Something new...

I have adopted a few new practices that I wanted to share with you....

 

the new daily journaling technique 

the new daily journaling technique 

  • As I mentioned in the last blog post, I am enrolled in the 2015 Year of the Spark with Carla Sonheim and Lynn Whipple. One of the techniques that Carla has shared is her practice of daily note taking and or journaling. I have adapted it a bit to fit my needs on a given day. The technique is to divide the daily page into small sections. It's less overwhelming then a big blank page and I can adapt the sections to meet my needs on a given day. 
  • I have started several different practices to help me move my work in a natural and authentic way. I do this periodically to confuse those creative muscles. I wrote some random themes or imagery impressions on small pieces of paper and folded them up and mixed them together in a small container (photo below). I then might pick two or three of these themes and see what imagery ideas come to mind. For example; what might an Indian-themed circus quilt illustration look like? I also pick a few of the 'object' cards to see if it might work in a composition. For example, I might pull a "skeleton key" card and try to see if that shape might work in the piece. Just to shake things up. 
  • I've been brainstorming ways to rethink my typical go-to composition comfort zone. To do this, sometimes I just browse on Pinterest to look at other artist's work. To see how they solve a problem of telling a story or highlighting shape or movement. I look at how they use the edge of the piece. Do they always follow the 'rules' of Classical balance? If not, why does it work anyway? This past week I was brought back to a composition concept that I have long been drawn to: the map or aerial view.

Two artists came to mind when I began my research and brainstorming about this perspective: 

First, is Barbara Neulinger, Barbara was a fellow Skidmore College art student with me. She was a few years older than me and I always admired her work. I remember Barbara doing a series of works all done from the perspective of a bird (it seemed) looking down on urban roof tops. I loved the abstraction of her perspective - so far from the way I was thinking about composition at the time. 

Second, is an Australian artist named Marina Strocchi  that brings to my mind garden maps. She uses flattened perspective that is rich with pattern and folk imagery. Her palette is limited, highlighting the simplicity of shape and repetition. 

I have always been fascinated by maps, particularly illustrated maps. Perhaps this is the influence of my father's long career in civil engineering. I learned how to read a map almost before I could read. I have been collecting images of maps and aerial perspectives on a Pinterest board for a while now, not knowing if and when the influence of these images would pop up. 

a page from my sketchbook...brainstorming flattened perspective/map-like composition 

a page from my sketchbook...brainstorming flattened perspective/map-like composition 

How do you shake up your way of working...in the studio, kitchen, garden, computer? 

 

 

                                             

I have a subscribe button!

It's been on my "to do" list for months...and I've done it! Please subscribe to my blog posts by clicking over there on the right on the SUBSCRIBE button and join me in this process of creativity and occasional angst! 

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I have signed on to take the 2015 Year of the Spark class with Carla Sonheim and Lynn Whipple

My goals for the class are to loosen up and have fun trying new things and meeting new friends. I look forward to seeing how this experience informs my new work this year. 

I am looking forward to the four commissions I have on my schedule in the next few months.

I am also thrilled to announce that I will be speaking at the Nantucket Historical Association's Whaling Museum in June. I worked at the Main Street Gallery on the island back in the mid-late '80's when I was a college student. It was while working at the gallery that I fell in love with an artist's works of formal, realistic oil portraits of farm animals. I have held these portraits in my imagination, knowing that some day I would do large portraits of animals. The Beasts series is a result of this goal and returning to Nantucket to give back to the community that brought me so much joy is something I am so very grateful for. 

I hope to begin writing a book proposal about the various ways I have used tissue paper in my work over the past eight years. 

What are your goals for 2015? 

Advent Doodles

On December 1st I decided, very impulsively, to post an advent doodle a day on Facebook and Instagram. I have enough sketches and little quickly rendered illustrations in my sketch books to do all 24 days, so why not? It has really been fun and I have had a great response to them! 

I will be adding more images to this gallery every so often until Christmas. Follow me on Facebook or Instagram to get them fresh daily!

Reminder: I will be having a meet-up at the Hanover Theatre to view my Beasts show on December 30th @ 10am. If you are local to Worcester, MA - please join us! 

Sold!

The Beasts are moving! 

https://www.facebook.com/ARTSWorcester/photos/a.161538257381967.1073741828.152418468293946/319934204875704/?type=1&fref=nf

I am thrilled to announce that there are now three sold pieces in the Beasts show at the Hanover Theatre ! I am also happy to announce that I will be having an informal meet-up for people who would like to view the show with me on December 30th at 10 am. The address of the theatre is: 2 Southbridge Street in Worcester, MA. The gallery room is not open to the public, you must be accompanied by either myself or someone from ARTSWorcester (508-755-5142). 

"Antongil Bay Humpback Whale" 36" x 72" diptych Acrylic, gouache, watercolor, ink, vintage papers and hand embroidery on tissue paper. SOLD

Following my compass

It’s easy to keep track of art by what art is NOT. It’s not following a manual, reading a Dummies book, looking for a map. It tends to be people who are working with a compass instead who have an understanding of true North and are willing to solve a problem in an interesting way. - Seth Godin

I love the radio program On Being with Krista Tippett  and I was up early this morning to hear this personally auspicious interview. Seth Godin has been dancing around the periphery of my conciosuness as someone I was going to get to reading, listening to, etc... This morning was my day to hear his message and it could not have been at a more important time. I am the student who is ready for this teacher.  

Although I have had the experience of going with my gut, pushing something out into the world or into a relationship, not knowing what the outcome will be and not letting that stop me many times, I still needed to hear his message today. I once had a friend who told me she admired my ability to "push the boat out", to take a chance that I would be rejected or taken advantage of for my vulnerability. I wasn't sure that was a strength. Maybe it's fool-hardy? Maybe it's childish? Or maybe that makes me an artist. Every artist has his/her audience that will meet them half way and gain joy, wisdom and or food for thought from their voice. But we can't find our audience if we stay in our dark, safe corners. We have to put it out there, knowing that some will wrinkle their noses and keep walking. It's the ones that stop and pause long enough to say, "tell me more" that we make our art for. It's connection, even on small scales, that lead to an eventual wider audience and help us find our tribe. 

To everyone who came to my website or is reading  my blog because something about what I am doing resonates with you - thank you! You are my tribe and I am yours. Tell me more. 

Here is the link to this interview between Krista Tippett and Seth Godin: http://onbeing.org/program/seth-godin-on-the-art-of-noticing-and-then-creating/5000 

 

"Kerinci Tapir" 30" x 30" Acrylic, gouache, tissue paper, vintage papers, graphite and hand embroidery on tissue paper on wood panel. $1600.00

Visual Scavenger Hunt

The opening reception for the "Beasts" series show at the Hanover Theatre in Worcester, MA was wonderful and exciting and overwhelming. I was, however, struck by something while showing a few individuals my show this past week. I wonder whether much of the pertinant messages of the works may have been lost that big night. I have developed a sort of visual scavenger hunt to try to highlight some of the themes that are woven into the fabric of the works. If you are local to Worcester,Ma and would like to meet up with me at the theatre to see if you can find the elements I list below please contact me and we can arrange a time. The gallery room where the show hangs is off limits to the general public but a meeting with the ArtsWorcester staff (508-755-5142) or myself (janemhoughton@gmail.com) can be arranged to gain access to the show. 

"New Haven" 12" x 12" Acrylic, gouache, ink, vintage papers, tissue paper and hand embroidery on tissue SOLD 

 

Incorporated into the pieces are reminders of our shared cultural values. These values butt up against the industrial and financial practices our community and political leaders carry out. These practices impact life for all of us on this planet we share and sometimes run counter to one another. It is this tension that I elude to throughout many of the pieces in the "Beasts" series. Can you find examples of them in the pieces? 

 "Humans are a cultured and civilized species" 

  • find a tea party set with china cups
  • find wallpaper patterns featuring abstracted natural beauty. Ask yourself where this type of wallpaper is often found.
  • Can you find the evidence of hand written letters and cherished literature? What habits of life from the past do we still practice and what has replaced them? 

"Religion gives us our guidance to be godly beings"

  • find a Madonna-like figure
  • find a Tree of Life image (used by Christian teachers of Biblical stories during the Spanish Conquest) 
  • find Mandalas (used as a mediation tool by Buddhist practitioners) 
  • find a pagoda (used in most East Asian communities as a religious structure) 

"Commerce brings wealth to all layers of society" 

  • how many pieces contain vintage food labels and advertisements?
  • how many food labels that you find would not be possible without the work of the honeybee and other pollinating insects?
  • can you find Monopoly money? 

"We value our heritage, often handed down through folk arts and hand made traditions" 

  • Can you find traditional design patterns from African tribal dress?
  • Can you find evidence of hand embroidery? 
  • Can you find vintage sewing patterns?

"We feed the hungry and heal the sick"

  • Can you find food stamps?
  • Can you find examples of endangered plants and trees often used in traditional medicines and researched for their healing properties? 

"We make sense out of chaos in order to understand our world" 

  • Can you find places that I used a grid pattern to mimic the categorization of species and specimens often found in Natural History museums and laboratories? 
  • Can you find illustrations cut from vintage text books and field books of insects and birds and plant life? 

...and finally, how many endangered and at risk species can you name? 

I am planning a meet-up at the gallery in the Hanover Theatre on December 30th at 10am. 

Please join me to view the show and search for these and other clues in the works! 

Opening night!

The opening of the Beasts series at the Hanover Theatre was a big success ...or at least that is what the Curator and Board at ArtsWorcester tell me. I was too overwhelmed and over joyed to pause long enough to take it all in. My daughter surprised me by flying in from Colorado and my dear friend Karen from Chicago. My aunt and uncle and cousin flew in from Denver. My sister-in-law and niece and nephew came from Vermont. Many, many local friends and friends of ArtsWorcester and the community arrived to celebrate the evening with us as well. My reaction to my far flung relatives making such expensive efforts to come lend their support was, "It's just a bunch of paintings on the wall!" 

It's a surreal experience to welcome a crowd into the previously intimate relationship between myself and "the zoo". It's wonderful and exciting to share the experience of the work with strangers and long time friends. It feels miraculous when someone shares their insight into the work and it hits the nail right smack dab on the head.

"The portraits remind me of the regal portraits that hang in great halls" 

"I find myself being sucked into the little worlds you have created in each piece" 

*photo credit  - Natalie Ackerman

*photo credit  - Natalie Ackerman

*photo credit - Natalie Ackerman 

*photo credit - Natalie Ackerman 

I am grateful for the opportunity to share this series with the community of the Hanover Theatre and I look forward to hearing more about what people come away with. 

Please contact me @ janemhoughton@gmail.com or the staff at ArtsWorcester 508-755-5142 to make an appointment to view the series which will hang until the end of February 2015. 

"creating small worlds"

Update from my messy and busy studio : 

in process detail: " tail feathers" from the Green Peahen piece - the final piece before I hang the "Beasts" show

in process detail: " tail feathers" from the Green Peahen piece - the final piece before I hang the "Beasts" show

I have been spending many many long hours in my studio stitching and painting in order to finish all my ten pieces for the "Beasts" show that will hang on the 27th (in a week) and open on November 10 at the Hanover Theatre in Worcester, MA. The hardest part is to remain focused and level-headed. I find it's easy to loose perspective when I am working under this much pressure as I ignore the other roles (mother, wife, friend, as well as my three other part time jobs) in my life. I guess I wouldn't have it any other way. Sleep is for sissies. 

A friend on Facebook recently described the above vignettes as me, "creating small worlds for all of (us) to fall in to" ... I love it ! That simple encouragement kept me going as the tired voices in my head tempt me off track. That comment tells me that actually I am exactly on the path I have chosen and I just need to keep going. 

When a butterfly flaps its wings...

Last weekend I drove south to Madison, NJ to my dear friend's new community book store/art gallery/community gathering spot: Short Stories. Barb invited me to be her first art show and I am honored to be in such a vibrant and beautiful space! If you are in the area please stop by and offer Barb and her team some support. If you are not in the area but want to support the idea of a small town book store please visit her Kickstart site. You never know what Barb's efforts will spark in other parts of the country or world. You may have heard about the concept put forth in a talk by Edward Lorenz ; he discussed the phenomena where a large storm can have it's origins in the flapping of a butterfly's wings in a far away part of the world, months before. 

Barb Short and I in front of a showing of some of my smaller, whimsical works. 

Barb Short and I in front of a showing of some of my smaller, whimsical works. 

I continue to work away to complete my "Beasts" series before it hangs at the Hanover Theatre in Worcester, MA on October 27th (opening on November 10th). Currently, I am embroidering the bugs, moths and butterflies that will be placed on "The Meek" piece. 

in process - stitching bugs 

in process - stitching bugs 

In process "The Meek" diptych 

10/11/2014:update ... I completed some of the "bugs" this week

detail: monarch   Embroidery on tissue paper 

detail: monarch   Embroidery on tissue paper 

Calloplophora graafi (NOT endangered) 

Calloplophora graafi (NOT endangered) 

in process detail - Luna Moth, Garden Tiger Moth - both not endangered. Still on the sheet of tissue paper it was embroidered on: the Blue Butterfly which was successfully reintroduced to Britain after being listed on the endangered list. 

in process detail - Luna Moth, Garden Tiger Moth - both not endangered. Still on the sheet of tissue paper it was embroidered on: the Blue Butterfly which was successfully reintroduced to Britain after being listed on the endangered list. 

embroidered "bling" to be placed on "The Meek" piece  - had such fun with these! 

embroidered "bling" to be placed on "The Meek" piece  - had such fun with these!