The Beaufort Art Association’s Spring Show was full of amazing paintings, photographs, collages, sculpture and student creations. Winning the Kris Cox Memorial Award for “City Rhythms” was an added thrill! Came with a check, too. Wonder where else I can enter my paintings for exciting rewards….hmmm.
“City Rhythms” wins award and 6-week private class offered!
Two things: Happy to report this collage – one of my very favorites – won an award yesterday! Also, I’ve got a new one-on-one course coming up. I’m offering 6-week, 2.5/hour one-on-one collage/painting courses for people in stressful life or business situations. Spend time loosening up, relaxing and enjoying being creative. Producing a finished work of art is only one outcome. The process of collaging provides powerful lessons in learning to be “at choice” rather than “at effect” in your life. These are private lessons, unless you choose to include someone else.
In my former life, I was an executive search consultant and coach.
Today’s Live Painting
Here’s yesterday’s funky painting – joint effort among the ladies from New York.
They chose the colors, determined the orientation and when to declare it “finished!” they named it Beaufort Secret Garden. One of them purchased it as a fond memory of her experience here at ArtLofts. It was a good day. But boy was it a challenge to keep the red and green from making mud. I got them to agree that a little yellow might help out. It looks a lot better in person, and so do I, thankfully.
My wish for you that you have as much fun in your life as I do here at ArtLofts!!
Love,
Susie
There’s Always Space for Art You Love: 5 Tips to Expanding Your View!
Herb and Dorothy Vogel (a postal worker and a librarian) managed to find space for over 4,000 works of art in the their two-bedroom rent-controlled New York apartment. When they finally donated their precious collection to the National Gallery, they just bought more art because they LOVED the art and the artists.
So please stop whining about not having any more “space” to put works you love. You just aren’t loving the works or the artists you’re considering. Keep looking for something that evokes an emotion, brings a smile, has you breathe easier, gets you to think or take some action.
Here’s a very simple 5-step process to help you:
1. Get next to artists who have values similar to yours and breathe in that creative energy. Spend time with them, talk about their art, their process, who they are, what gets them excited. Buy their work for yourself, as a gift to your own specialness.
2. Buy what you love, always, always, always! It will nurture and nourish you and your beloved soul. Work out a payment plan with the artist, if you need to. (One of my favorite pieces was purchased at $25 a month for 10 months).
3. Get rid of what doesn’t evoke any emotion or feelings – whose only value is that it goes with your furniture; or was created by a “famous” artist and might be worth a lot someday (gag). Believe me, it’s just taking up space. Donate, sell, give away what’s no longer “you.”
4. Change your thinking that having lots of blank wall space is good for you. Hang paintings in a group, as a “gallery” and stack small ones on the walls between doorways, on the sides of hallways, over doors, anywhere there’s wall space. Some of us even have paintings on the floor, leaning against the wall. Put sculptures and 3-D art on any surface where it will be seen by YOU and appreciated. When you love every piece, it’s never “clutter.”
5. Remember that life is shorter than you think, so buy the work for YOU. Nobody is going to eulogize you because your art collection matched your walls or because you kept a piece for 100 years that you didn’t love.
Watch the documentary “Herb and Dorothy” – Netflix, iTunes, DVD – and have a life-altering experience! http://herbanddorothy.com/ –
UPDATE: the link to the original film is on the bottom right corner of their webpage. The new movie is about their contribution to museums in the 50 states.
Love to you all, Susie