Color is an integral part to all types of creativity, it influences our moods and emotions, itโs linked with our memories.
Colors have been assigned meanings and connections throughout history and around the world. Sometimes these overlap and sometimes they are contradictory. Color is a great metaphor for so many aspects this wildly paradoxical trip we call life.
Looking out for colors is an invitation to observe the world around you on a new level.
It adds to the richness of the everyday places and things, and brings back a childlike sense of fun and wonder.ย
All these images are everyday things, in isolation not that interesting, but together they can make a patchwork of colors.
Art is everywhere when you begin to really look for it.
When we tune our eyes in to notice the colors around us, life becomes a little bit brighter and more vibrant.
Month by month through the year I’m exploring one color at a time in a project I call TWELVTY.
Beginning with yellow I’ll share what I’ve been making here in this blog.
If you’d like to create your own version of TWELVTY then sign up for my Studio Musings Newsletter & get your free TWELVTY Guide ebook.
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Youโll get an email to confirm youโve signed upand are human. Sorry, only humans (and their cats) can join. Check your spam folder cos sometimes the good stuff gets swept in there by mistake.
โStart where you are, use what your have, do what you can.โ
โ Arthur Ashe
The magic of mixed media art making comes from the layers.
First layers can be marks made in paint or pen, they can be collage or textural. Sometimes the whole surface is covered, sometimes it’s just a few marks to break up that beginning expanse of nothing.
scribbles and doodles break up the space on the blank paper.
When you keep in mind that what goes down on the first layer will likely get covered up, it’s much easier to feel free to experiment.
first layers don’t need to be pretty!
I don’t strive to make something beautiful, I just play. Letting one idea feed the next and seeing where it leads.
Experiment by combining patterns of mark making on different surfaces – thin copier paper reacts very differently to paint and ink than watercolor paper, or tissue paper, or fabric. Investigate some of the infinite possibilities!
I like having a few pieces on the go at the same time. Ideas cross pollinate between them, and I can swap from one to another while the layers dry.
Crumple or fold paper so the color can seep into the creases.
Consider how many ways there are to apply color to surface. Paint brushes are just the beginning, some of my favourite tools are not conventional things you’ll find in the art supply store ๐
Watch how the first layers of the first color of Twelvty began.
First layers made in Yellow for TWELVTY 2020
Every month this year I am making a series of pieces in just one color, so at the end of the year I can combine them into one big multicolored work.
Iโll be sharing my process throughout this adventure here in this blog.
Iโd love for you to join me. TWELVTY is open to everyone, and better yet, itโs free! Sign up for my newsletter to find out more and get your free TWELVTY guide ebook.
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Over the last days of the decade I’ve been thinking back to where my creative journey has wandered. Now let’s catch up to the moment before we dive into the 2020s.
Over the last days of the decade I’ve been thinking back to where my creative journey has wandered. You can see parts one & two in my previous posts. Now let’s catch up to the moment before we dive into the 2020s.
2017:
TWELVTY – Etsy – The 100 Day Project – Postcards.
Inspired by my own 12 month / 12 color project from 2012, I created a year long online class – TWELVTY – a trip around the color wheel. It was so much fun, over half the folks who joined me came back for a second time the next year!
Each month we explored a different color together. As part of the class I shared the making of this 12 color art journal filled with my most fav mixed media techniques.
2017 was the first year I heard about the 100 day project through social media. I missed the official start date, but in 100 days I made 100 drawings inspired by the random photos in my phone. I learned a lot in the process.
The images and faces that showed up in this book inspired my first collection of mini-print postcards, and more ideas that would unfold over the next months.
2017 was the year I launched my Etsy store, and as the year moved on I filled it with the colorful things I made.
Meanwhile, in the background I had a sketchbook of ideas fermenting into future ideas…
2018:
TWELVTY – the 67-ish day project – the Sketchbook Project – the Tiny Book Collaboration.
This year I stepped up the TWELVTY game, instead of making an art journal with the experiments in 12 colors, I made two 3D mixed media color wheels.
The 100 day project called me to step up again too. This time I embarked on a series of big paintings on canvas.
I don’t often work this big, I’d not painted on canvas before, and I planned to make my 100 day project from 100 time lapse videos of progress on these.
Tbh I really bit off more than was possible this time, so when I got about two thirds through I stopped and set these paintings aside for a while. I’m beginning to get the itch to return to them soon (watch this space!)
Sometimes it’s more difficult to stop when the time is right, to wait it out, than it is to plough on regardless. I feel like that was the biggest lesson learned for me this time.
I’m much more at home working in a small scale – when I heard about theSketchbook Projectit sounded exactly my kinda thing.
In light of this trajectory, it’ll come as no surprise that when I head about theTiny Book Collaboration I joined up without a second thought!
Of course, while this is all going on I’m feeding my muse with regular down-time in an art journal. This was a fun change of format and opened lots of panoramic new ways to play.
2019:
Ink Dyed Papers – 100 days in 100 days – The Sketchbook Project twice – and a ZINE!
I began this year in my studio with more experiments in paper dying. It really took over everything for a couple of months or so, and I’ve still so much to tell you about this – something for the new year!
This time around I began my 100 day project on the ‘official’ start date and managed to complete 100 days in just that. I set my own rules and made them manageable this time – adding to an art journal I’d been dabbling in for a while took a lot of pressure off – so each day I just added a bit more.
Days add up to weeks add up to completed pages added up to 3 and a bit months of daily practice. These pages inspired my latest set of mini-print postcards.
2019 was book-ended by the Sketchbook Project.
Earlier in the year I completed my 2019 book, and to my amazement I finished my 2020 book before December 2019 was out. Each one is more elaborate than its predecessor, I think that goes to show how much I love making these books!
The first book was home to the characters, the imaginary friends & curious creatures, who collaborated with me to make my first ZINE that I published in December.
So the year ended as it began, in a delighted frenzy of gluing and doodling, as I assembled the pages of my 2020 Sketchbook project into this. It’ll be flying off to Brooklyn after the holidays, and another decade of making will commence.
.
Thank you!
Thank you all so much for joining me in this journey – your support means more than I can tell you. I hope I can keep spreading inspiration around the blogosphere and color around my pages for many more decades, and I hope you’ll be here too.
Big love to you my friends, I wish you a fabulous 2020 and beyond! X
If you’d like monthly updates on what I’m doing and making, sign up for my Studio Musings Newsletters. You’ll be first to see what I’m up to each month + you get 10% off everything in my Etsy store as a thank you for joining me ๐
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Part two of a look back at where my creative path has wandered since 2009
In the last 3 days of this decade I’m taking a stroll back along the timeline that brought me to where I am now. Join me tomorrow for the final chapter.
So much changes and evolves in the span of a decade. Curiosity lead me to look back at where my creative path has wandered since 2009… (catch part 1 here)
2013:
Mixed Media – Installations – Site Specific Art – Nest Building
Around this time I was exploring more of the cross over between my digital art and all the new skills I was developing in art school – digitally collaging images in photoshop, printing, then collaging these into art journals with more layers of drawing, printing, painting, buttons, beads and stitching on top. Bits of everything.
This is “nen nen ju shin ki“ – the relief collage I made for my second year project.
Art mirrors life. For all that was complicated and complex in my art, that chaos was mirrored in daily life. I’m looking back now and seeing it as the whirlwind it truly was.
I moved house right at the end of the school year, so my end of year show set up and nesting merged into one continual process of painting walls and shifting heavy stuff about, which took up most of my summer.
First step was bringing some necessary color to the new home!
Back to college at the end of the year, I started work on an installation for the spinal unit at a local hospital featuring a series of 16 portraits, all collaged from hand cut screen prints.
2014:
Animation, Word Drawing Installation, Graduation, Textiles.
I reached my final year at college, and my final major project was an enormous (over 20 feet long!) word drawing which ‘poured’ down the wall around a projected video animation / sound collage entitled “In Other Words”. More about this another time.
After college ended, nesting was front and centre of my attention. I’d acquired a gelli printing plate and was experimenting printing onto textiles to make soft furnishings with a mishmash of dying & printing with hand & machine stitching. And a LOT of colors. Obvs.
I began a gigantic (formerly floor length curtain) wall hanging. That’s still a work in progress, another story for another time. Multi-layered and colorful, but most importantly, really fun to make. Currently it looks like this
2015:
Online Learning, Collaborating with Nature, Video making, Altered Book.
Throughout 2015 I filled another art journal – this time at the rate of a page a week.
In January I enrolled in Connie Solera’s year long ‘IGNITE’ program, to learn about teaching online & mentoring. I published my first eBooks. Through this program I also met a group of women from around the world who I know will be lifelong friends.
In the summer I made a hanging sculpture from ivy and this video of it dancing in the woods.
As you know I love to sew, and play around with ideas. The idea came to make these funny little animals from scrap fabric. I made a big family of them for my friends, so most have flown from my nest. The last of these ones now live on my bookcase, awaiting the next generation to be stitched into life.
2015 is also the year I began playing with altered books and collage, and made my first (of so many) flip through videos.
2016:
Mentoring, Teaching, Travelling, always Learning.
This year I returned to the IGNITE program, this time as a peer mentor for a new group of students. In August I travelled to Washington and spent a week with some of the women I’d worked with online last year, I don’t have words to tell you how much I enjoyed being in their company and sharing creative time with these fabulous friends.
I taught my first online class about color as part of 21 Secrets, and began planning what was to be a 2 year project based on this to begin in 2017.
This is the first time I’ve looked back at these sketchbooks for a while – they’re filled with ideas I’ve gone on to develop without realising. Isn’t there something magical about the process of making sketchbooks and art journals, and in looking back years later.
These ideas are seeds I planted back then, which are now starting to bear fruit.
to be continued …. come back for the final part tomorrow!
If you’d like monthly updates on what I’m doing and making, sign up for my Studio Musings Newsletters. You’ll be first to see what I’m up to each month + you get 10% off everything in my Etsy store as a thank you for joining me ๐
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So much changes and evolves in the span of a decade. Curiosity lead me to look back at where my creative path has wandered since 2009.
In the last 3 days of this decade I’m taking a stroll back along the timeline that brought me to where I am now, and share some of the sketchbooks that came and went along the way!
So much changes and evolves in the span of a decade. Curiosity lead me to look back at where my creative path has wandered since 2009.
In the last 3 days of this decade I’m taking a stroll back along the timeline that brought me to where I am now, and share some of the sketchbooks that came and went along the way.
2009:
Digital Photography – Photoshop Collage – DeviantArt – Open University.
At the start of 2009 I began an undergraduate degree in Computing & Design the Open University. I’d been doing freelance web design for a couple years and wanted a qualification to give my self-taught-ness some legitimacy.
Meanwhile the thing that was really making my heart sing was digital art.
Photoshop found its way into my life almost a decade earlier when I was living in a small space and messy art wasn’t a practical option.
By 2009 I was getting back into drawing and watercolors. I’d spend my evenings doodling these intricate squiggles which I’d scan and add to my digital collages.
I got my first digital camera around this time, so wherever I went I gathered photos as ingredients for art – pictures of textures and shapes and colors, buildings and backgrounds, to layer up and ‘shop together into these dreamscape images. Around this time I was really active over in deviantart – it was the first time I felt like I’d found my tribe with other creatives.
2010:
Art School – – – a world of discovery.
Although Open University is almost all distance learning, there were a couple of evening tutorials held in at a local uni. The first time I went the entrance hall to the Uni building was filled with displays made by the fine art students.
I was utterly entranced.
While I love the tech side of things – I was devouring all the finely granulated minutiae of computing, and a degree was a solid addition to my adulting repertoire – none of it gave me butterflies the way that all the swirls of color that art exhibit did.
In September 2010 I went to school for real and began a foundation course in art & design,
I took on classes in drawing, painting with acrylics, ceramics, art history and print making. I started visiting galleries and museums, I started seeing with brand new eyes. After years of aimless drifting I stepped into the beginning of my current life.
I took my digital art and began adding paint, stitching, print and collage to it. My eyes were opened to a new world of possibility.
2011:
Screen Printing – Exhibitions – Daily Practice – Life turned upside down.
The first half of 2011 was taken up with college, taking classes in drawing, 3D design, graphics, I learned how to set up an exhibition space, and I fell utterly in love with screen printing.
The day after I finished at art school, I bought myself this sketchbook and a set of Brusho inks. It was to begin an almost daily practice of moving colors around, playing, experimenting, and letting my imagination wander about into the pages of a sketchbook.
Meanwhile, life as I knew it began falling apart around me. I lost my best friend – Queen of all Cats – Mooly.
Then in a few short weeks, the second year course at college was cancelled. I lost my mum. My car got written off. Father-in-law got really ill.
Life was a free fall into chaos.
I fell into making art.
Remember when selfies meant standing in front of the mirror and guessing if you were in shot? This was me & Queen Moo back in 2009.
2012:
Blogging – 12 colors in 12 months – paper dying – daily practice – mixed media – back to school again.
With all the change and chaos surrounding, I needed to make shape to my days, so early in 2012 I began a blog to document my art making.
I photographed and documented what I was making, playing with, experimenting, learning. I set myself the challenge to fill an art journal through the course of the year, each month focused on using just one color.
I was diving deep into the world of mixed media now and I tasked myself with spending some time each day exploring. Cue: the ‘page a day’ project.
In September my college classes resumed and I threw myself in. Our first project was entitled Memento Mori. Bittersweet but timely, one year to the day of losing mum I presented my first video project, which I made in her memory.
to be continued ….
If you’d like monthly updates on what I’m doing and making, sign up for my Studio Musings Newsletters. You’ll be first to see what I’m up to each month + you get 10% off everything in my Etsy store as a thank you for joining me ๐
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Folks, I’m making space to make more weird and wonderful art!
Help me to clear a bit of studio space by offering a home to one of the pieces in my Etsy store. Go on, you know you want to!Everything is 15% off this week, and I can send it to you wherever you are in the world.
2019 has been a cathartic year, I’ve cleared out a lot of mental cobwebs and actual clutter. I made a concerted effort to fill the spaces that gave way with juicy creative times, and to leave some unfilled. A space to breathe.
Here’s what my year has looked like month by month, and what’s been feeding my imagination
Here’s what the rest of my year looked like month by month, and what was feeding my imagination.
September
โShare what you love, and the people who love the same things will find you
2019 has been a cathartic year, I’ve cleared out a lot of mental cobwebs and actual clutter. I made a concerted effort to fill the spaces that gave way with juicy creative times, and to leave some unfilled. A space to breathe.
Here’s what my year has looked like month by month, and what’s been feeding my imagination
โIf you are not afraid of the voices inside you, you will not fear the critics outside you. Besides, those voices are merely guardians and demons protecting the real treasure, the first thoughts of the mind.โ
2019 has been a cathartic year, I’ve cleared out a lot of mental cobwebs and actual clutter. I made a concerted effort to fill the spaces that gave way with juicy creative times, and to leave some unfilled. A space to breathe.
Here’s what my year has looked like month by month, and what’s been feeding my imagination
2019 has been a cathartic year, I’ve cleared out a lot of mental cobwebs and actual clutter. I made a concerted effort to fill the spaces that gave way with juicy creative times, and to leave some unfilled. A space to breathe.
Here’s what my year has looked like month by month, and what’s been feeding my imagination.
January
โComing back to where you started is not the same as never leaving.โ
Art isn’t something you need an outside license or a paycheck to pursue. Itโs a way of life.
Itโs a way of adding up what you feel and where you’ve been and what you fear and what you can imagine. Itโs a way of seeing your life through a lens that makes everything โ good and bad, confusing and clarifying, uplifting and depressing โ valuable.
โA creative life is an amplified life. Itโs a bigger life, a happier life, an expanded life, and a hell of a lot more interesting life. Living in this mannerโcontinually and stubbornly bringing forth the jewels that are hidden within youโis a fine art, in and of itself.โ
These are the pages that have been brightening up my long dark days of winter. As weโve reached the shortest day Iโm calling this project finished and ready to move on to all that comes next. I canโt tell you how much fun I had with this book.
I fill these pages in the spare bits of time in between other things, so they become a visual stream of consciousness, garnished with bits of stuff, collaged scraps of whatever’s on my desk, they come to represent a snapshot of the season’s projects and ideas.
I scribble down words I hear in song lyrics, audio books and podcasts, there are phrases and words snipped from magazines, landing together to create found poetry and serendipitous sentences.
Faces emerge from the blobs of color, the torn paper shapes and the negative space in between.
It’s weird, it shouldn’t work, but it all seems to come together in a way I never could have predicted.
I canโt tell you how much fun I had with this book.
These are the pages that have been brightening up my long dark days of winter. As weโve reached the shortest day Iโm calling this project finished and ready to move on to all that comes next.
Iโll be sharing a full flip through video + a SPECIAL HOLIDAY GIFT that this book inspired with all the lovely peeps who get my newsletter this weekend.
Sign up here if you haven’t already done so (and then do check your spam hole cos sometimes the good stuff gets swept up into there by mistake)
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