Monday, February 4, 2008


Good morning all,


Please forgive the delay in proceeding with the "paper" strip. We will.


This is how you manage studio life in the middle of a move from San Diego to Austin. I would like to introduce you to a STUDIO RULE . These aren't really rules. They are more like an opportunity to break out of some of my self imposed habits, and explore new territory.


And, yes, you can and may have more than one project going at once, and produce phenominally. Here's why. Many times one phase of an idea is at a waiting period, let's say an hour, or two, or longer. During that hour you may continue spinning ideas on how you can "do this differently" (which is a good bank of ideas phrase.


You could write them down, but that would still leave the concept untried. Fine, instead apply this STUDIO RULE. Instead of bypassing the ideas flowing in when a wait period arrives, grab the nearest raw materials (paper, clay, glass, fiber, whatever is the first you lay eyes on) and try to apply the most immediate idea or any other idea immediately coming to mind.


With only the materials at hand, use them. Don't go scrounging around for more than a couple of things. This is not The Treasure Hunt Studio Rule. This is The Grab It and Use It Studio Rule (because all your other stuff is out of reach, say packed to move?).


Here are some for instances. In January 2006, I only had some paper and colored pencils, but wanted to be creating quilts that were not traditional designs, but played with new patterns and designs. With my traveling colored pencils, I began with a doodle. Then I made the doodle into something else, by applying the principles and elements of design singularly, or in various combinations. I only had time for three here. There were boxes involved, I am sure.
If you can read this set, you will see I was in the kitchen a lot just prior to this. The middle image began with what a fried egg looks like.
I was very tired of the sphere of eggs creations. Although not finished, I wanted a break. These breaks will usually weed out projects which do not evolve into anything as begun. (Note: This is a very valuable positive, not a negative at all.) They in turn become the raw materials for any of these Grab It and Use It projects. This often results in a raw material becoming a valued material, or (choose one: fun, wow, exciting, full of potential spin offs) technique.
So today, maybe even right now, try to do something with only the few raw materials you have around. Later on it too could be considered a raw material and added to another creation. Using these methods has given me so many ideas, finished art pieces, trash to take out, and smiles, smiles, smiles. What a way to live. Creating was the first act ever, and I am created in the image of my Maker. The first thing He ever did was create. You too. The first thing you ever did was create. If He enjoyed it so much, we should enjoy moments of creation still.
Please post me on your discoveries and creations. I'll post them here for everyone to see. Please post the lessons learned, and what doesn't work out, with or without pictures, so we can all avoid some heartache and learn along with you. When artists share what they learn in such a manner, they also cannot avoid to inspire someone, somewhere, eventually. It's a blast to find out about it.
Wow! That was a long posting.

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

"Paper Strip" Activity


Now that you have created a "paper" strip from the first posting's activity, let's do something fun with it. This will be real simple.

Attach something to it, which remains raised on the surface. Use glue, sticky glue dots, or anything you can think of to raise your item off the surface.

Need some ideas:

beans (seeds)
thread
buttons
sand
card (or part of a card)
paper clip
clothes pin
safety pin
piece of plastic

It's ok if the addition exceeds the edges of your stip. Later you will be adding this strip to something. Begin thinking of ways you can attach your strip to something. Will it become a chunky postcard you hand deliver? Will it become a sign you hang somewhere?

My favorite uses are making spontaneous thank yous. Everyone needs a thank you, and I can usually find something I want to encourage and thank someone for. It might just be a smile, but if it lightens my load, they are a candidate for receiving something.

If my project stays fairly flat, I have been known to mail it. Here is an image of a postcard I made with left overs in the studio. In this case my paper was cloth. The brown leather was a portion of my husbands old wallet. It is shown on a journal, where it could have been glued permanently. I have piles of journals for everything from drawing to addresses and note taking. Everyone qualifies as blank paper. I try to rework the covers to fit my personality, use up extra stuff in the studio, clean out drawers, and in any way possible, help me remember which journal I wrote that address, phone number, put that sketch, or recipe in. My memory is not always what I wish it were.

No rules folks, just keep it legal and managable. You don't even have to keep your experiments. This is play. Relax and enjoy. If the results are keepable, you will find a home for it.

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

WELCOME!

I am glad you could join us. Would you like to begin with a simple ten minute session? Actually, all our sessions are 10 minutes long. Feel free to extend that as long as you want. If you really like something you did, send me an image. I'll let you know when and where soon.

Let's have some fun.

Materials:

Strip of "paper"
  • tear a piece off long and narrow
  • any colors if you want, or only one
  • do both sides if you want
  • do part of one side
  • fabric
  • brown paper
  • plastic paper
  • something long and narrow, which isn't paper at all, but can have marks put on it with something
  • piece of cereal box
  • cylinder, cube, shere, or flat (2D)
  • something very temporary (wet block of sand)
  • something very permanent (wet cement)

Are you getting the idea?

Something to make marks with

  • crayons
  • pencils
  • pens
  • ink
  • chalk
  • thread
  • paint
  • sticks
  • beads
  • pebbles
  • more paper (hole punches, tiny bits)
  • this list is unending too
  • anything you can make a mark on your "paper"

Task at Hand

(your 10 minutes of imagination becoming visible)

Make any kind of marks you want on your "paper", Cover as much as you want, but cover most of it the first time. If you want, make more than one. For instance, if you are only using crayons, color that thing. Then put it between sheets of wax paper. Then put the wax paper sandwich between paper towels. Now iron it with just enough heat to melt the colors. When it is cool, break away the leaks. You might want to save them for one of the next steps. Oops, I mean proejcts.