stop in add in some photos from my student's work and promise to update the calendar. I'm working (when I have time) on planning some new art classes for adults and kids; Planning for my residency and putting togehter some advent kits for sale in Muckabout. It's been a very intense week but I do have some class images to share before I head into a Pro D camp, an afternoon helping to set up art for the school fundraiser and an evening of teaching a journaling.
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11/13/2017 0 Comments Count DownNovember is traditionally a super busy month for me. Regular term classes are well underway, holiday preparation starts up and my small ones' school is working on their annual main fundraiser. Our school is a fine arts school which means that as part of their regualr curriculum our children experience art in the form of music, dance, drama and viaual art incorporated into thier lesson plans. Our PAC has as it's main fundraising event an art show to showcase the art each class creates where the art can be purchased and other items can be bid on for a silent auction. My job in all of this is to get the art display ready. I've been leading parent volunteers in matting art work which has been both fun and quick. Today is the last prep day before the set up of the main event. On top of that I've got my regualr lessons and classes scheduled; a pro D camp to prep for, a full day school workshop and parties to lead on the weekend. next week the oveload drops but only a little and on through December.
I've been working on protraits with my Painting and Drawing Students. My preschoolers have also been working on portraits. WE've done a salt glue watercolour packground and the rest of my students will be adding self portraits this week and on Monday. I'll post those pieces soon. In addition I've been creating Count Down Calendar kits for sale in Muckabout. To support the kit I've been working on a page for this site that will be available for further instructions, tips and tricks for further decking out. I'm pretty pleased with the results and I've even been able to compile a list of activities, books and event ideas to help fill up the calendar. All that's left is to package the kits! 11/8/2017 0 Comments From Top to Bottom and backTo follow up from my last post; every year around this time I take some time to reflect on the previous year and to look forward to what I want in the coming year. I've got my goal; creating a body of art work for exhibition. Setting the goal is easy. Execution on the other hand is daunting and involves a lot of work. As an art teacher I dabble a lot. I have a large tool box filled with art techniques and skills that I require so that I can pass those tools on to my students. They are handy to have for my own practice as well. I can approach a problem and reach a solution by using more than one direction. It's brilliant to use those skills and gratifying (it's one of the reasons that momentum art and creativity is so important in education). The down side (and I don't like to admit that there is a downside) is that all those skills and techniques can create a bit of creators block. I have a degree in Fine Art. I majored in photography but I am not a photographer. I have a background in Printmaking but I'm not a printmaker. I love to draw and paint but I am not a painter or an illustrator. I enjoy creating collage works and assemblage works but I am not a mixed media or sculptural artist. Contrary to all of those statements I am all of those things as well. I am an artist. I make art with photography, paint, assemblage, paper, pen, pencil and a few other media as well. I am an artist. I make art. So if I am an artist and I make art I must also have a voice. Something to say; to share with my audience. Just like with writing we require some guidelines, some learning, some limitations and some specifics. the one thing I didn't list above is that I love to make books. Over the course of the last year about half of my personal practice has revolved around journalling and bookmaking. While I was in art school I made my first book as a final project for a printmaking class. I had never made a book before. I had no knowledge of how to make a book beyond the single book offered in the college library and the final project did have some great intaglio prints on it's pages it was cumbersome and didn't open properly or lay flat. In my first year at Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design I took a bookmaking course with Author Celia King. It was a revelation. The class covered the basics of a number of book making styles and I created a number of great little art books. I loved making books. Loved it. it's been a part of my practice for some time and I often boundaries the notes for that class when creating. As much as I love it I've never made it the prime focus of my practice. It's a personality quirk of sorts. I will circle around the things I like on the edge for a time before fully revisit. Even though I have a passion for bookmaking, but bookmaking hasn't been a focus for my practice. I will be creating in an artist in residency program in the new year where the goal will be to create a body of art books for exhibition sometime n 2018 or 2019. It's a pretty daunting goal for me and when the idea presented itself I knew I had to jump at it; that I could do it but now how I would do it. Five years ago I would have backed away and delayed. Five years ago I didn't have some of the tools I currently tote around in my artist's toolbox; didn't have the organizational skills or the time to commit. In five years I've gained a little more time and have planned and executed hundreds of classes and workshops. Sitting down to plan how to meet my goal within a committing program is still daunting but totally doable and I have an idea of how to break things down in order to succeed. None of these steps are set in stone but they are a good place to start. 1. I will create a zine a week on any topic spending no more than 20 to 30 minutes on the creation during the scheduled studio time used for my residency. I will create a small run for free distribution. 2. I will practice making different book types, creating blank journal prototypes for finished art book works. 3. I will create collections of themed artworks in various media to be bound into final residency works. These will be exhibited in a gallery setting to be announced in the future. 4. I will teach 2 book making classes free to the public and 1 more intensive class that will have a registration fee. 5. I will spend three dedicated studio hours per week focused on the above goals as well as any extra time I find available. 6. I will document the progress and process of my work My residency program begins in the new year but I'll begin the steps listed above before then to get the learning going and keep it moving. Planning a project like this often requires that you start the project with the end in mind. I know what I need to accomplish. I have the steps down to get there. I also have a support system in the form of my peers and family to help keep me on track. 11/4/2017 0 Comments Moving Right AlongWe're just flying right on through to the end of the year aren't we? Heading into November I'm starting to consider what my art practice might start to look like. With my heavy teaching load becoming lighter, the balance in my personal life is shifting and things are realigning. Rather than let things settle into new organic flow, I'm continuing to stir the pot. It's not a comfortable place to sit; with all that change. Letting things stagnate would be much less comfortable, so I'm letting things stay uncomfortable with the goal of creating a new comfort zone. I spend so much of my work time focused on the lessons I'm teaching, the classes and workshops I'm planning and updating the skills I require to teach all of those things that my own work becomes less focused. With less focus I'm scattered; not sure where I want my focus to be and in an endless loop of dabbling. Getting ready for the LRAH last september and the art exhibit I'm participating in this December has put a spotlight on my need to find my voice as an artist. I'm lucky that I have a serendipitous community of like minded creators in my day to day life. I say serendipitous because these people through one random instance or another have fallen into my social circle and inform my thinking, my creativity and my desire to create. Daily and weekly conversations with these artists and creative people has been a lifeline as well as a navigational tool. I'm taking some time to map out my goals and the direction I'm headed in order to arrive at my destination. Now that I've thouroughly mixed my metaphors it's time to look at what I've been up to this last week. Halloween was a huge success in the costume department. The smallest of my small ones has requested that we keep her wings attached to her dress so she can be a quail in daily life. The Raven costume was elegant and mysterious and I'm happy with how they both reacted and enjoyed their costumes. My students were very much focused on the holiday last week epsecially my painting and drawing students who all came to the class even though there were hoards of trick or treaters streaming past the window at Artspace. They managed to finish off the previous weeks project and we'll be starting something new and exciting next week. My independant students are nearing the completion of weeks long projects and I think looking for new inspiration. I'll be working on finding that for them in the coming days so that we can move on and keep them engaged in their art making. I've been head down and planning for workshops and classes in the new year and I hve a series of lessons I'm quite excited about. They can be taken as a series or as a single workshop. Updates to the claendar with further details and dates will be made soon. Mailing List Members receive updates and news first each month along with special deals and offers. You can sign up on the Home page . |
Peanut
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