Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Guildess volunteers at Daystar

Well, here I am almost two weeks without a blog post. I guess that's what happens when you decide to go entirely handmade for the Holidays. Instead of posting photographs of all the wonderful handmade items, I would like to highlight a volunteer project I worked on this Holiday season.



















As co-directors of Guildess, a Contemporary Female Artist Guild, Ashley Gustafson and I wanted to develop a simple project to extend a helping hand this time of year. Our dreams of the Holidays have never been without family, food and gifts, but for some they lack all three. As a way to remain true to our artistic background, we developed a project that involved artists from our local community. We sent out a call for artists to create handmade Holiday greeting cards and mail them to us. Our goal was to hand these out a local soup kitchen or shelter with a batch of warm cookies. After a few phone calls, we found ourselves setting up a date and time to visit Daystar, a local transitional shelter program for formerly battered women. Daystar provides shelter and support services to survivors of domestic abuse that allows them to regain their confidence and self-esteem and to break the chain of violence in the lives. Daystar also provides women with the tools to become financially stable and emotionally independent.

Upon hearing of an art room at the shelter, we decided it would be great to organize a card making workshop for the women of Daystar to make their own Holiday cards for family and friends.


Wednesday, December 15, 2010

All I want for Christmas...

Everything always happens at once.. extra hours at work, freelance work-both photography and knitting, gifts to make, and Guildess work to get done! I've been coming home too exhausted to open my computer and unwilling to cook myself dinner. Sometimes I could kick myself for taking on too many things, but then I remember how miserable I am when I have nothing going on.

To avoid tackling more work after 8 hours of work, I scanned in a roll of film. Unfortunately, only one picture turned out, which confirmed that something is definitely wrong with my camera. My diagnosis-shutter release is sticking and not reading my settings. Would Santa please fix my camera?

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Kristmas Kitsch at The Jazz Gallery!

Today, from 12-5pm, celebrate the season of giving at The Jazz Gallery. The Riverwest Artists Association will hold an opening celebration with festive hors d’ oeuvres and cider. Enjoy an eccentric installation by RAA members and artist-made giftables to stuff your stockings.

Bring food and clothing donations for the Riverwest Food Pantry and mNSC to help keep our community warm this winter. And have fun creating an artful shopping bag to benefit our neighborhood through the Outpost’s Buy a Bag program.

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Fine Line Magazine

At HoverCraft this weekend, I got a chance to check out the first issue of Fine Line Magazine, a quarterly publication edited and produced by Jessica Steeber and Cassandra Smith (the ladies of the Armoury Gallery). The best part about it, besides the art of course, was the complete lack of advertisements and reviews! It's refreshing to page through a publication and just see art.

"Fine Line presents only images and text - ideas without definition, questions without answers. It is curated for the viewer's consideration and becomes a tangible guide to a thought, moment or expression. Somewhat like a deep breath, a pause in the daily go, Fine Line Magazine creates a space to stop and consider the moments that make up our lives." - Fine Line website

For the ladies of Fine Line, it is apparent that their ability to curate a physical gallery space translates beautifully to a two-dimensional gallery on paper. Among the list of artists featured in Issues #1, two of the artists grew up locally and the rest are from a variety of regions and countries. Check out their website for a full list of featured artists. Individual issue purchases as well as full subscriptions are available.

Monday, December 6, 2010

Learning science with art and art with science!

A friend of mine recently brought BigShot to my attention. BigShot is an educational camera designed for kids. It pairs the mediums of science and technology to function as a learning tool as well as a creative tool. First, students learn how a camera works by actually putting the camera together. Then, they learn about the variety of photographic mediums photographers use by using each with the Bigshot rotating lens.

Images courtesy of BigShot website

Pairing art with other subjects has always been an interest of mine, but now its becoming more and more crucial since art is being eliminated from so many schools. In the school I work at, we are instructed to combine math and reading concepts with our daily activities because test scores in those areas are so low. Thus, I have been researching how to add math and reading concepts to art. This demonstrates the power art can have not only as a creative tool for expression, but also as a vehicle for learning. Although BigShot is still in the prototype phase I see it a valuable tool for teaching artists. Check out their website for more information and educational resources: BigShot

Friday, December 3, 2010

Handmade for the Holidays!

Every year I tell myself I will make handmade gifts for my friends and family. Then, somehow it ends up being the week of Christmas and I still haven't finalized who should get what (and by then I've probably made a million lists of what to do for who). BUT this year will be different and if I run out of time to make things, I will purchase handmade items from my friends.

Here is a list of a few quality handmade items to make and give people during the holidays:
Image courtesy of Bargain Hoot


Image courtesy of Cornflower Blue Studio
Image courtesy of Handmade Oddities

 Ashley Gustafson makes beautiful Japanese bound journals and catnip fortune cookies (pictured above). I will be purchasing a package of catnip fortune cookies for one of my cat lover friends.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

character and beauty

These are a few examples of the portraits my 4th and 5th grade girls of the Joseph J. Zilber Boys & Girls Club are working on. For some reason, I have always been drawn to portraits created by children. Unlike subject matters such as landscapes and still life's, portrait inaccuracies are forgivable. Often times, the "mistakes" are what give a portrait its character and beauty. A professor once told me to never be afraid of showing imperfections. If done in the right way, it can be very effective.



Despite my thoughts on imperfections, I still feel obligated to teach children the way my art teachers taught me. I started the lesson with a brief explanation of proportions and how to make use of the entire sheet of paper. 

A few of the portraits will be submitted to the Boys & Girls Clubs National Fine Art Show, which I organized last year with Ashley Gustafson