My Son, An Award & The MET

My Son, An Award & The MET

My son, Nic, who is a teenager and has been painting since he was old enough to pick up a brush, just won an award from Scholastic Art & Writing for one of his pieces.  It’s a portrait, done in acrylic on a large piece of wood, of a friend of his.  That painting will be hung in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, here in New York City, in an exhibition featuring the award winners.  To say that I’m proud of him would be an understatement.  I’m beyond ecstatic.  Every time I think of him and his beautiful painting I smile.  A big, sweeping, all-encompassing smile.  A smile that makes my cheeks hurt and my whole body feel as though it were filled with sunlight.

When Nic was little he began painting every day.  We have drawers filled with his work.  When he was three, a friend of mine wanted to buy one of his paintings, but it was one of my favorites, so I wouldn’t let her purchase it, even though Nic was happy to have her buy it.  He sold his first painting to an art collector when he was 8 or maybe he was 9, I can’t remember now.  It had a Basquiat feel to it, lots of color, playful and yet there was an undercurrent of something deeper.  Nic was thrilled with his first sale and said he was going to save the money so he could buy himself something important, “like college”.  He was 8 or maybe 9.

Nic’s always been a collector of sorts and, like both his parents, tends to get obsessed with things that interest him.  I see this as an excellent trait.  Every member of my immediate family is passionate (another, more accepting, word for obsessed) about their line of work.  I say YAY to obsessions!  I cannot imagine life without obsessions.  This is also something that some people frown upon in the world of disability, particularly autism, where an obsession, having a passion for something, is called, “special interests.”  There’s something so condescending about that.  Why should a passion be called anything even remotely derogatory?  Every human should be so fortunate as to have passions in this life.

Here’s to a life filled with passion and obsessions.  And here’s to my son, Nic, his talent and this award!  You’re amazing and I’m so proud of you!!!

nics-painting

Nic holding his painting

My Son, An Award & The MET

Creating While Life Happens

I’ve been alive for over half a century and  have witnessed a great deal of beauty as well as tragedy, both personally and in the world.  However the current political climate is unlike anything I have ever experienced.  The take away from the past three months is that we Americans are as divided, if not more so, as we’ve ever been.  Our planet and its people are in jeopardy and we Americans are in crisis.  Even those who backed the current administration seem unable to accept that their man has won and leave it at that.  There is a combative rage that masks the fear and despair of so many.

What I find most helpful in coping with my concern regarding the world and our place in it, is to take action, speak out, write letters and postcards, make phone calls, join protests, get involved and take at least a couple of daily, anonymous, kind, actions toward another human being.  And then, with whatever time I can carve out, I create.  Every day.  I work on something, whether it is my Ode to Matisse Quilt, which I’m now free motion quilting (yay!) or working on a block of the month or throwing pots or painting or sketching out new ideas, I create.  Every day.  It’s the thing that has always saved me over these past 56 years.  I create.

When I was a teenager, I wanted to be a fine artist.  I loved pen and ink, but also acrylic paint.  I studied with the great Nate Oliveira, who also happened to be a close friend of my parents.  While at Parsons School of Design, one summer I took classes at the Art Institute of Chicago.  I painted, drew, designed, sewed, embroidered, knitted, wrote…  I have explored many different artistic mediums, but in the end, I kept going back to designing, whether it was hand knits, fashion or jewelry, design was what I did, more often than not, to earn money.  But fine art, is always there, somewhere in the background informing it all.

Last month I took out my paint brushes and began painting again.  It’s been years, no decades!  I’d forgotten how much I love it.  The following images are all collages with acrylic paint and a variety of other things, such as pastel, ink, torn newspaper, cardboard, etc.

red

Red

on-the-horizon

On the Horizon

dawn

Dawn

obscured

Obscured

america

America

Wishing everyone a peaceful day filled with creativity and ART!

My Son, An Award & The MET

Fabric Painting & the Fun Begins!

Fabric painting was something I knew nothing about before taking Elizabeth Barton‘s online class Dyeing to Design at the Academy of Quilting.  Fabric painting is the process of combining fabric dye with a thickener so it can be used to paint fabric, just as one would paint on a canvas.  Think about that.  The possibilities are endless!!  As we had been silk screening the week before, I used a couple of my silk screened fabrics and painted on them and then decided to branch out and paint on a blank white piece of cloth.  Here are some of my doodles.

As you can see I had fun!  I also painted the fabric in the photograph below, but I didn’t have a clear idea of what to do with any of it.  While painting the fabric in this photo below I was thinking about how we are all moving along in our lives, sometimes following, at other times leading, sometimes crossing paths with others, but can often feel we are alone even though we live in a world populated by so many.  Still, if we can just remember to reach out to others, we find our experiences are shared by many.  Should I have just written all that in the first person singular?  But then I might have felt that alone feeling again… Anyway, I sat with these various fabrics and did nothing for several days.

a-rippleThen, having given up on the idea that I was going to be miraculously hit with a blast of inspiration, I cut up the fabric (just a little, nothing radical) and sewed it back together (photo below.)  And then I sent it off to my class for feedback, that’s the whole reaching out thing that I mentioned above…  Elizabeth is an excellent teacher and can be depended upon to make terrific suggestions. 5abstractWhich led to this…5abstract1And this…5abstract2And this…5abstract4

And finally, finally, finally… this…5abstract6Which became this…  traveling along our various paths…5togetherAnd finally, this…  reaching out to others and no longer feeling so alone…lesson5front-copyHere are a few close ups of the machine and hand stitching…

upperleft
upperrightlowerrightlowerleftdetail2detail

And this is the back.lesson5back-copy

Traveling Together measures 21.75″ x 21.75″  All the fabric was hand painted and hand dyed. Then quilted using a cotton batting and kona cotton back.  I did the hand stitching using a perle cotton thread as well as a wool thread. The binding was hand dyed and sewn on, as was the label.

I still have not figured out what to do with my various silk screens, but I just finished painting over a few of them and plan to over dye a couple of others, so will see what the results are after that.  In the meantime I painted a few more half yard pieces of fabric and am eager to see how they turn out.

Elizabeth’s Dyeing to Design class is over, but she’ll be teaching it again in the spring, I believe.  I cannot recommend it more highly.

My Son, An Award & The MET

Fear of Dyeing

I was going to entitle this post Fear of Dyeing (and Silk Screening) but Where’s the Pun in That?  But it was too long so I just went with the edited version… a girl can have a little pun.  Okay, okay that’s enough. I’ve filled my quota of puns and I’m barely out of the starting gate.  It’s all going to be very serious from here on out.

In my last post I promised screen printing, so here we go.  All the photographs below are of techniques described by Elizabeth Barton in her wonderful class Dyeing to Design over at the Academy of Quilting.

The last and only time I did screen printing was when I worked (briefly) for the fashion designer Zandra Rhodes while living in London having just graduated from Parsons School of Design about a hundred years ago.  Zandra Rhodes is known for her beautiful silk screened fabrics as well as being the “Queen of Punk” a distinction given to her back in the late 70’s.  All I remember from that time, aside from the time she told me to clean her bathroom, was using a huge squeegee-like thing to scrape paint across the enormous screens she used.  I wish I could remember more as it might have helped me get over my fear when tackling Elizabeth’s silk screening lesson.  I have to admit I was completely intimidated reading the lesson over, so much so that I read the lesson and then didn’t do any of the exercises mapped out in it for at least three days.  Then another person in the class posted her gorgeous silk screened fabrics and it motivated me to at least try some of the techniques suggested.

purple-swirls

Using newsprint this was my first attempt at silk screening on white cotton

Have I talked about fear during the creative process?  I know, I know, I have.  But maybe you didn’t read that post and anyway, I’m feeling compelled.  I’m always surprised when I feel fear while designing or doing something art “worthy”.  Why feel frightened when creating something?  Why should I feel anything but joy?  How does fear, even a twinge of it, make itself known through all the curiosity and excitement? And while I don’t have complete answers for these questions, I do know it isn’t unusual for artists to feel tremendous fear when creating.  So much so that there’s even a terrific book written on this very subject called Art & Fear ~ Observations On The Perils (and Rewards) of Artmaking by David Bayles & Ted Orland.   Heading up the chapter entitled: The Academic World is this quote from Howard Ikemoto –

     “When my daughter was about seven years old, she asked me one day what I did at work.  I told her I worked at the college – that my job was to teach people how to draw.

She stared back at me, incredulous, and said, “You mean they forget?”

I went to Parsons School of Design for my undergraduate degree and majored in Fashion Design.  Much of what I learned had to do with the business of fashion design and that there’s no such thing as new, that everything is recycled and that in order to succeed one must be as determined, if not more, about the business as one is about creating.  The truth is, I learned little about being an artist and more about the challenges of being a designer in the business world.  By my last year my fairy tale notion of what it would be like to be a fashion designer was thoroughly squashed and in my disillusioned state I felt only  dread at the idea that I was about to go out into the world and seek a job, much less in the fashion world.  After floundering for a few years I abandoned fashion design in favor of a series of jobs/careers that I thought might be more fulfilling and less soul wrenching.  And while all the things I tried my hand at varied, even dramatically, they were all in the “Arts” of some kind.  What I’ve learned is that artists tend to have a difficult time making a living with their art, no matter what the medium is.

There’s a wonderful quote from Oscar Wilde that begins Part II of the book Art & Fear.

“When bankers get together for dinner, they discuss Art.  When artists get together for dinner, they discuss money.”

How does one price one’s art, something that might have taken hundreds of hours to create through trial and error, through missteps, through experimentation, through FEAR?  If artists used an hourly wage system to price their work, all art would be so expensive no one could afford it.  So most of us don’t.  We can’t.  And while in an ideal world no one would have to concern themselves with making money from their art, and instead would just spend all their time making it, few live in such a privileged world.  The fear of being able to sell our work, and how that inhibits the process is a whole other topic and one most of us can understand, but there is another fear that is far more complicated.  It is the fear one feels when confronted with something new, something one has never done before, but would like to learn.  There is the fear of failure or appearing incapable or of ridicule, criticism or being seen as incompetent by others, but also by oneself.  To create art, is to be at once vulnerable and confident, and it is a tricky balancing act to not lean more one way or the other. Both carry their own pitfalls.

Creating is a messy process.  Most people never see all the discarded bits, the beginnings and first steps taken to get to that finished piece.  What I love about blogs is that people are willing to show their process.  My favorite blogs, in fact, are the ones that do just that.

purple4

Adding color to the purple

When I am starting something new I often have an idea in my head.  What I envision is always spectacular, but creating that idea takes skill, talent and knowledge, things I do not always have.  So I have to learn, practice, and explore in order to be able to get the skills to (hopefully) produce the image I envision.  Sometimes I’m successful, but more often I’m not.  Sometimes I realize it will take me years to achieve the level of expertise required to make what I envisioned.  So I have to accept that I won’t be able to do something as I’d hoped or modify what I’m doing to compensate or continue to practice, with the idea that eventually I might be able to produce what is in my mind.

orange2

Torn newsprint

redswirls

For this piece I cut stencils out of a thin plastic sheet, before silk screening on top

blueswirls2

This is the result of using those stencils that I removed for the red piece above

waves

A technique attributed to Kerr Grabowski.  This piece has yet to be washed, so who knows what it will look like!

stripe2

Another technique described in Elizabeth’s class.

Regardless of the approach I take, perfectionism is truly the greatest kill joy and, for me anyway, the root from which almost all my fear springs. While some argue that without perfectionism, we would settle for less or not work as hard, they are misunderstanding perfectionism at its most destructive. I am referring to perfectionism that lacerates, the kind of self-talk that abuses and brutalizes.  It is that awful voice that needs to be muted before anything can be created.  Free from perfectionism I am allowed to explore and play.

I have no idea what I’m going to do with any of the fabric I’ve silk screened, and in some ways that’s beside the point.  I didn’t approach this lesson with a preconceived idea.  And that’s the beauty of taking a class like this one.  The assignments require you to explore and play first and then after you’ve done that, consider what you’ll make.  Most of these fabrics have been done for almost two weeks now and I still don’t know what to do with any of them.  Or as one of the many talented and wonderful people taking this class said, “I’m waiting for divine inspiration.”

My Son, An Award & The MET

Turbulent Times

I began this blog a few years ago because I wanted a place where I could discuss creativity, art, inspiration and being an artist.  Since life has always informed my art, I came up with the name – Where Art & Life Meet.  Art has always been the thing that saves me.  When I am creating I am completely present, focussed and I am most at peace.  I’m in the zone, an almost trance-like state of being.  I feel happy and serene.  So when life gets turbulent, when I am scared, when the world feels chaotic and unpredictable, art is the thing that beckons me, soothing me, allowing me to appreciate life and it’s beauty, if only in that fleeting moment.  However these last two weeks have been particularly difficult, so much so that for an entire day I couldn’t do any art at all.  Nothing.

Thankfully, I had my online class, Dyeing to Design given by Elizabeth Barton, which I’ve written about ‘here‘ and ‘here‘ and we had another project due, so I forced myself to focus.  We began with some basic shibori dyeing.  Shibori is the Japanese art of wrinkling, creasing, folding and binding fabrics before dunking them into dye.  One can get a great variety of patterns from Shibori.  Here are some of mine.

But once the fabrics were dyed, I felt at a loss as to what to do with them.  I am drawn to shapes and usually sketch out my ideas first, but these fabrics are so bold, even bossy, that I couldn’t figure out how to respond to them.  Finally I had an idea that I began to play around with, but it was going to be far too complicated and I didn’t have enough time to create it…

1st-sketch-lesson3

So I refined and came up with this…

3sketch

I plunged in and began cutting out shapes, putting them up on my design wall, pulling things down, putting other things up.  Eventually I designed this.

lesson3

In part this piece was in response to a comment about how things seemed dark, but the sun would shine again.  That red was glaring and SO red, so I went back to my design wall and did this.

lesson3-copy

And here’s the back and the label.

3label3Back.JPG

In between working on this piece, I lost myself in the bliss of hand painting some of my pots that I threw over  a month ago.  They make me happy.  I am calling them “Message Pots.”  The next batch will feature a more diverse population, which I’m looking forward to creating.  Did I mention that I haven’t been sleeping much?  I think all these guys look sleepy.

IMG_2533.JPGIMG_2534.JPGIMG_2536.JPGIMG_2535.JPGIMG_2526.JPG

To all of you who celebrate Thanksgiving, have a happy one.  To all who are feeling frightened and despondent, know that there are many feeling the same.

As for me, I will be losing myself in several days of cooking, another art form(!) before getting back to my painting, dyeing, quilts and designing.

Next week – screen printing!