Tuesday, February 22, 2005

New ways to be creative

From time to time I teach basic drawing at an elder club here in Silkeborg.
One of the most common problems people have when they start to draw, is to think of things to draw.

Actually you don't have to go through a lot of creative thinking, to draw creative drawings.
Normally I start a class by asking all in the class room, to pick the first thing they can reach in their bags or pocket. Then I ask them to do a quick sketch of their picked subject.

Some students are afraid not to draw perfect enough, but what is perfect, when is some thing perfect? I will ask the student to take two pencils, and draw a simple still life with both hands.
This still life will be less than perfect, but it will be very lively. I then ask the student to find a still life they did, drawing with only one hand, and then pick the best drawing. In many cases they will pick the drawing done with both hands.

It is always an good idea to change the way you draw or paint once and a while. I also have a rule about going some where new every week. You don't have to go fare, try laying up side down in your bedroom to see the room from a new direction, or try to clime a tree in your garden. You can find magic new worlds in your near by location if only you look for them!
Bring a sketchbook and/or a camera, so you can remember what you saw.

This is a list of ways you can change your way of working.

Draw/paint draw with a tree branch
Draw/paint in a new location
Draw/paint in dots
Draw /paint in a diffrent size and format
Draw/ paint outside in the moonlight, strong sunlight....
Draw / paint in a new medium
Draw/ paint doodling
Draw/ paint your thoughts and not what you see
Draw/ paint things you don't like
Draw/paint a smell or sound
Draw/paint by memory
Draw/paint up side down
Draw/paint the latest new in you news paper
Draw/paint feelings like love, hate...
Draw/Paint contrasts, small/large, dark/ light, strong/ weak, old/new, organic/geometric
Draw/paint close ups
Draw/ paint a rhythm
Draw/paint your own symbols
Draw /paint some thing broken
Draw/paint reflections
Draw/paint time
Draw/paint your dreams
Draw/paint a travel
Draw/ paint a story


The Persona - Masks

My Painting of "The Persona - Masks"

Well, here you go Heather, love - an image. This is part of a study I have been doing on Jung’s Archetypes. This is the Persona. Each one of the characters is a separate painting. I had a good time with the dresses and especially the masks. When I decided where I wanted to put them together, I decided on a dance studio because of the mirrors. Of course, the point being that there are these big banks of mirrors, but there are no reflections; this is part of the idea of the mask. I decided to place my paintings on a photograph rather than painting the studio, for contrast. I was very pleased with the effect that I got since the floor, windows and even ceiling are shiny and contrast with the muted softness of my characters. I was pleased with the way I managed to lay the characters in as well, the one in the Viking mask turned out looking huge, which was what I wanted, the girl with her hands on her waist pulls focus, which she should. All in all, I was very pleased with the way it turned out.
~ Winnie

Monday, February 21, 2005

The Muser's Muse

The word muse got me musing so I did a search on the word "muse" on google. I came across a site for song writers called Muse's Muse. Its chocked full of little tidbits on writing, dealing with writer's block, inspiration and all manner of people and links.

I am in the middle of Muse's Muse at the moment. My excuse is that I need to tap further into my creativity. Truth be known, I really have a more earthly excuse....I am really avoiding cleaning out the fridge!

Bobbi

Friday, February 18, 2005

How to Make Artist Scrapbooks

http://www.arts.ufl.edu/art/rt_room/sketchbk/make_a_sketchbook.html
The following directions offer a simple way to make a sketchbook. The pages for the sketchbook shown are 6-by-9 inches and are made by cutting 12-by-18 inch white drawing paper in half longways and then folding each page over.


http://www.angelfire.com/ma/pondart/sketchbooka.html
You need a cereal or cracker box, scrap paper to draw on, and scissors.
If you want to be able to add pages, you'll need a paper punch and yarn (or string).
If you want to just staple your sketchbook together, that's okay too!

http://www.arts.ufl.edu/art/rt_room/sketchbk/sketching.html
Most artists keep sketchbooks in which they experiment with ideas and collect drawings of their environment. Sketchbooks are like visual diaries for artists. Artists often use them for planning and developing their work.

http://drawsketch.about.com/od/sketchingsketchbooks/
Articles on sketchbooks and drawing lessons on your favorite subjects including nature and landscape, marine themes and flowers. Get ideas and inspiration for scrapbooks and journals.

http://jeffcoweb.jeffco.k12.co.us/isu/art/sketchbook.html
How to use the Sketchbook/Journal as an Instructional Strategy; for Standards and Student Performance Expectations

http://www.dwain.dk/skitsebog2003/how-sketchbook.htm
Why do artists keep sketchbooks, and what do they put into them?

http://www.princetonol.com/groups/iad/lessons/high/sketchbookHS.html
Sketchbook Ideas for
High School - Middle School

http://www.eggsbenedict.net/html/sketchbook.html
All artists keep sketchbooks. To improve your drawing you need to practice, and the sketchbook is the way to do it. Draw everything you see. Every Monday, your sketchbook will be checked to see if you have added any drawings since the previous week. You need to draw at least 11 sketches per week. Do not give up. Just keep churning out the drawings and you will see improvement.

http://www.utm.edu/stafflinks/dmcbeth/335sb.html
Sketchbook Assignments
Art 335 Ceramics
David McBeth
Spring 1999
General Observations about Your Sketchbook:
The purpose of these sketchbook exercises is to:

http://www.mystudentsrock.com/website/Sketchbook.htm
Sketchbook Assignment:

http://www.synergisticbooks.com/ecotopian.html
An alternative to coloring books, this invitation to draw, color, write, make collages, fantasize about creating a new world or just look was inspired by Ernest Callenbach's novel Ecotopia.
Marianne Mathiason

Art Scrap Sites and More

I found some interesting sites about art scrap

SCRAP is a creative reuse center
http://scrap-sf.org/

http://www.durwinrice.com/
Here you find lots of scrap clip art (great)

http://harrell.srhs.net/Parents/Scrap_Box/scrap_box.html
-Heather you need to see this list of scrap:

"As an art teacher, I ve received the most unusual donations for our
classroom. From 20 spoon ladles to burlap feed bags, these donations
havefed the creativity of several young artists. Since the art budget
is limited as to what can be ordered, I m requesting the following
items from parents,teachers, and the community. If there is a remote
possibility we can do something with it, then please bring them to
the art room 405 anytime between 7am 4:00pm. If we can't use it,
we'll either find someone who can or we will toss it.. lovingly.
Here s a list of just some of the materials that are handy in the art
room.

old shoes
keys
small and/or old soap bars
old mousepads
Plastic CD cases and CD-Roms especially the AOL kind that you get in
the mail
yarn - any kind or color - for weaving
scrapes of materials (cotton only)
beads
ribbon
wire coat hangers
pliers - any kind
old calendars
fascinating still life stuff - hats,
taxidermy, tools
old bones and animal skulls.
old blankets
unusual machinery
old machine parts
old coffee table art books
old animal books
old jewelry
old kitchen utensils- especially wooden spoons and rolling pins
sewing machine
magazines
canvas
burlap
zip lock bags


PCP pipe (under 1 )
leftover shades of white house paint (latex only, no oils)
tar/ felt paper (roofing)
candy molds
rope (any size)
old muffin pans
screen (fine mesh)
fishing line and clothesline
sequins, pearls, glitter, etc.
embroidery hoops
corks (fishing or wine, any kind)
books from hair stylists (full frontal faces and facial features)
sponges
electric skillets
odd saucers, cups, bottles, glasses for still life drawings
old silk flowers
feathers
anything you have 30 of...we can probably find a use for!
And of course, art supplies- old broken crayons, leftover dye,
pencils, paint, etc.
SRHS Web-site"

http://www.fulltable.com/SB/
Lots of weird and wacky pictures to peruse and enjoy

http://groups.msn.com/GardenJunk
If you are new you might spend a few minutes (hours? days?!!) looking
over our picture albums to get a feel for what we've been creating.
Bowling balls in the garden? Garden benches made from scrap? Yep,
plus birdbaths from clay pots and satellite dishes, birdhouses from
PVC pipe, lovely gazing balls made from bowling balls, old light
fixtures, even softballs! Wonderful hypertufa creations! You will
find amazing "recycled materials" art.

http://www.wipapercouncil.org/makepaper.htm
Paper is simple material. It is essentially a mat held together by
the fiber's roughness, and can be made from almost any fibrous
material like wood or recycled paper.

Marianne

Especially For Art Rat Packers

A very big thank you to all those people who have helped me compile this list of things to collect for my students at the three schools where I am working. Now I will be able to tell parents and teachers what we need in our scrap room. Of course, any further additions would be appreciated. It will also help me when I am making up my mini stashes for the Footprint Challenge. I had thought of some of these things. When stashes begin arriving a few people will find that I have also chopped up some old ties for their fabulous material.

Garden magazines (new in colour)
Seed catalogs
Seed bags
Books on nature from junk sales
Fashion magazines
Wrapping paper
Postcards
Ribbons
laces
glitter glue
Feathers
Fresh or dried flowers
Stamps
News papers
Silk flowers
textiles
My own photos
Oriental paper
Tea backs
Paper from candy and other kind of food
Things with an interesting texture like wood.
I place the paper over the textured subject, and rub with a pencil.

http://www.outsidethemargins.com/kidsab.html

Plastic netting for texture (we get onions in it here, maybe you get
something similar?)
seed pods, shells
pretty napkins
old birthday/xmas cards
leaves
dry twigs
buttons (!)
cancelled stamps from the mail
stickers that come in junk mail
mesh veggie bags (the ones that oranges, onions, potatoes come in)
shoe/boot laces -- love the leather ones
the free CDs that come in the mail (AOL offers, that type of thing)
dryer lint
egg shells (I love egg shell mosaics, tinted with food colouring -- make sure they are rinsed and dry)
watch parts and broken jewellery
the cellophane "windows" from boxes of pasta
slats from vinyl mini-blinds (these take and hold pencil and Sharpie markings very well. Cut to length, they also make excellent plant markers...write the name of the plant on it, and stick it in the pot or the ground)
pretty (or foreign language) labels from canned goods
soap wrappers (if you insist on using that store bought, mass produced stuff...*wink*)
brown paper grocery bags, especially the ones with handles that can also be used
funky yarn bits
handmade paper (or paper that looks like it)
Fabric paints
small metal charms
formica samples
unglazed tile pieces
plywood pieces to mount my Raku pieces on
glass beads
thread
dyeable fabric
glittery paint
copper wire
glass votive holders
old fashioned blue embroidery transfers (the sort our grandmothers
used to use!)
dress patterns
labels from everything
tickets (bus, train, cinema, theatre, sports events, etc)
maps
foreign and national bank notes and coins (coins and notes can be
scanned and coins can be rubbed with oencil over paper)
newspapers and magazines in foreign characters or languages
illustrations from old books
old letters, old documents, bills
playing cards, tarot cards, cigarette cards, the sort of cards that
kids swap with each other
cake doillies
handmade paper
interesting calligraphy
beads and sequins
knitting yarn, embroidery silks
laddered stockings or tights with textures or appliqués
leaf skeletons
grasses
seeds and seed cases

I don't think anybody listed "fortunes from fortune cookies", did they? I have a stash I collected over a period of ten years and they're just a-waitin for the perfect project. I also like clothing labels and "made in's" (made in Canada, made in Taiwan, made in China, etc). Instructions from shipping labels (this end up, fragile, throw underhanded, etc). Warning labels can be both illuminating and hilarious. Black and white photocopies of large, richly textured items are great. I've been trying to photocopy the cat but as yet he still won't go for it. I've never been one to throw out a perfectly good marble but I can't seem to keep track of them. Obviously. My most important collection, however, is a pile of damaged books from which I cut letters, words, phrases, and whole paragraphs. Other than the books, I have an enormous collection of odds and ends of the category-less sort that are never used. Stephanie

Many of the items suggested would be interesting to work into costumes as well. I have created costumes by putting together pictures of jewelry. I know one artist that is a master at creating costumes using all kinds of pictures from magazines. She can see the possibilities. Even used a picture of a plowed field as a dress and it looked like pleats! When I was teaching, I also had kids bring in stuff from home and had sent out a list of items such as egg cartons, foam meat trays, detergent bottles, old magazines, cartons from cereal,etc. I got so much it was a problem to store some of it, but certainly a help in doing a variety of projects. Sylvia

Funny I was just reading on http://www.sascolby.com/lesson/index.html about artists as pack rats... having just spent a delightful afternoon going through boxes and boxes of fabric that my neighbour's mum is discarding and then raiding the beach for twigs and sticks and logs and sea glass and....the other day I found three twisted rusted big old nails and want to so something along the lines of the "shipwrecks of our lives"...
Shena

Oh my DEAR! I have SOOOOO much more stuff than just what I've listed! I only listed what I thought others might not have thought of. I really should just box up my various collections and sell the damn things online. They're great, but they take up my space and taunt me MERCILESSLY to stop the work at hand and start scheming about a whole new line of artwork. Lord how they torment me those cool whatsits and thingamajigs! OH...and I must add "plastic caps off of water and pop bottles" to the list of collections. I mache them onto my bowls for feet. I also glue or tape them to pieces of cardboard to make...what should I call them?...not racks...but they act like racks for keeping a piece of mache work off the surface allowing me to work without the work-in-progress sticking to the worktable thus peeling off layers, and it set the work there to dry with the air being able to circulate underneath. I have white and blue plastic caps in every freakin drawer and shelf downstairs and sitting along all the window ledges. I'm not sure, you'd have to ask the cat, but I think they breed overnight when the lights are out. Stephanie

used telephone cards

expired credit cards - cut these up along the edges and use them to drag
through acrylic paint - gives wonderful textures

I was curious to see what kind of things people on the collage group would be collecting, so ask them for ideas and got some interesting new materials to add to our list. Some may be a bit too way out but then we can consider every possible category. Depends on our themes as to what might work for us.
Subject: Re: Things to collect for Collage

i meant to add: i've also photocopied mittens, pottery (not easy!), brushes, hair (my own, not the cats'), corners of rugs, kleenex boxes,ceramic tiles, antique tins, and a million other antique objects.

also those patterned thingies that go under the feet of furniture to protect a rug.
suggestion: do this at other houses that have photocopiers -- different stuff to choose from.

i use mostly small pieces of the images in the art. and then too many get covered with paint or other items and i want them back.
From: Nancy Bell Scott

Don't forget dryer lint....there's an artist hereabouts that wraps Barbie dolls in it. And my alltime favorite, smashed rusty bottle caps, but don't take them from my neighborhood parking lots...I want them for myself!

ever use miscellaneous pieces (slices, sort of like mica) of rust from, say,the bottom of a wagon that's been outside for a decade or three? one of my favorite finds. also, smashed eyeglasses from parking lots -- the kind where the frames have been run over by trucks forever. you're right, in fact, parking lots are some of the best hunting grounds. nancy

I recently decided to try some mosaic work, and being in need of tile,mirror and such in short order with no money, tried posting on Freecycle. I got six or seven offers and got some great materials that way. If you're asking for "junk" it's easier to get responses. I've never regretted collecting anything, but I've regretted throwing things away or not picking them up!
From: loel barr

Okay, since we're admitting our secrets....I've collected roadkill...very squashed and dehydrated by the time I found it... squished toad made a great little art piece, but I finally tossed out the squirrel. I had a fellow art classmate long ago called "Dead Dog Dave" who collected fresh road kill, cast it in plaster, then poured liquid clay into the mold to create pottery.

Here's an interview with another bizarre collector/artist I ran across: http://www.cafezeitgeist.com/andiview.html Oh--and maybe it's been mentioned here before, but a great movie is The Gleaners -- http://www.imdb.com/title/tt024738

I collect all kinds of things, such as:
1. Old buttons and clip-on earings from the thrift store
2. Plastic net bags that I get my shallots in
3. Egg cartons
4. Candy boxes
5. Rubbings (sometimes I just walk around with paper and a pencil and look for any and all textures that I can get rubbings from. You can use color pencils for variety. Sometimes you can get an
interesting embossement from a texture if you use an embossing tool. I have used wooden stirs and lollipop sticks as embossing tools, although I prefer the real tool)
6. Gourmet coffee labels and stickers (Starbucks has some cool ones)
7. Gourmet (micro-brewery) beer labels, box art, and bottle tops
8. Store catalogs (like Spiegle or Anthropologie)
9. Computer bits (like the non-functional motherboard my husband replaced in his computer)
10. Wire
11. Twine
12. I work in a framing shop and I constantly raid her recyclable garbage dor bits of matt board and foam-core board (which if anyone knows of a use for shards of glass, framing shops throw out a ton
of it)
13. Tissue paper
14. Old calendars
15. Old lace and doilies from the thrift store (you can also, often find bags of yarn, for cheap)
16. Mint tins (like altoids)
17. Old gift cards
18. Nylon screening from screens I have had to replace
19. Hoes and socks (a pair of nylon hoes around a bent hanger can be used as a screen for paper making)
20. Old hard cover books (like the Readers Digest Select
editions which are compilations of condensed contemporary novels, this is so I don't feel guilty for destroying/altering actual literature). Use a little gesso on the pages and you have a new journal to play with.

What do I do? Well, I have played with anything textile for around 15 years. I felt, dye, stitch, burn, glue, paint, bead, basically anything textile based. Sadly I hardly ever do anything
traditional, I like breaking rules far too much. Last year I started to play with paper, copper, wire etc. At the moment I am a full time student taking an 'access to art and design' course with a view
to starting a design crafts degree later this year. So far we have covered constructed drawing, designed the packaging for a face product, made clay tiles, sculptured a clay figure, constructed a 3d wire sculpture, card pop ups,life drawing, self portrait, still life painting and art history. At the moment I am carving an abstract figure from masonite, learning to use photoshop, trying to write a 2000 word essay on Manet.......and basically tearing my hair out. It is exciting, but extremely hard work!