Five friends learn composition, collage and beeswax

My friend Mary James organized a great private workshop for five friends at the Studio yesterday afternoon. We worked with vintage photos and beeswax. I really hadn’t worked with anyone but Mary before, but I loved every one of the participants! They were enthusiastic risk-takers – some first-time artists, some  with art backgrounds – all great students!

We followed my usual teaching sequence – explaining the AB3’s of composition, arranging the visual elements accordingly, layering and fusing wax and stamps and foil and – of course– spraying walnut ink to accent the incised lines. Some people brought photos of their grandmothers and mothers to work with – beautiful.

They got it all! You can see the incredibly individualistic results in this short video. Fun! Thanks, everyone, stellar work!

On being an artist ~ a gift from Cecelia

This whole experience has brought a whole new consciousness to the meaning of creativity. My awareness is that it is not a gift that was arbitrarily handed out to some lucky people. It is an inherent quality, which for good or ill, is constantly manifesting in every moment for everyone. ” ~ Cecelia Britton


On Sunday, the rain fell steadily on Beacon Hill, and artists were scrambling to find sheltered spaces in old fire stations and community centers for the annual Art Walk. The crowds were sparse, spirits were damp. Why the heck were we doing this? Why work many hours doing our best work for so little reward? Grumble.

When the show was over and I was back in my little Boston home-away-from-home, I discovered this astonishing essay in my email from friend Celelia Britton, beloved therapist and intuitive artist. She prefaced it with, “Dedicated to you, sweet friend.”

I love what you wrote, Cecelia, because it’s dedicated to ALL of us who are searching for (and finding) meaning through artistic creativity. After reading this, I resolve never to grumble again about being an artist and a teacher. Cecelia, thanks for giving me permission to share this personal and inspiring account.


Cute little girl drawing with pencils at lesson

Being an Artist
Cecelia Britton

   The energy in the studio is palpable. Anticipation brightens the eyes of the participants.  Excited chatter ripples in the air as we survey the space.  Individual supplies are arranged like dinner place settings around a large table in the center of the room.  Bins filled with art supplies line the perimeter.  Covering the walls and looking at us from every direction are samples of Lyn Belisle’s work- presentations of years of teaching, as well as her own personal endeavors. 

    Can I really do that? I question, as I survey multi-media collages, some similar to what we were to learn today.   

   I want to learn that, I’m thinking, as I see and touch fabric art in the form of spirit dolls and wall hangings. I am amazed at the many paintings in mediums of oils, acrylic, watercolor, and pencil.  Sculpture, displayed alone as well as incorporated into textured art, boxed collections and free-standing art pieces on shelves make up a plethora of creativity that inundates my senses.  I appreciate the range of expertise around me. I am buoyed by Lyn’s confidence that by the end of the day we could each proclaim we could draw!

    Me, an artist?  the voice in my head questions. My life experiences roll out in front of me, each frame declaring the opposite.  I am reminded of the many times my attempts produced nothing I wished to share or ever see again. 

    Like ghosts of Christmas past, I see my grandmother’s Crayola lesson instructing my four-year-old self to color in tiny circles, in the lines, colors only of a traditional reality.  No purple trees or orange houses allowed, thank you very much.  Her critical eye watches me follow her demonstration.

   I am in a new school.  An icy gray Alaskan winter hangs heavily outside the fluorescent lighting of the classroom.  Second graders are required to draw airplanes for this art assignment.  I observe the boys in the class, most likely future architects and engineers, gleefully and confidently launch into the project.  The intimidation of actually drawing something that could be identified as an airplane, paralyzes my ability to proceed.  I do not know how to move my hand across the art paper in front of me.  There are no models to copy and in that moment, I cannot even conjure up the memory of the plane that brought my family to Anchorage a week ago.  The prospect of failure makes me queasy as my stomach clutches anxiously.   The shame of the low grade it earns glares down at me as it is displayed around the room, an indictment of my failure as an artist.

    I receive a gift certificate as a Christmas present for a sculpting class at a local museum.  My forty-five year old self has spent the previous twenty-five years raising children, moving around the country with my husband’s career, and then helping him pursue his dream of having his own business.  I am initially excited about stepping into exploration of new territory.  On the first day of class I discover, as introductions are exchanged, that I am the only student who is not making a living as a professional artist.  I immediately feel intimidated and my heart sinks.  To my dismay, I am will not be using my hands to touch and mold the clay as I had imagined.  Instead, I will be removing clay from my block with a knife to reveal the model’s body within it.  I look around at the realistic likenesses the other students are producing.  I can’t wait to destroy the evidence of my ineptness as soon as I complete the course.

     As we are about to start Lyn’s class, this reverie of self-condemnation comes to an unceremonious halt.  I have dropped my graphite pencil from my supplies and as I lean too far to retrieve it, my chair tips, toppling me to the floor in a dramatic thud.  After assuring myself and others in the room that I have no pain or injury, I smile inside as I realize what message I have given myself.  A more heralding positive voice is attempting to gain my attention.  I listen to the prompt to stop my negative self-talk.  I decide to give full attention to the present moment. I resolve to allow my seventy-two-year-old self to simply experience the learning, letting go of needing approval from myself or others.

    The hours seem to evaporate throughout the afternoon.  I move through each phase of my art piece in appreciation.  I do not feel intimidated by the efforts of others in the class.  Lyn moves through the room, a butterfly pollinating her flowers.  I welcome her experienced eye as she assists me in my composition.   Even though my own pace is generally slower and measured, I relax any frustration about the press of a definitive class schedule.  I am proud of not only the technical skill of my piece but also what it reveals about me during the show-and-tell at the conclusion of the day.

    Now, I have a small and eclectic gallery of art from seven different classes.  I have been moving each piece around my home so I can experience where each would like to live.  The original trepidation has no say or sway over how I feel.  My friends report that I look like a woman in love, literally glowing with the pleasure of each artistic experience.  Pure child-like joy has replaced the old internal tapes of self-loathing, shame, and competitive envy that characterized my sense of an artistic self.           

    I have reached some conclusions about the nature and meaning of creativity.  My awareness is that it is not a gift that was arbitrarily handed out to some lucky people. It is an inherent quality in everyone, which for good or ill, is constantly manifesting in every moment in the unfoldment of life.    Art is the process of consciously bringing forward my own inner landscapes.  Technical skill cannot define it and should never deprecate it.  It’s simply a learning curve.  

   I can grow because art, by its nature, is about evolution. What is conceptualized may find varied avenues into meaningful expression.  What comes out through all art-culinary, canvas, lenses, pages, sculpture, flower arrangements, and beyond-is Spirit informing me where my attention is.  If I can allow myself to hear that Inner Voice in a climate of curiosity, there are a wealth of treasures possible.  I might be expanded, entertained, awed, and possibly fascinated by an Alice-in-Wonderland complexity of my psyche. I may unearth nightmares available for healing, latent talents, suppressed feelings and emotions, or unknown dreams.     

    If I regress into old thinking, I am emboldened enough and have the capacity to laugh in its face, knowing that I have nothing to fear in the process of knowing myself.  It is, after all, fodder for my next expression. It is not unlike the broken jewelry, leaves, sticks, scraps of paper, cut-outs from magazines, etc.-all formerly considered junk-now repurposed in the next project.  I am ecstatic about my journey. This road to my authentic self is rich with satisfaction and worthy of my exploration.  My inner child agrees and is giggling with delight that I have responded to her beckoning to come out and play.

 

Cute little girl drawing at lesson and smiling

 

 

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Kintsugi and Boro – fusion and inspiration

Celebrating the imperfect, the time-worn, and the re-invented resonates deeply with me, probably because I am a combination of all of those things. That’s why the Japanese arts of Boro and Kintsugi are so appealing. Boro, a Japanese word meaning “tattered rags,” describes lovingly patched and repaired cotton bedding and clothing used much longer than the normal expected life cycle.

Boro is enjoying a revival among fiber artists who treasure its indigo blue color and melange of textures and subtle patterns. In fact, the Fiber Artists of San Antonio are offering a Boro workshop taught by Mary Ruth Smith in July.

A Japanese houshold Boro textile

Linked to Boro by concept is Kintsugi, meaning “mended with gold.” It refers particularly to the Japanese method for repairing broken ceramics with a special lacquer mixed with gold, silver, or platinum.

The Kintsugi process usually results in something more beautiful than the original.

The Kintsugi process usually results in something more beautiful than the original.

Both Boro and Kintsugi are interwoven with the philosophy of wabi-sabi, which means “to find beauty in broken things or old things. ” See why I like this stuff so much?

So today at the Studio, I was putting away materials from our Citrasolve and altered paper collage workshop, and I started thinking about torn paper scraps (Boro) mended with gold (Kintsugi). I printed out the word “kintsugi” and began arranging Boro-like tatters of paper (they would probably have been dumped in the trash) onto 8×10″ pieces of archival mat board.

Then, inspired by the gold veins of Kintsugi, I “mended” the spaces between the scraps with gold leaf. It was amazing how fast time flew – I created five of these collages in about four hours. They almost pieced themselves together.

Here are the five collages – #3 is my favorite because it looks most “Boro-like.” These pieces are destined for the Beacon Hill Art Walk this Sunday, but when I come home from Boston, I’m going to continue to explore the idea of gold-mended tatters and the beauty of imperfection and re-invention.

Mended with Gold #1 Lyn Belisle 2016

Mended with Gold #1
Lyn Belisle 2016

Mended with Gold #2 Lyn Belisle 2016

Mended with Gold #2
Lyn Belisle 2016

Mended with Gold #3 Lyn Belisle 2016

Mended with Gold #3
Lyn Belisle 2016

Mended with Gold #4 Lyn Belisle 2016

Mended with Gold #4
Lyn Belisle 2016

Mended with Gold #5 Lyn Belisle 2016

Mended with Gold #5
Lyn Belisle 2016

 

 

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Smell this . . . . . .ahhhhhhh

GINGERGRASS

 

Raise your hand if you know about aromatherapywow! That’s more people than I thought! It’s a wonderful practice, one that I’ve taught since 1990. Shortly after that, my biochemist friend Dr. Bill Kurtin and I began work on a new educational aromatherapy website called Chemaroma. We’ve just updated and expanded it, and we’re really excited about it. We may even get to participate in the National Association of Holistic Aromatherapy conference later this year.

logosmall copy copy

So what’s in it for you? First of all, there are a bunch of free resources on the Chemaroma site, including a recipe called Stinky Sneaker Zapper that makes your track shoes smell like lavender. There are also some neat skin care recipes and such. And you can get essential oils at Whole Foods and Sprouts. There is even a special essential oil for creativity called Clary Sage – I’ll tell you about that one later. Essential oils are easy and fun, and you don’t have to be an aromatherapist to experience them.

So, if you want to experiment, here’s one of my favorite ways to use  essential oils – an aromatherapy bath salt project. I made this video about three or four years ago. Once you make these artistic little bath salt packets, you can use them for gifts, for craft markets, or just to store in your linen closet or underwear drawer until you are ready to open them and use them in the bath tub or shower 🙂 They make lovely aromatic sachets.

Got questions about aromatherapy? Visit Chemaroma or just email me. And the first person to contact me through the Chemaroma home page gets that packet of Gingergrass Bath Salts at the top of this post. Happy Friday!!

The serendipitous landscape of fantasy

Landscape collages in progress

Landscape collages in progress

Now THIS is one of my all-time favorite workshops – perfect for any level, full of serendipity, with absolutely gorgeous results. Here’s how I described the workshop online:

Using the technique of DÉCHIRAGE (day-shur-ah j’) – distressed paper collage –  students will gain a solid grasp on composing little landscapes using a variety of altered papers, natural elements, and mixed media special effects. Lyn will also share art-enhancing framing suggestions that compliment your finished work so that your final display is both appealing and professional looking. Even a total beginner can create a stunning artwork with these fun distressed paper techniques.

Yesterday’s participants in the Altered Paper Landscape Abstractions class rose to the occasion with some stunning work. Some people created several collages, some just one, but all were beautiful and individual. The hardest part was choosing which piece to mat for display.

I loved this comment from Ellen, “I got frustrated because couldn’t make it do what I wanted it to do, but when I let it do what it wanted, I loved it!!” Talk about trusting the creative process – when you let go and accept the beautiful, unpredictable results, magic happens.

Take a look at the video, below, and then I’ll give you the list of materials for this project.

Lyn Belisle’s Altered Paper Landscape Collages: Materials List and Source Notes

For the basic collage:

  • A 5×7” piece of matboard, illustration board, or very heavy card stock
  • Glue sticks
  • Scissors
  • Walnut Ink from
    Tsukineko
  • Altered paper (see below)
  • Metal leaf
  • Stamps and inkpad, your choice
  • Lightweight paper to rub down elements as they are glued
  • Metallic felt tip pens and ultrafine Sharpie (optional)

For the altered paper:

  • Citrasolv orange oil-based cleaning solvent
  • National Geographic magazines or other clay-base ink photos – I encourage you to experiment

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Sources of materials:

  • Mat board scraps can be purchased or requested for free at most frame and craft shops. Look for ones that are dark colored with white on the back for the most versatile design options
  • Citrasolv is becoming widely available in art stores because of this popular altered paper method. You can usually find it at organic grocery stores such as Whole Foods, as well. Online: Citra Solv is now being sold through Cheap Joes, Jerry’s Artarama, Stampington, and DickBlick
  • Tsukineko Walnut Ink is very versatile for many projects and can be ordered from Imagine Crafts, the Tsukineko distributor:
  • I use Scotch permanent glue sticks, but most good brands will do nicely
  • Metal leaf is available in craft stores or can be ordered here on Amazon.com

If you want a very in-depth look at this process, including other altered papers such as “ghost paper” with bleach on black construction paper, I have a DVD called Small Worlds, published by Artful Gathering, that offers an intense discussion of how-to-do-it instructions, videos and demos. Happy new week, All!

sw

Quebradillas: a feast for the senses – there’s an app for that

quebra

I am so proud to be a part of this amazing project! Two years in the making, Quebradillas is a fusion of poetry, intimate audio readings, and gorgeous photos developed in the style of a coffee table book but accessible on your iPad. In a word, it’s stunning. You can purchase it here for only $4.99 – but truly, Quebradillas is priceless!

johnlynscott

Me, Quebradillas author John Dickey, and photographer Scott Taylor at a meeting in my studio in 2015

John Dickey, a dear friend, came to me with this idea about two years ago. He had written a lovely and reflective book of poems titled Quebradillas, inspired by his home in Puerto Rico, and wanted to combine them with photos taken by his son-in-law, photo artist and world-traveler Scott Taylor. I knew just enough to design the epub layout in InDesign and worked closely with John and Scott putting the visuals together. John recorded each poem in his wise, endearing voice.

Larry Ketchersid, app wizard

For turning the concept into reality, we enlisted the invaluable help of Larry Ketchersid, honco at JoSara Media. I had met Larry through another friend, author Bob Flynn and knew he’s be perfect for the job. Larry broke new ground developing Quebradillas in app form, adding an audio file for every poem and making each page glide smoothly across the gorgeous photos.

I hope you will look at the app. I hope you will buy it and show it to your friends! I hope you will cherish the poems and the photos as I do. It’s been an extraordinary collaboration – please share 🙂

Here are two of my favorite poems from Quebradillas – hearing John read them on my iPad is a double delight. And for you non-techies, there may be a hardcover version in the near future! Stay tuned.

Q1 Q2

 

 

 

 

 

Rainy day re-discovered books, and FF winner

Does this sound familiar? You’re looking for a particular book in your overcrowded art book stash, and you find one or two that you forgot you even bought. You check them out – hey, wow! These are good! Just what you were looking for and didn’t even know it! Serendipity strikes again.

That just happened to me on this rainy stay-in morning, so I’m sharing these with you – the first one is Mixed Media Books by Gabe Cyr. It is a treasury of mixed media ideas, and not just for re-imagined books.

The Tools and Material section alone is worth the price of the book, including a great page on adhesives with a chart comparing and contrasting different ways to stick stuff to other stuff. And the photos are drool-y.

Mixed Media Books by Gabe Cyr

Mixed Media Books by Gabe Cyr

 

It's about more than just altered books

It’s about more than just altered books

 

There's a nice section on collaboration

There’s a nice section on collaboration

 

The second is a book published in 2010 by Annie Lockhart called Objects of Reflection: A Soulful Journey through Assemblage. Annie Lockhart’s recent work is based on Soulful Painting, but this is all about collections and construction.

This book is wonderful for anyone doing assemblage because it has maps and legends of the components. And it has another invaluable section on joining things together. The book is printed on tan paper with monochromatic photos – interesting.

Prompts and inspirations

Prompts and inspirations

A legend of components

A legend of components

Objects of Reflectin by Annie Lockhart

Objects of Reflectin by Annie Lockhart

One big fat request: I’m giving you the Amazon links so you can “look inside” but if you want to order these books, please PLEASE check first with your independent book store and see if they have them or can get them for you!!  If you’re in San Antonio, here’s a link to The Twig Book Shop.

And now – tah dah – the winner of the Cat Starter Kit Friday Freebie is – – – – – Carlos Haun. Carlos, email me about how to collect your Shaman Kitty kit.

kitphoto

 

Cat Shamans, a serendipitous surprise kitten and a Friday Freebie

catshaman

Meow —  and Happy Friday. Yesterday was all about cats.

I’m teaching a class called The Mystical Cat Shaman at Artful Gathering this summer, and a group of local friends wanted to try it out. So we scheduled a custom weekday workshop held yesterday (you can do this too, by the way) and created a litter of Mystical Cat Shamans at the Studio!

The “serendipitous surprise” came as we were just starting. Roxanne was late, and she called in with a voice message, “Can you hear in the background why I’m not there yet?”  We all heard kitten mews on the speaker – adorable!

She brought the newly-rescued three-week-old kitten to the workshop and we took turns holding it while we worked. Roxanne is a consummate animal rescuer – she even had some kitten milk replacement formula with her. The little guy was pretty hungry.

Of course, the kitten found a home before the workshop was over. Whether it was the kitten surprise or the group energy, the Cat Shaman creations were amazing – each one different, each one magically personal. Take a look.

So if all of this inspires you, be sure that you are subscribed to SHARDS by midnight on Sunday. One name will be drawn to win the Friday Freebie – a Shaman Cat Starter Kit complete with Heart Box body and kiln-fired earthenware head, ready to finish. Even “dog people” are eligible, so feel free to share this post. Hmmm – are Dog Shamans in my future?

kitphoto

 

 

Glittering banner celebration on Mothers Day

“Everything in nature bespeaks the mother. The sun is the mother of earth and gives it its nourishment of heart; it never leaves the universe at night until it has put the earth to sleep to the song of the sea and the hymn of birds and brooks.” ~Kahlil Gibran

Yesterday’s Goddess Banner/Prayer Flag workshop was a different kind of Mothers Day celebration. We created personal statements in fiber with dyeing, surface design, phototransfer, handwritten quotes and personal iconography. It was a celebration of the idea of nurturing the spirit of Mother Earth – and we had a really fantastic time!

OK, so I don’t usually use glitter in my workshopstoo darn frivolous, right?not this time! We glittered our banners, our gloves, our faces (inadvertently) – it looked like a Tinkerbell convention. And every single work was beautiful and heartfelt.

Even though some of us had kids who were far away, the Studio was a real place of creative belonging yesterday. What an experience! Take a look at our video:

2016 National Juried Photo Encaustic Exhibition

“Untitled” © Kathryn Oliver

Clare O’Neill has pulled together a fascinating and eclectic exhibit that goes a long way in defining the relatively new art genre, “Photo Encaustic.”

As juror of  the 2016 National Juried Photo Encaustic Exhibition, Clare writes, “This newest exhibition of photo encaustic work beautifully blurs the lines between photography and painting; melding together what the camera captures with the vision of the what the artists sees.”

The show opens on June 2 at the Sage Gallery in Portland, Oregon.

D is for Dragonfly © Darren Terpstra

Michelle Belto introduced me to encaustic painting several years ago (thanks, Michelle!). And then I worked with Clare in her online class in January of 2015. With her guidance, I was able to craft a personal encaustic style that worked well for me. Clare and I became friends, and her sold-out classes at my Studio this past January were hugely inspiring to all of us. It’s an exciting medium with unlimited possibilities for both the photographer and the painter.

“No Good Outcome” © Lyn Belisle

I’m delighted to be included in the 2016 National Juried Photo Encaustic Exhibition Michelle Belto’s work is included as well. You can see all of the selected works on this page. It’s obvious that the old chicken-and-egg question applies – “which came first?’ – did the medium inspire the image or did the image call out for the medium? Fun stuff.

“Soul Boxes” © Michelle Belto

If you’d like to know more about Clare’s photoencaustic workshops, here’s a link. I’m also teaching three encaustic workshops in August which have sold out, but I’ll be added a second session of Vintage Veils: Encaustic Photocollage on Saturday, August 13th. It isn’t listed yet on my Workshop Calendar, but if you’d like a spot, email me and I’ll put you on the list.

Now  get out your camera and melt some sweet-smelling warm beeswax to enhance your images!