Tuesday, August 30, 2016

Beach Daydream

Today's still heat reminds me of the beach. So I traveled there too,  in my paper dreams, for the Impression Obsession challenge. This card collages torn papers, acrylic, and Impression Obsession die cuts.
It's late in the day. Everyone's gone to the clam shop. The birds are overhead; the bunnies sneak on to the dunes, to nibble grass. Maybe it's after labor day.
Time for rest and clear ocean sky.

Friday, August 12, 2016

Into the Garden

After three classes, and lots of behind-the scenes prep, my Alzheimer's group's summer project is done. 

Final piece

Six weeks ago they painted over 50 butterflies, pre-cut with a Tim Holtz die.
marathon painting session - I still have more!

They glued the butterflies on to blue card stock, then painted the background and the butterflies with acrylics. At home, I built these into a wall piece, connected in back with packing tape, and stripped vertically with yellow to build out the width.
Painted and assembled, ready for collage
The bright lines served to guide today's project: adding leaves and flowers.
I like that the black marker shows on some of the leaves
 I arrived with glue, brushes, pre-cut flowers, fun foam, scissors, markers, stick-on dots. A cornucopia of art supplies. 
this woman stuck all her flowers together
 Seven residents gathered at the table. As the hour progressed, folks sorted themselves into tasks. Some like cutting, others gluing, others preferred to work with the less sticky dots. The very talkative person settled into her chosen project. The quietest person stood beside me and worked on placing leaves.
Notice the lovely circles and crosses in the background
 At the end of the class I held the entire piece up. You could hear the intake of breath. "It's lovely." "Look at all the colors." "Who made that?" "It's profound."
Dots were added to the butterflies and backbround
 I laid the piece back on the table. Aides came over. Everyone stayed to joke and admire.
Circle stickers for flower centers
The curmudgeon of the group looked me in the eye: "You did a great job. Someone should tell you that."
 Leading Alzheimer's classes is like doing improve. Just say yes, and take it to the next level.


rabbit rabbit

Another answer to the challenge: (a) use only Impression Obsession stamps/dies and (b) work in a square. Limitation spurs the imagination. So here are two rabbit/bunny dies at work. The mini-bunnies and grass help give a sense of distance. The text is edited from a holiday sentiment

Use what you have. See where it takes you.

Thursday, August 11, 2016

Celebration

Another super-hot day. I'm a shade plant.  I relish the return of cooler weather. So in response to  Impression Obsession's square card challenge, here's a bit of fall.

two favorite stamps
 Their Print Pear always looks elegant. Against its clarity I enjoy experimenting with loose painting and scattered dots.
 
less paint, more color
Their Joy stamp seems a bit grungy for Holiday cards, but I like it here: an invitation to celebrate, whatever the reason.

Abstracted

For advanced Alzheimer's patients, the "still life" model of teaching fails. Too many steps. Too many instructions that slip away into the fog. 
So we sing instead, and play with color. 

Picking out the next color

The act of mark-making is enough. It is an effort that rewards with surprise. Often we start with circles. "Take the line on a trip," I tell them. "Let the colors dance."

"It's good to hold a brush again."

Some students painted their whole lives. I can still see that memory in the way they handle the brush. But most are new to art. Each week, I show them. "Touch it to the paper. Press hard. Pull with your shoulder. See the color grow."

Fly away home 

This artist hardly moved his hand for weeks. Then: surpise!  The oil pastels seem to make much more sense to him than watercolors. At the hour's end: "A bird in trouble," he chuckled. Success.

Abstracted

For advanced Alzheimer's patients, the "still life" model of teaching fails. Too many steps. Too many instructions that slip away into the fog. 
So we sing instead, and play with color. 

Picking out the next color

The act of mark-making is enough. It is an effort that rewards with surprise. Often we start with circles. "Take the line on a trip," I tell them. "Let the colors dance."

"It's good to hold a brush again."

Some students painted their whole lives. I can still see that memory in the way they handle the brush. But most are new to art. Each week, I show them. "Touch it to the paper. Press hard. Pull with your shoulder. See the color grow."

Fly away home 

This artist hardly moved his hand for weeks. Then: surpise!  The oil pastels seem to make much more sense to him than watercolors. At the hour's end: "A bird in trouble," he chuckled. Success.

Monday, August 8, 2016

Christmas in August

Walk into a cool evening
On a hot Monday, a cool winter night, from IO Stamps and reclaimed papers.

The idea of a square card piqued my interest.
Start with rectangle of midnight-painted paper. What next?

The Impression Obsession Birch Trees die, complete with cardinals, cuts too delicate for my clumsy ways. But wait. There's hand-me-down self-stick white paper on my shelves. Voila! Birch trees even I can manage. 

The wee red cardinals, cut from used watercolor paper, are turned over and colored red. The deer comes out of an old file card. (Turn it over and you'd find tenth grade history notes.)

The ground and sentiment  are scraps of notes, sheet music, and an old novel. Even the purple card-stock was hand-me-down. 

Next time perhaps the birch trees will continue into the purple. But I like the off-center composition. It feels like a window into another world.

Reclaimed art materials + Impression Obsession + the Holidays = inspiration on a hot summer day.

Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Dreamy day

Do you have those days that looked primed for productivity, that disappear in a swoon of experiments and ideas?
After three days of energy - so welcome after as many weeks stuck on the couch, I thought more intense sewing was ahead.
 But today felt like drifting downstream, paddle on lap. The notion of making my own images on fabric keeps turning over in my hands and head. Today's attempts varied from sentimental to autumnal.
Playing with stamps and brush on muslin
These were printed after a slow walk around the block in the mist with the dog.
Working back into long-ago dyed fabric, with acrylic paints

 I'll let them dry and see how I feel about them tomorrow.