Changing Forms

Table by Alice Stroppel – www.polymerclayetc.com

So, have my suggestions thus far this month triggered any new ideas for fresh and exploratory directions in the studio? Well, if it hasn’t yet maybe it will this week. Even if this month’s ideas did have you looking into some previously uncharted territories, my theme today can work in conjunction with new materials, big new projects, and collaborations as well.

But first, at quick note … have you signed up for the new Virtual Art Box coming out next weekend? I do hope you plan to join us if you haven’t already. Not only will you get great material to keep you inspired and keep that creative wheel in your head turning all month long, I have a couple specials just for my art boxers including a freebie and deep discounts. 

I’ll be drumming up such specials from polymer and mixed media craft resources every month, most will be worth much more than you are paying for the art box itself. Plus, for just another week, you can get in on a forever lifetime discount, just because you jumped in both feet first with me on this new adventure!

Ok, back to pushing ourselves, or at least thinking about it, this month.

I was thinking that a really stimulating challenge would be to work in a form that you have not worked in before. You know, like if you normally do jewelry, try decorative arts or sculpture. If you do wall art try your hand at jewelry. But knowing most of you, you’ve probably dabbled in a quite a few different forms. So, I think we need to look at some unusual territories within various art forms you’ve already tried.

For instance, if you work in jewelry or other adornment, consider what types you haven’t tried creating. Hair adornments, perhaps? Ankle bracelets? Gauge earrings instead of pierced? Tiaras perhaps? How about lapel pins, cufflinks, tie bars, or bolo ties? Or just men adornment in general?

If you create or cover a lot of home decor, move beyond the vases and switch plates and look around for other hapless home victims like ceiling fixture pulls, trashcan lids, lampstands, or the finials on the ends of drapery rods. Really, nothing should be safe from your decorative touches.

I could probably make an insanely long list of oddball things that could either be made with their covered with polymer, but let’s just look at what a few people have done with some less than common forms and see if these pieces can’t push your ideas about what you can do with polymer clay.

Strange Polymer in a Strange Land

when sitting down to write this, I wandered around the house looking for things I thought could be made with polymer, but I hadn’t seen much of. It is actually kind of hard. I see a lot. But how about this– incense burners? Maybe people don’t burn incense quite as much as they used to and perhaps that’s why we don’t see people making them in polymer clay but, on the other hand, they’re so easy to make and you have a really wide range of possible shapes they could take. You would think a few people would be regularly popping some out. But they are hard to find.

For an incense burner, all you need is a stable form with a snug hole big enough for the incense sick to stand in and, preferably, a platform to catch the ashes. You can have incense stick standing straight up or have a long tray the stick would hang over or you can ignore the tray component completely. That should be easy, right? I do wonder if people hesitate to make incense burners with polymer because they believe the hot embers will singe the clay. I very much doubt that would happen, especially if you create a straight up stand type, where the ashes have a long way to fall. Here is one example of an incense burner created with cane petals by Israel’s Marcia of Mars Design. It’s a straightforward construction and a pretty, as well as functional, little piece

You should check out her dreidels as well. I’m not sure Marcia is working in polymer anymore, or at least she’s not posting, but she did have a lot of fun ideas you can find on her Flickr photo stream.

 

This next suggestion seems to be such a minimally explored area of adornment for a category with such a wide range of options. I’m talking about hair adornments. There are so many of them – barrettes, hair sticks, hairclips, hair combs, hair beads, bun caps and cages, hair slides, tiaras, head wreathes, hairbands, headbands, hair charms, hair rings, and hair twisters (a.k.a hair spirals or ponytail wraps). I am partial to hair slides myself because they can double as scarf and shawl pins so you can pull them out for all kinds of occasions. You can see how I make mine with the in-depth tutorial in the Polymer Art Projects – Organics book. Here’s another example of a hair slide from Emily May. Like the incense burners, as long as you planned for the basic form, one that allows a stick to pass through from one side to the other, you can create pretty much whatever you want.

 

And I did mention the nothing should be safe from polymer in the house? I can’t tell you how often I look up at window molding or the insets in a door panel or the trim on a cabinet and think “A bit of polymer could go right there!” Okay, maybe I’m pushing it for someone with limited studio time who wants to add sculptural elements, not canes or other veneers, to large immovable parts of my house. So, does may be a cane covered table sound more reasonable? That can be pretty ambitious as well but at least it can go with you if you move or can be sold. Just look at the table by Alice Stroppel that opens this post, or this amazing work by Bridget Derc.

Bridget’s canes are intense, as is her process, really. You have to skim through her Flickr photostream a bit (check out the bottom half of pages 3 and 4) but she posts a lot of photos of her process. It’s pretty amazing. And check out Alice’s website for more of her polymer table adventures.

 

Now, what if you’re into sculpture? How do you push the form there? I suppose if you normally sculpt “in the round” you can do bas-relief sculptures or vice versa. You could, of course, also venture into any of the other myriad areas of polymer and craft and apply your sculptural skills there, but this next piece might give you a whole other set of ideas. Why not, literally, take your sculpture somewhere you haven’t taken it before. Like outside maybe?

Tatjana Raum photographs her tree spirit sculptures as if they are in trees, although I think these are all in detached parts of trees like large swaths of bark and pieces of drift or dead wood. Even if they are not attached to a living tree, the tree material gives these other-worldly faces an unusual context that enriches the sculpture and how a viewer will perceive it. And what if you did put a bit of polymer art into a living tree? What a great surprise for a passerby!

 

Okay, that is all for today. I’ve got to start making these posts a bit shorter as I will have a lot to do for the Virtual Art Box each month. I am so super excited about what I have for our adventurous art boxers though. I don’t think it’s going to be what anyone is really expecting but I think it’s going to be a fantastic surprise, especially for readers who really loved The Polymer Arts magazine. I think we’re going to get to know each other a lot better and are in for a really creative year!

 

For now, have a wonderful and really creative week and I’ll see you next weekend!

 

New Materials for a New Year (and VAB subscriptions are open!)

Would you say that you are primarily a polymer artist or do you work with another type of material either separate from or with polymer clay? This is a question I asked in a survey I sent out late last year. I found it interesting, although not overly surprising, that 75% of the survey respondents said they worked with another material. That would seem to indicate that the majority of us are technically mixed-media artists even if we identify as polymer artists. Not that the labeling should matter but sometimes it does. I’ve had chats with a number of artists who have felt guilty when they wander off to work with another material, as if they’re cheating on polymer clay. Of course, that’s quite silly. We are creative’s first and should be open to whatever material works for us in the moment., Besides, polymer plays so well with others that you’re unlikely to abandon your stockpile of clay. Working in another material just grows your creative circle.

Trying out a new material is also a fantastic and energizing challenge you can pose for yourself this new year. I know it can be hard to step away from something you know so well and become a newbie once again but the excitement and the humbling aspects of having to learn something new can provide a fresh injection of ideas and creative motivation that is hard to achieve any other way. When first working with a new material, it’s best to let yourself fall into a childlike state full of curiosity and a hunger to explore. And, generally, it is not that hard to do because, acknowledging you have no experience in the material, you shouldn’t have particularly high expectations of yourself. It can be wonderfully freeing.

If you are tentative to step outside the polymer focused arena but are curious about what adding another material can do for your polymer creations, look to materials that quite readily combine with polymer clay. Yeah, I know, that’s pretty much everything but let’s look at a few that plenty of mixed-media artists who work with polymer already play with.

Making New Material Friends

Some of the easiest materials to explore for a polymer focused creative are other sculpting materials. Epoxy clay, paper pulp, and air-dry clays are obvious materials to pick up. You already have most of the tools and a good base of skills to work with them. But if you want to challenge yourself a bit more, precious metal clay is tremendously exciting and can increase the actual and perceived value of your work if you sell your art. (Yes, it’s sad that people don’t always value polymer because is not a “precious” material, but that’s a discussion for another day.)

These days, precious metal clay comes in every common metal type – silver, gold, copper, brass, bronze, steel, and even iron. This means it’s doesn’t have to be nearly as expensive an investment as it used to be. Yes, ideally, you’d have a jewelry kiln (or a friend that does!)  but there are also some metal clays (primarily silver, low fire varieties) that can be cured with a small, inexpensive blowtorch. And who doesn’t like to play with fire?

Dawn Stubitsch is one of the first people I think of when it comes to combining polymer and precious metal clays. She has worked with a range of metal clays although she seems to prefer copper. She creates stunning pendants that that look like the 70s got design lessons from the Art Deco era, blending some of the best attributes of both eras.

Dawn also wrote a tutorial on creating with precious metal clay and combining it with polymer in The Polymer Arts Spring 2016 issue – Convergence. Her article is one of the best overviews of the process that I’ve seen. It will give you a great idea if this is something you want to do dive into.

Working with metal is popular for many polymer art artists, although many of them go for more traditional metalsmithing processes. This is also an area where you probably have many of the tools you would already need if you’re already working in jewelry. Adding a jeweler’s hand saw and a small blowtorch (still get play with fire!) will allow you to investigate quite a range of metalsmithing techniques.

Consider the construction possibilities of metal by looking around at artists such as Celine Charuau. She combines metal and polymer so that neither material stands out, so entranced are we with the forms and her unusual juxtaposition of them.

 

Celine is actually working on a new workshop focusing on “metal and polymer clay and how to connect these different elements together. No need to know how to solder, no need for specific or expensive tools and materials.” That would be the perfect opportunity to try something new. Not sure when and where that workshop will be held yet. I expect she will give notice about her workshop on Instagram and Facebook.

 

For very inexpensive and quick to learn alternative materials, how about beads or macramé? Or maybe both beads and macramé? Here’s an example where polymer may be the focal element but most of the energy comes from the bead and macramé design. Yulia of Multi-craft Studio on Livemaster is, a Russian currently living in India. She works in a variety of materials with a definite penchant for fiber but is well skilled in polymer as well.

Micro macramé is another technique tutorial, written by Iris Mishly, that you can find in that same Convergence issue of The Polymer Arts, if you want to try that technique out right away. Honestly, if you’re looking to try a new material to combine with polymer, pull the Spring 2016 issue out of your collection or purchase it on the website. That same issue also explores cast paper, found objects, epoxy clay and a few other intriguing mixed media ideas.

 

Here’s another material and art form you may not have considered mixing with polymer – embroidery! I love how easy it is to get into a flow doing embroidery, but I had never considered adding polymer to it. However, as you can see by the piece this post opened up with and the work-in-progress below, it’s a wonderful combination. Justyna Wołodkiewicz is a Polish artist who likes to say that she “stitches with clay,” which is a great summation for what she does as both materials are equally important in her compositions.

 

I know I only really touched on metal and fiber options here but my objective is not to give you full sampling of what is possible – because that would be impossible with polymer being as mixed-media friendly as it is – but to get you to start thinking about other materials you may not be working with at this point but have been curious about. It doesn’t even have to be about combining with polymer. Just trying a new material can inject new life into your polymer work even if the two don’t go together for you.

Take a look at these gorgeous eggs that our Chris Kapono has been hand painting while still well entrenched in working with polymer. She’s not combining her eggs with polymer, but they do both influence each other. If you’re familiar with her polymer art, you can see how her polymer designs are reflected in her egg painting. Then take a look at her Etsy shop and see how often egg shapes pops up in her polymer work. These two different materials look to be informing each other quite a bit.

 

Whether you go out and explore a new material or not, I do highly encourage you to just try something new. Novel experiences not only help your creativity but it keeps your brain young. Being creative in general will do that but if you do the same thing over and over again it definitely diminishes its benefits. Yes, it can take courage and a lot of hard work to develop your own distinctive voice but I don’t think there is a better high than getting those ideas and feelings you have inside of you out into the world in the form of your own unique art.

 

Explore Your Voice with the Virtual Art Box

Exploring and developing a unique personal voice is a big part of what I will be trying to help you with through the new Virtual Art Box project which, by the way, is now available for sign-ups on the website. If you sign up for an auto renewing subscription, you can get yourself a forever loyalty discount that will get you the Art box at the lowest possible price for as long as you’re subscribed.

Note that the forever Loyalty discount will only be available through January 31st.

Go to the website to sign up now. With the auto renewing payment, you won’t be charged until the 1st of February and you can cancel at any time so if you are at all interested, jump over and get yourself set to receive the first virtual box. I’ll send it out on Sunday, February 2nd.

And remember, as of next month, this blog will be an abbreviated version because only members of the Virtual Art Box will be getting the full article. I’m not deserting you completely if you can’t afford to join my clan of VAB people. I’m still dedicated to sharing and exploring mixed-media design with as many people as possible but, you know, one has to make a living while, preferably, not working oneself into an early grave by trying to do too much. So, if you like these posts, for less than $10 a month you can get the full article every weekend plus other articles, downloadable tools, videos and much more by joining the Virtual Art Box project.

 

It’s All in The Genes

For those who have been so kindly keeping track and nudging me to take care of my health, I’ve got a little bit of news in that area.

I’m back working a fairly full schedule although my right arm is not super happy about the situation because I keep forgetting I shouldn’t be typing with it. (I’m working, right now, with a loose rubber band around my right-hand fingers which makes it just awkward enough to remind me not to type with it. But then, I have to remember to put the rubber band on in the first place!)

The really great news is that I think we finally figured out what’s going on with my metabolism. It looks like the root cause is a genetic condition whereby I don’t process fats efficiently and end up with too much fat in my bloodstream. Not breaking down fats is, strangely enough, related to high blood sugar as fat can block the mechanism that allows insulin to move glucose into cells, causing a vicious cycle of high blood glucose, high blood insulin, and a stressed pancreas, eventually resulting in type II diabetes. This can happen if you eat a lot of fat and processed foods or because you have a stupid, annoying gene like I seem to have.

So contrary to conventional wisdom, I am on a high carbohydrate diet but, mind you it’s all whole foods, mostly plants, and I still avoid all refined sugar. And, guess what? This week I’ve had 4 days in a row of normal blood glucose testing! I know, super exciting, right?! Okay, yeah, more exciting for me, I’m sure but my blood sugar readings were in the diabetic range when this month started and I was getting really scared, so this is an amazing turnaround. Thank the powers that be for my nutritionist! I get more usable information and better results from her than anything my MD has told me or prescribed. And not just for the metabolic issue. It’s true that we are what we eat so it makes sense that what we put in our body will have such a tremendous effect on our health and medical conditions. If you’ve never seen a nutritionist, and you have anything medical you’re dealing with, go find one. It could literally change your life.

Okay, off my soapbox now. I know this is not a health blog but, hey, as many of you well know, it’s really hard to make art when you aren’t feeling well so I just wanted to share what I’ve found in case it helps any of you. Let’s take care of ourselves as best we can so we can continue to add to the beauty and wonder of our world!

Okay, enough yammering from me today. Have a wonderful, healthy, and creative week!

The Collaborative Effect

[If you are getting this email mid-week, my apologies. Emails sending was turned of the last few days for the blog due to late night human error. But now you have a mid-week pick-me-up!]

Have you ever used accountability to help you get something done? You know, when you tell someone else that you are going to do something and then you feel obligated to do it because somebody knows and you don’t want to tell them that you couldn’t or simply didn’t do what you said you were going to do? Most of us are pretty easily pressured by what other people think of us which can be used to our advantage when we’re trying to complete something that is difficult, scary, or just no fun. Like finding motivational goals for the new year!

Having someone else know of your plans can help you prioritize goals and just daily life. It’s why people do challenges in a group and post on social media. Your online circle of fellow challengers and followers will be expecting to see something from you and so you’re less likely to set that challenge project aside for something else.

Sometimes, though, even telling others isn’t enough to keep you on task. But what if you are working with someone else? Collaborations put a lot more pressure on us than just having someone else know you have a particular goal. We aren’t likely to step away from a project when we know someone else is expecting something from us. So, if you need something to kickstart your new year or want to take on a big project but are feeling a little overwhelmed, maybe the answer is collaboration.

The Who, Why, and What of Collaboration

As an artist, you can collaborate with anyone else who is creating. That means you could collaborate with another polymer artist, someone in another craft medium, someone who works in a traditional two-dimensional art medium, or even someone who works outside the visual arts like a writer, dancer, actor or musician. You do your thing and they do their thing under the umbrella of a particular concept or with a particular final project or event in mind. Not only are you more likely to complete your part of the project when working with another artist, the excitement and interaction with that person can give you so much energy as you’ll both generate excitement through the communication and exchange of ideas.

Have you ever collaborated with someone before? If you have are not, this is something to consider for this new year. Why is that? Let’s look at a few reasons:

  • Collaboration helps you grow. Having to work within the constraints and compromises of another person’s artistic vision pushes you to go in directions that you would never have gone on your own. There’s a lot of self-discovery in collaboration.
  • Collaboration can help you reach a new audience, especially if you collaborate with someone who is not working in the same medium or selling to the same market as you.
  • Collaboration cuts the workload in half on big or time intensive projects which makes them more manageable, probably more enjoyable, and more likely to be completed.
  • Collaboration adds a social aspect to your creative process for the duration of the collaboration. It can be hard working alone in the studio for hours or days on end, especially if you’re a full-time artist. The occasional collaboration becomes especially appreciated when you work alone a lot.
  • And, as mentioned, working with someone else is extremely motivating and inspiring.

Let’s look at a few examples of polymer artist collaborating with others.

 

The Whole Is Greater Than the Sum of Its Parts

Although there are many ways to put together a collaborative project, quite commonly one person does one portion and then hands their portion off to the other person to do their share. Helen Breil and Annie Pennington did just that to create this gorgeous brooch. It started with the blue polymer framework from Helen and was finished off by Annie with her metal and felt work.

 

If you work in canes, trading canes with someone or sending canes to someone to work with is an easy type of collaboration. That’s what happens with the extra canes and scraps that are sent to Ron Lehocky who makes them into his wonderful hearts. The canes for these hearts were created by Jane Dwyer.

 

Finding someone with a similar aesthetic or style as you can really help bring a collaboration together, not to mention a friendship. Polymer’s master caner John Stuart Anderson worked with painter and sometimes sculptor Luke Brown on this Tryptamine Palace. Although it sounds like they have been friends for some time, you can only imagine what working on an intense project like this did for their friendship.

Get an even better look at this amazing piece through this video.

 

Here’s an interesting roundabout collaboration. Stephanie Kilgast took on the challenge of painting and adding to a sculpture produced by Moon Crane Press from a graphite drawing by Miles Johnston, a two dimensional artist working heavily in pencil as well as ink and paint. In this case, the drawing was done independently of a collaboration idea but then Moon Crane Press, who Miles already worked with, decided to create a three-dimensional image of the drawing from which sculptures could be cast. Stephanie was invited to paint and further embellish the work. I’m not sure that one could purposely re-create such a situation but it is a great example of a collaborative option to take something that has already been completed by one artist and have it further developed by another.

 

Stephanie’s example brings up the point that collaboration doesn’t have to be just between two people. The Into the Forest project, the Russian Quilt project, and the Fimo 50th year Globe had dozens, if not hundreds, of people working on the same project. Most of us aren’t up for organizing things that big but if it’s manageable for a local group like your guild, you could have the whole guild work on a single project. Or three or four of you best artist friends could get together and make something any one or two of you would never have conceived of. Pretty exciting stuff, right?

Just Gotta Ask

if you are going to embark on a collaboration, be ready to ask a few tough questions and be ready to answer a few of your own. These are the kind of questions you and your collaborator(s) should both ask and answer.

  • What are you hoping to get out of collaboration project? You want to keep focused on each participants purpose in taking part in the collaboration as the work progresses.
  • How much time do we each have to dedicate to this project? Be realistic about how much you can do and scale back the project if necessary.
  • Will the final project be sold or, if not, who will it live with or how will you share it? Not everything you make has to be sold, but if you do want to sell it, collaborative projects as charity donations will get you publicity and networking opportunities.
  • What concept, theme, or vision is important to both of us? This question tends to get the ball rolling on what you want to make and allows you to get to know your artistic partner.
  • Will one or both of you oversee the organizational aspect of the project? Commonly, especially if there’s more than just two people, one person will organize the timeline and process, and keep track of progress. Overseeing the project doesn’t mean that person makes all the decisions, it just means that they will keep the project on track. It’s nice to have this figured out from the start so collaborators don’t step on each other’s toes.

Keep in mind collaboration doesn’t mean the work is 50-50. If one of you wants to do a lot more than the other or the primary concept is one person’s (such as Miles Johnston’s sculpture) but is embellished or finished by another (which is what Stephanie Kilgast did with Mile’s work) it’s still a collaborative piece but you’re just working to each other’s strengths.

Also remember that collaboration is supposed to be an enjoyable and inspirational learning experience. Be patient with your partner(s) if they’re not doing what you’d expect, talk if you have concerns, and be ready to compromise. It’s kind of like a marriage – you know something great’s going to come of it but it’s a give-and-take to get there.

 

The State of Things

I had hoped to have sign-ups for new subscribers to the Virtual Art Box this week but unfortunately, I was not doing so well this week and had to take it easy early on. I’m back to full steam ahead now but I have some catching up to do. It will be very soon though.

 

Nudge Sale is Still On… For 3 more days!

Our year end Nudge Sale is almost over. All the reduced prices go back to full price after the 15th. Right now, almost everything is on sale so if you need more inspiration at your fingertips as you set yourself up for a great creative year, hop over to the website and snatch up a great deal on beautiful print and digital publications!

 

Okay, I have to stop working now as I’ve got a birthday to celebrate. The tradition in my house is that the birthday person doesn’t have to do any work which, of course, makes it a struggle for this workaholic. But I’ll be good and let my dear man make me breakfast and take me to dinner and I don’t know what else. Maybe just curl up in a corner with a book. I don’t think I’ve done that for ages and ages.

If you want to help me celebrate my birthday, my preference is actually to have friends and family do something charitable. You can donate to my charity listed on Facebook – the International Rescue Committee fund which assist refugees and other displaced persons. Any bit of help that can be given to our poor Australian friends would also be wonderful. Being a big picture person, I give to the Global Recovery Fund who set up assistance for the long haul. If funds are in short supply, as they often are after the holiday season, just be kind to the world that we live in by maybe giving up one less disposable item (get a filtering water bottle and never buy bottled water again for instance) or just doing something thoughtful and kind and make someone’s day.

You all just stopping to read my yammering makes my day! Thank you and have a wonderful week!

Go Big or Go Personal

January 5, 2020

So, here we are. The new year has begun, and we have 12 months and nearly 52 weeks of possibilities before us. Will you be changing the way you work or challenging yourself this coming year?

If you read last week’s post, you know I have mixed feelings about New Year’s resolutions, but I do believe in always having goals. Goals give you something to bounce out of bed for in the morning. Even small goals can get you up and going and keep you focused. However, this weekend I want to talk about making big goals, or particularly big projects.

This will mean different things to different people but whether or not the idea of doing something challenging in size or scope appeals to you, I think it’s just one of those things you should periodically ask yourself. Do I want to do something big, monumental, dramatic, or just drastically different? There is nothing wrong with saying no and just focusing on small, easily manageable projects. But I think you ought to ask the question just to be sure.

Nearly a decade ago, I interviewed Gwen Piña who, at the time, was the most prolific polymer artist I knew of in our community, with over 600 accounts she regularly fulfilled orders for. (She has since retired from polymer.) With all that work, I was really surprised when she took me to a side room to show me her personal projects. These were rather tall dolls and other pieces made from found objects and polymer. These were her personal projects which she didn’t always try to sell. Although they took time away from her primary wholesale work, she acknowledged that she needed that creative outlet to make her happy.

I think that is an important consideration. Not everything you make has to sell. Actually, unless your livelihood depends upon it, nothing you make needs to be sold. Go ahead – create for the sake of creating! How freeing is that idea? I bring this up because, many times, our big personal projects are not something that is either easy to sell or easy for us to part with.

So, setting aside the idea that everything you make has to support a business, let’s talk about big personal projects you might consider taking on to feed your soul.

A Big Way

Large, showy art pieces are often referred to as “statement” pieces. Big necklaces, towering vases, and wildly colorful wall sculptures can all be considered statement pieces when they outshine the wearer or dominate the room they occupy.

There is more latitude given for the functionality of craft art that is created as a statement piece. Awkward and uncomfortable collar necklaces, dangerously spiky brooches, and vases that are too monumental to hold any kind of flower arrangement are forgiven their lack of functionality in exchange for being a conversation piece or attention grabber. These can be great fun to create because you have fewer restrictions with that concern for functional construction set aside. If you’re looking for a bit more freedom in your designs this year, this might be something to explore.

But what if we change that definition of a statement piece and attach it to work that is primarily personal—making that kind of work a personal statement piece, as in you have something to say. You may just want to share your aesthetic views, or you may have opinions about the state of the world, or you might aim to share the emotion of a personal experience. These are all expressions of the artist being taken from inside themselves and put out into the world. That’s really at the core of what, arguably, defines something as a piece of art.

So how about YOU get noticed for some “big” piece of yours this year that is focused on expressing what you want to put out into the world? Being that this kind of project is more for you, you also get to define what a big project means to you. It could be literally large. It could also be small but so minutely thought out or detailed that it is big in terms of its process and scope. A big project could be based on a really delicate or difficult personal subject that you have previously found hard to share. It could also be a large collection of work instead of a single piece. Or a piece made up of a lot of smaller pieces. Do any of these ideas spark a fire in you?

Let’s look at just a few “big projects” other artists have taken in polymer.

 

Thinking Big

Heather Campbell goes big quite often. The piece of hers that opens this blog, Trippin’ in Spain, is 6 feet long! A handful of years ago, you might have seen the challenge she took on of making this insanely detailed polymer quilt called Keep Circling. Much of the texture and pattern is created with the attachment of many small, but easily replicated accents and objects as can be seen in the detail shot.

This piece is both a great approach to creating big, beautiful artwork in polymer and a metaphor for how to take on a big project or any daunting goal. Just do one small thing at a time and, if you just keep at it, next thing you know, you have something huge and amazing and that goal is reached.

 

A similar approach can be used in jewelry. A gloriously monumental bit of adornment does not have to be complicated. You can simply make a lot of something that you love to create and bring it together into a single magnificent piece. Gloria Danvers does a lot of this type of thing with polymer butterflies, leaves, and other caned shapes.

 

You know how I mentioned you could set your big goal to not just be one thing but that you might consider just creating a big collection? Well, what if you did both? That’s essentially what Jeffrey Lloyd Dever did with his Edensong Revisited installation piece from 2011. Taking dozens of individual pieces, he created a fascinating wall piece that you have to just keep looking at to take it all in.

Edensong Revisited | 2011 | Approx. 50”H x 42” W x 3.5” D | Polymer clay, steel wire, plastic coated wire, repurposed mixed media, latex paint | Photo credit: Jon Bolton/Racine Art Museum

 

The idea of something big for you though, might just be a project that’s really different and daring. If so, I would strongly suggest looking at artwork in other mediums for inspiration, not just polymer. I don’t know if anyone’s doing any really wild with ear cuffs like the ones below in polymer, but this is just one possible inspiration for what could be done with polymer and unique forms of jewelry. Check out this site for some wild pieces. No artists are listed although they do say these are handmade.

 

Sometimes your big idea can simply be sticking with a particular theme and really pushing yourself to see what you can do with it. I got a wonderful email from blog reader Suzanne Andrews, noting how the last post on having a goal really resonated with her. She’d already started on her goal to get focused this year by cleaning up her studio (and that’s a pretty big project for many of us, I know!) And then, she said she, “placed one photograph for reference on the wall in the studio. It is of a painting that speaks to me and my goal is to create pieces that belong with this painting.” I don’t know if she’ll make anything literally big or complex, but I love that idea of committing to that painting. It will give her a focus on something that she feels personally connected to, which can take some bravery. And that is a statement!

 

The Big Idea

So, whether or not you’re ready to take on something big, in whatever way you define it, or just want to play around this year, I’m hoping to make setting goals, or at least working on a focus, to be a bigger part of what we talk about throughout this year. It’s something I’m going to focus on with the Virtual Art Box, hoping for those of you who are up for it, to make what I share with you a more active kind of information exchange. Most of us aren’t reading this to simply pass the time, are we? This material and our creativity drive us to make art, right? So, let’s do that and make art that we are personally passionate about! I can’t tell you how fulfilling it is to take risks and push yourself. You won’t always succeed but, man, when you do, there’s nothing like it!

We’ll go over a few other ideas for possible goals and focuses you might want to take on over the coming year if you’re not sure what you want to do yet, if anything. There really is no rush so just let ideas wash over you until something grabs you.

Myself, I need to put a rush on some things. I think we finally have the technical end ironed out for the new Virtual Art Box so I’m getting ready to get sign ups set up on the website. Just need a few more tests. Then back to whipping the content into shape. That’s my focus this week so keep an eye out for newsletters for more info and I’ll update you on the blog this next week and as well. Get on this list here to be notified first for special discounts.

 

Nudge Sale is Still On!

Don’t forget we have that nudge sale going for another week or so. Almost everything is on sale so if you need more inspiration at your fingertips as you set yourself up for a great creative year, hop over to the website and snatch up a great deal on beautiful print and digital publications!

 

 

Happy first full work week of 2020! Hope its a beautiful and creative one!

Changing Forms

January 26, 2020
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Table by Alice Stroppel – www.polymerclayetc.com

So, have my suggestions thus far this month triggered any new ideas for fresh and exploratory directions in the studio? Well, if it hasn’t yet maybe it will this week. Even if this month’s ideas did have you looking into some previously uncharted territories, my theme today can work in conjunction with new materials, big new projects, and collaborations as well.

But first, at quick note … have you signed up for the new Virtual Art Box coming out next weekend? I do hope you plan to join us if you haven’t already. Not only will you get great material to keep you inspired and keep that creative wheel in your head turning all month long, I have a couple specials just for my art boxers including a freebie and deep discounts. 

I’ll be drumming up such specials from polymer and mixed media craft resources every month, most will be worth much more than you are paying for the art box itself. Plus, for just another week, you can get in on a forever lifetime discount, just because you jumped in both feet first with me on this new adventure!

Ok, back to pushing ourselves, or at least thinking about it, this month.

I was thinking that a really stimulating challenge would be to work in a form that you have not worked in before. You know, like if you normally do jewelry, try decorative arts or sculpture. If you do wall art try your hand at jewelry. But knowing most of you, you’ve probably dabbled in a quite a few different forms. So, I think we need to look at some unusual territories within various art forms you’ve already tried.

For instance, if you work in jewelry or other adornment, consider what types you haven’t tried creating. Hair adornments, perhaps? Ankle bracelets? Gauge earrings instead of pierced? Tiaras perhaps? How about lapel pins, cufflinks, tie bars, or bolo ties? Or just men adornment in general?

If you create or cover a lot of home decor, move beyond the vases and switch plates and look around for other hapless home victims like ceiling fixture pulls, trashcan lids, lampstands, or the finials on the ends of drapery rods. Really, nothing should be safe from your decorative touches.

I could probably make an insanely long list of oddball things that could either be made with their covered with polymer, but let’s just look at what a few people have done with some less than common forms and see if these pieces can’t push your ideas about what you can do with polymer clay.

Strange Polymer in a Strange Land

when sitting down to write this, I wandered around the house looking for things I thought could be made with polymer, but I hadn’t seen much of. It is actually kind of hard. I see a lot. But how about this– incense burners? Maybe people don’t burn incense quite as much as they used to and perhaps that’s why we don’t see people making them in polymer clay but, on the other hand, they’re so easy to make and you have a really wide range of possible shapes they could take. You would think a few people would be regularly popping some out. But they are hard to find.

For an incense burner, all you need is a stable form with a snug hole big enough for the incense sick to stand in and, preferably, a platform to catch the ashes. You can have incense stick standing straight up or have a long tray the stick would hang over or you can ignore the tray component completely. That should be easy, right? I do wonder if people hesitate to make incense burners with polymer because they believe the hot embers will singe the clay. I very much doubt that would happen, especially if you create a straight up stand type, where the ashes have a long way to fall. Here is one example of an incense burner created with cane petals by Israel’s Marcia of Mars Design. It’s a straightforward construction and a pretty, as well as functional, little piece

You should check out her dreidels as well. I’m not sure Marcia is working in polymer anymore, or at least she’s not posting, but she did have a lot of fun ideas you can find on her Flickr photo stream.

 

This next suggestion seems to be such a minimally explored area of adornment for a category with such a wide range of options. I’m talking about hair adornments. There are so many of them – barrettes, hair sticks, hairclips, hair combs, hair beads, bun caps and cages, hair slides, tiaras, head wreathes, hairbands, headbands, hair charms, hair rings, and hair twisters (a.k.a hair spirals or ponytail wraps). I am partial to hair slides myself because they can double as scarf and shawl pins so you can pull them out for all kinds of occasions. You can see how I make mine with the in-depth tutorial in the Polymer Art Projects – Organics book. Here’s another example of a hair slide from Emily May. Like the incense burners, as long as you planned for the basic form, one that allows a stick to pass through from one side to the other, you can create pretty much whatever you want.

 

And I did mention the nothing should be safe from polymer in the house? I can’t tell you how often I look up at window molding or the insets in a door panel or the trim on a cabinet and think “A bit of polymer could go right there!” Okay, maybe I’m pushing it for someone with limited studio time who wants to add sculptural elements, not canes or other veneers, to large immovable parts of my house. So, does may be a cane covered table sound more reasonable? That can be pretty ambitious as well but at least it can go with you if you move or can be sold. Just look at the table by Alice Stroppel that opens this post, or this amazing work by Bridget Derc.

Bridget’s canes are intense, as is her process, really. You have to skim through her Flickr photostream a bit (check out the bottom half of pages 3 and 4) but she posts a lot of photos of her process. It’s pretty amazing. And check out Alice’s website for more of her polymer table adventures.

 

Now, what if you’re into sculpture? How do you push the form there? I suppose if you normally sculpt “in the round” you can do bas-relief sculptures or vice versa. You could, of course, also venture into any of the other myriad areas of polymer and craft and apply your sculptural skills there, but this next piece might give you a whole other set of ideas. Why not, literally, take your sculpture somewhere you haven’t taken it before. Like outside maybe?

Tatjana Raum photographs her tree spirit sculptures as if they are in trees, although I think these are all in detached parts of trees like large swaths of bark and pieces of drift or dead wood. Even if they are not attached to a living tree, the tree material gives these other-worldly faces an unusual context that enriches the sculpture and how a viewer will perceive it. And what if you did put a bit of polymer art into a living tree? What a great surprise for a passerby!

 

Okay, that is all for today. I’ve got to start making these posts a bit shorter as I will have a lot to do for the Virtual Art Box each month. I am so super excited about what I have for our adventurous art boxers though. I don’t think it’s going to be what anyone is really expecting but I think it’s going to be a fantastic surprise, especially for readers who really loved The Polymer Arts magazine. I think we’re going to get to know each other a lot better and are in for a really creative year!

 

For now, have a wonderful and really creative week and I’ll see you next weekend!

 

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New Materials for a New Year (and VAB subscriptions are open!)

January 19, 2020
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Would you say that you are primarily a polymer artist or do you work with another type of material either separate from or with polymer clay? This is a question I asked in a survey I sent out late last year. I found it interesting, although not overly surprising, that 75% of the survey respondents said they worked with another material. That would seem to indicate that the majority of us are technically mixed-media artists even if we identify as polymer artists. Not that the labeling should matter but sometimes it does. I’ve had chats with a number of artists who have felt guilty when they wander off to work with another material, as if they’re cheating on polymer clay. Of course, that’s quite silly. We are creative’s first and should be open to whatever material works for us in the moment., Besides, polymer plays so well with others that you’re unlikely to abandon your stockpile of clay. Working in another material just grows your creative circle.

Trying out a new material is also a fantastic and energizing challenge you can pose for yourself this new year. I know it can be hard to step away from something you know so well and become a newbie once again but the excitement and the humbling aspects of having to learn something new can provide a fresh injection of ideas and creative motivation that is hard to achieve any other way. When first working with a new material, it’s best to let yourself fall into a childlike state full of curiosity and a hunger to explore. And, generally, it is not that hard to do because, acknowledging you have no experience in the material, you shouldn’t have particularly high expectations of yourself. It can be wonderfully freeing.

If you are tentative to step outside the polymer focused arena but are curious about what adding another material can do for your polymer creations, look to materials that quite readily combine with polymer clay. Yeah, I know, that’s pretty much everything but let’s look at a few that plenty of mixed-media artists who work with polymer already play with.

Making New Material Friends

Some of the easiest materials to explore for a polymer focused creative are other sculpting materials. Epoxy clay, paper pulp, and air-dry clays are obvious materials to pick up. You already have most of the tools and a good base of skills to work with them. But if you want to challenge yourself a bit more, precious metal clay is tremendously exciting and can increase the actual and perceived value of your work if you sell your art. (Yes, it’s sad that people don’t always value polymer because is not a “precious” material, but that’s a discussion for another day.)

These days, precious metal clay comes in every common metal type – silver, gold, copper, brass, bronze, steel, and even iron. This means it’s doesn’t have to be nearly as expensive an investment as it used to be. Yes, ideally, you’d have a jewelry kiln (or a friend that does!)  but there are also some metal clays (primarily silver, low fire varieties) that can be cured with a small, inexpensive blowtorch. And who doesn’t like to play with fire?

Dawn Stubitsch is one of the first people I think of when it comes to combining polymer and precious metal clays. She has worked with a range of metal clays although she seems to prefer copper. She creates stunning pendants that that look like the 70s got design lessons from the Art Deco era, blending some of the best attributes of both eras.

Dawn also wrote a tutorial on creating with precious metal clay and combining it with polymer in The Polymer Arts Spring 2016 issue – Convergence. Her article is one of the best overviews of the process that I’ve seen. It will give you a great idea if this is something you want to do dive into.

Working with metal is popular for many polymer art artists, although many of them go for more traditional metalsmithing processes. This is also an area where you probably have many of the tools you would already need if you’re already working in jewelry. Adding a jeweler’s hand saw and a small blowtorch (still get play with fire!) will allow you to investigate quite a range of metalsmithing techniques.

Consider the construction possibilities of metal by looking around at artists such as Celine Charuau. She combines metal and polymer so that neither material stands out, so entranced are we with the forms and her unusual juxtaposition of them.

 

Celine is actually working on a new workshop focusing on “metal and polymer clay and how to connect these different elements together. No need to know how to solder, no need for specific or expensive tools and materials.” That would be the perfect opportunity to try something new. Not sure when and where that workshop will be held yet. I expect she will give notice about her workshop on Instagram and Facebook.

 

For very inexpensive and quick to learn alternative materials, how about beads or macramé? Or maybe both beads and macramé? Here’s an example where polymer may be the focal element but most of the energy comes from the bead and macramé design. Yulia of Multi-craft Studio on Livemaster is, a Russian currently living in India. She works in a variety of materials with a definite penchant for fiber but is well skilled in polymer as well.

Micro macramé is another technique tutorial, written by Iris Mishly, that you can find in that same Convergence issue of The Polymer Arts, if you want to try that technique out right away. Honestly, if you’re looking to try a new material to combine with polymer, pull the Spring 2016 issue out of your collection or purchase it on the website. That same issue also explores cast paper, found objects, epoxy clay and a few other intriguing mixed media ideas.

 

Here’s another material and art form you may not have considered mixing with polymer – embroidery! I love how easy it is to get into a flow doing embroidery, but I had never considered adding polymer to it. However, as you can see by the piece this post opened up with and the work-in-progress below, it’s a wonderful combination. Justyna Wołodkiewicz is a Polish artist who likes to say that she “stitches with clay,” which is a great summation for what she does as both materials are equally important in her compositions.

 

I know I only really touched on metal and fiber options here but my objective is not to give you full sampling of what is possible – because that would be impossible with polymer being as mixed-media friendly as it is – but to get you to start thinking about other materials you may not be working with at this point but have been curious about. It doesn’t even have to be about combining with polymer. Just trying a new material can inject new life into your polymer work even if the two don’t go together for you.

Take a look at these gorgeous eggs that our Chris Kapono has been hand painting while still well entrenched in working with polymer. She’s not combining her eggs with polymer, but they do both influence each other. If you’re familiar with her polymer art, you can see how her polymer designs are reflected in her egg painting. Then take a look at her Etsy shop and see how often egg shapes pops up in her polymer work. These two different materials look to be informing each other quite a bit.

 

Whether you go out and explore a new material or not, I do highly encourage you to just try something new. Novel experiences not only help your creativity but it keeps your brain young. Being creative in general will do that but if you do the same thing over and over again it definitely diminishes its benefits. Yes, it can take courage and a lot of hard work to develop your own distinctive voice but I don’t think there is a better high than getting those ideas and feelings you have inside of you out into the world in the form of your own unique art.

 

Explore Your Voice with the Virtual Art Box

Exploring and developing a unique personal voice is a big part of what I will be trying to help you with through the new Virtual Art Box project which, by the way, is now available for sign-ups on the website. If you sign up for an auto renewing subscription, you can get yourself a forever loyalty discount that will get you the Art box at the lowest possible price for as long as you’re subscribed.

Note that the forever Loyalty discount will only be available through January 31st.

Go to the website to sign up now. With the auto renewing payment, you won’t be charged until the 1st of February and you can cancel at any time so if you are at all interested, jump over and get yourself set to receive the first virtual box. I’ll send it out on Sunday, February 2nd.

And remember, as of next month, this blog will be an abbreviated version because only members of the Virtual Art Box will be getting the full article. I’m not deserting you completely if you can’t afford to join my clan of VAB people. I’m still dedicated to sharing and exploring mixed-media design with as many people as possible but, you know, one has to make a living while, preferably, not working oneself into an early grave by trying to do too much. So, if you like these posts, for less than $10 a month you can get the full article every weekend plus other articles, downloadable tools, videos and much more by joining the Virtual Art Box project.

 

It’s All in The Genes

For those who have been so kindly keeping track and nudging me to take care of my health, I’ve got a little bit of news in that area.

I’m back working a fairly full schedule although my right arm is not super happy about the situation because I keep forgetting I shouldn’t be typing with it. (I’m working, right now, with a loose rubber band around my right-hand fingers which makes it just awkward enough to remind me not to type with it. But then, I have to remember to put the rubber band on in the first place!)

The really great news is that I think we finally figured out what’s going on with my metabolism. It looks like the root cause is a genetic condition whereby I don’t process fats efficiently and end up with too much fat in my bloodstream. Not breaking down fats is, strangely enough, related to high blood sugar as fat can block the mechanism that allows insulin to move glucose into cells, causing a vicious cycle of high blood glucose, high blood insulin, and a stressed pancreas, eventually resulting in type II diabetes. This can happen if you eat a lot of fat and processed foods or because you have a stupid, annoying gene like I seem to have.

So contrary to conventional wisdom, I am on a high carbohydrate diet but, mind you it’s all whole foods, mostly plants, and I still avoid all refined sugar. And, guess what? This week I’ve had 4 days in a row of normal blood glucose testing! I know, super exciting, right?! Okay, yeah, more exciting for me, I’m sure but my blood sugar readings were in the diabetic range when this month started and I was getting really scared, so this is an amazing turnaround. Thank the powers that be for my nutritionist! I get more usable information and better results from her than anything my MD has told me or prescribed. And not just for the metabolic issue. It’s true that we are what we eat so it makes sense that what we put in our body will have such a tremendous effect on our health and medical conditions. If you’ve never seen a nutritionist, and you have anything medical you’re dealing with, go find one. It could literally change your life.

Okay, off my soapbox now. I know this is not a health blog but, hey, as many of you well know, it’s really hard to make art when you aren’t feeling well so I just wanted to share what I’ve found in case it helps any of you. Let’s take care of ourselves as best we can so we can continue to add to the beauty and wonder of our world!

Okay, enough yammering from me today. Have a wonderful, healthy, and creative week!

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The Collaborative Effect

January 12, 2020
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[If you are getting this email mid-week, my apologies. Emails sending was turned of the last few days for the blog due to late night human error. But now you have a mid-week pick-me-up!]

Have you ever used accountability to help you get something done? You know, when you tell someone else that you are going to do something and then you feel obligated to do it because somebody knows and you don’t want to tell them that you couldn’t or simply didn’t do what you said you were going to do? Most of us are pretty easily pressured by what other people think of us which can be used to our advantage when we’re trying to complete something that is difficult, scary, or just no fun. Like finding motivational goals for the new year!

Having someone else know of your plans can help you prioritize goals and just daily life. It’s why people do challenges in a group and post on social media. Your online circle of fellow challengers and followers will be expecting to see something from you and so you’re less likely to set that challenge project aside for something else.

Sometimes, though, even telling others isn’t enough to keep you on task. But what if you are working with someone else? Collaborations put a lot more pressure on us than just having someone else know you have a particular goal. We aren’t likely to step away from a project when we know someone else is expecting something from us. So, if you need something to kickstart your new year or want to take on a big project but are feeling a little overwhelmed, maybe the answer is collaboration.

The Who, Why, and What of Collaboration

As an artist, you can collaborate with anyone else who is creating. That means you could collaborate with another polymer artist, someone in another craft medium, someone who works in a traditional two-dimensional art medium, or even someone who works outside the visual arts like a writer, dancer, actor or musician. You do your thing and they do their thing under the umbrella of a particular concept or with a particular final project or event in mind. Not only are you more likely to complete your part of the project when working with another artist, the excitement and interaction with that person can give you so much energy as you’ll both generate excitement through the communication and exchange of ideas.

Have you ever collaborated with someone before? If you have are not, this is something to consider for this new year. Why is that? Let’s look at a few reasons:

  • Collaboration helps you grow. Having to work within the constraints and compromises of another person’s artistic vision pushes you to go in directions that you would never have gone on your own. There’s a lot of self-discovery in collaboration.
  • Collaboration can help you reach a new audience, especially if you collaborate with someone who is not working in the same medium or selling to the same market as you.
  • Collaboration cuts the workload in half on big or time intensive projects which makes them more manageable, probably more enjoyable, and more likely to be completed.
  • Collaboration adds a social aspect to your creative process for the duration of the collaboration. It can be hard working alone in the studio for hours or days on end, especially if you’re a full-time artist. The occasional collaboration becomes especially appreciated when you work alone a lot.
  • And, as mentioned, working with someone else is extremely motivating and inspiring.

Let’s look at a few examples of polymer artist collaborating with others.

 

The Whole Is Greater Than the Sum of Its Parts

Although there are many ways to put together a collaborative project, quite commonly one person does one portion and then hands their portion off to the other person to do their share. Helen Breil and Annie Pennington did just that to create this gorgeous brooch. It started with the blue polymer framework from Helen and was finished off by Annie with her metal and felt work.

 

If you work in canes, trading canes with someone or sending canes to someone to work with is an easy type of collaboration. That’s what happens with the extra canes and scraps that are sent to Ron Lehocky who makes them into his wonderful hearts. The canes for these hearts were created by Jane Dwyer.

 

Finding someone with a similar aesthetic or style as you can really help bring a collaboration together, not to mention a friendship. Polymer’s master caner John Stuart Anderson worked with painter and sometimes sculptor Luke Brown on this Tryptamine Palace. Although it sounds like they have been friends for some time, you can only imagine what working on an intense project like this did for their friendship.

Get an even better look at this amazing piece through this video.

 

Here’s an interesting roundabout collaboration. Stephanie Kilgast took on the challenge of painting and adding to a sculpture produced by Moon Crane Press from a graphite drawing by Miles Johnston, a two dimensional artist working heavily in pencil as well as ink and paint. In this case, the drawing was done independently of a collaboration idea but then Moon Crane Press, who Miles already worked with, decided to create a three-dimensional image of the drawing from which sculptures could be cast. Stephanie was invited to paint and further embellish the work. I’m not sure that one could purposely re-create such a situation but it is a great example of a collaborative option to take something that has already been completed by one artist and have it further developed by another.

 

Stephanie’s example brings up the point that collaboration doesn’t have to be just between two people. The Into the Forest project, the Russian Quilt project, and the Fimo 50th year Globe had dozens, if not hundreds, of people working on the same project. Most of us aren’t up for organizing things that big but if it’s manageable for a local group like your guild, you could have the whole guild work on a single project. Or three or four of you best artist friends could get together and make something any one or two of you would never have conceived of. Pretty exciting stuff, right?

Just Gotta Ask

if you are going to embark on a collaboration, be ready to ask a few tough questions and be ready to answer a few of your own. These are the kind of questions you and your collaborator(s) should both ask and answer.

  • What are you hoping to get out of collaboration project? You want to keep focused on each participants purpose in taking part in the collaboration as the work progresses.
  • How much time do we each have to dedicate to this project? Be realistic about how much you can do and scale back the project if necessary.
  • Will the final project be sold or, if not, who will it live with or how will you share it? Not everything you make has to be sold, but if you do want to sell it, collaborative projects as charity donations will get you publicity and networking opportunities.
  • What concept, theme, or vision is important to both of us? This question tends to get the ball rolling on what you want to make and allows you to get to know your artistic partner.
  • Will one or both of you oversee the organizational aspect of the project? Commonly, especially if there’s more than just two people, one person will organize the timeline and process, and keep track of progress. Overseeing the project doesn’t mean that person makes all the decisions, it just means that they will keep the project on track. It’s nice to have this figured out from the start so collaborators don’t step on each other’s toes.

Keep in mind collaboration doesn’t mean the work is 50-50. If one of you wants to do a lot more than the other or the primary concept is one person’s (such as Miles Johnston’s sculpture) but is embellished or finished by another (which is what Stephanie Kilgast did with Mile’s work) it’s still a collaborative piece but you’re just working to each other’s strengths.

Also remember that collaboration is supposed to be an enjoyable and inspirational learning experience. Be patient with your partner(s) if they’re not doing what you’d expect, talk if you have concerns, and be ready to compromise. It’s kind of like a marriage – you know something great’s going to come of it but it’s a give-and-take to get there.

 

The State of Things

I had hoped to have sign-ups for new subscribers to the Virtual Art Box this week but unfortunately, I was not doing so well this week and had to take it easy early on. I’m back to full steam ahead now but I have some catching up to do. It will be very soon though.

 

Nudge Sale is Still On… For 3 more days!

Our year end Nudge Sale is almost over. All the reduced prices go back to full price after the 15th. Right now, almost everything is on sale so if you need more inspiration at your fingertips as you set yourself up for a great creative year, hop over to the website and snatch up a great deal on beautiful print and digital publications!

 

Okay, I have to stop working now as I’ve got a birthday to celebrate. The tradition in my house is that the birthday person doesn’t have to do any work which, of course, makes it a struggle for this workaholic. But I’ll be good and let my dear man make me breakfast and take me to dinner and I don’t know what else. Maybe just curl up in a corner with a book. I don’t think I’ve done that for ages and ages.

If you want to help me celebrate my birthday, my preference is actually to have friends and family do something charitable. You can donate to my charity listed on Facebook – the International Rescue Committee fund which assist refugees and other displaced persons. Any bit of help that can be given to our poor Australian friends would also be wonderful. Being a big picture person, I give to the Global Recovery Fund who set up assistance for the long haul. If funds are in short supply, as they often are after the holiday season, just be kind to the world that we live in by maybe giving up one less disposable item (get a filtering water bottle and never buy bottled water again for instance) or just doing something thoughtful and kind and make someone’s day.

You all just stopping to read my yammering makes my day! Thank you and have a wonderful week!

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Go Big or Go Personal

January 5, 2020
Posted in

So, here we are. The new year has begun, and we have 12 months and nearly 52 weeks of possibilities before us. Will you be changing the way you work or challenging yourself this coming year?

If you read last week’s post, you know I have mixed feelings about New Year’s resolutions, but I do believe in always having goals. Goals give you something to bounce out of bed for in the morning. Even small goals can get you up and going and keep you focused. However, this weekend I want to talk about making big goals, or particularly big projects.

This will mean different things to different people but whether or not the idea of doing something challenging in size or scope appeals to you, I think it’s just one of those things you should periodically ask yourself. Do I want to do something big, monumental, dramatic, or just drastically different? There is nothing wrong with saying no and just focusing on small, easily manageable projects. But I think you ought to ask the question just to be sure.

Nearly a decade ago, I interviewed Gwen Piña who, at the time, was the most prolific polymer artist I knew of in our community, with over 600 accounts she regularly fulfilled orders for. (She has since retired from polymer.) With all that work, I was really surprised when she took me to a side room to show me her personal projects. These were rather tall dolls and other pieces made from found objects and polymer. These were her personal projects which she didn’t always try to sell. Although they took time away from her primary wholesale work, she acknowledged that she needed that creative outlet to make her happy.

I think that is an important consideration. Not everything you make has to sell. Actually, unless your livelihood depends upon it, nothing you make needs to be sold. Go ahead – create for the sake of creating! How freeing is that idea? I bring this up because, many times, our big personal projects are not something that is either easy to sell or easy for us to part with.

So, setting aside the idea that everything you make has to support a business, let’s talk about big personal projects you might consider taking on to feed your soul.

A Big Way

Large, showy art pieces are often referred to as “statement” pieces. Big necklaces, towering vases, and wildly colorful wall sculptures can all be considered statement pieces when they outshine the wearer or dominate the room they occupy.

There is more latitude given for the functionality of craft art that is created as a statement piece. Awkward and uncomfortable collar necklaces, dangerously spiky brooches, and vases that are too monumental to hold any kind of flower arrangement are forgiven their lack of functionality in exchange for being a conversation piece or attention grabber. These can be great fun to create because you have fewer restrictions with that concern for functional construction set aside. If you’re looking for a bit more freedom in your designs this year, this might be something to explore.

But what if we change that definition of a statement piece and attach it to work that is primarily personal—making that kind of work a personal statement piece, as in you have something to say. You may just want to share your aesthetic views, or you may have opinions about the state of the world, or you might aim to share the emotion of a personal experience. These are all expressions of the artist being taken from inside themselves and put out into the world. That’s really at the core of what, arguably, defines something as a piece of art.

So how about YOU get noticed for some “big” piece of yours this year that is focused on expressing what you want to put out into the world? Being that this kind of project is more for you, you also get to define what a big project means to you. It could be literally large. It could also be small but so minutely thought out or detailed that it is big in terms of its process and scope. A big project could be based on a really delicate or difficult personal subject that you have previously found hard to share. It could also be a large collection of work instead of a single piece. Or a piece made up of a lot of smaller pieces. Do any of these ideas spark a fire in you?

Let’s look at just a few “big projects” other artists have taken in polymer.

 

Thinking Big

Heather Campbell goes big quite often. The piece of hers that opens this blog, Trippin’ in Spain, is 6 feet long! A handful of years ago, you might have seen the challenge she took on of making this insanely detailed polymer quilt called Keep Circling. Much of the texture and pattern is created with the attachment of many small, but easily replicated accents and objects as can be seen in the detail shot.

This piece is both a great approach to creating big, beautiful artwork in polymer and a metaphor for how to take on a big project or any daunting goal. Just do one small thing at a time and, if you just keep at it, next thing you know, you have something huge and amazing and that goal is reached.

 

A similar approach can be used in jewelry. A gloriously monumental bit of adornment does not have to be complicated. You can simply make a lot of something that you love to create and bring it together into a single magnificent piece. Gloria Danvers does a lot of this type of thing with polymer butterflies, leaves, and other caned shapes.

 

You know how I mentioned you could set your big goal to not just be one thing but that you might consider just creating a big collection? Well, what if you did both? That’s essentially what Jeffrey Lloyd Dever did with his Edensong Revisited installation piece from 2011. Taking dozens of individual pieces, he created a fascinating wall piece that you have to just keep looking at to take it all in.

Edensong Revisited | 2011 | Approx. 50”H x 42” W x 3.5” D | Polymer clay, steel wire, plastic coated wire, repurposed mixed media, latex paint | Photo credit: Jon Bolton/Racine Art Museum

 

The idea of something big for you though, might just be a project that’s really different and daring. If so, I would strongly suggest looking at artwork in other mediums for inspiration, not just polymer. I don’t know if anyone’s doing any really wild with ear cuffs like the ones below in polymer, but this is just one possible inspiration for what could be done with polymer and unique forms of jewelry. Check out this site for some wild pieces. No artists are listed although they do say these are handmade.

 

Sometimes your big idea can simply be sticking with a particular theme and really pushing yourself to see what you can do with it. I got a wonderful email from blog reader Suzanne Andrews, noting how the last post on having a goal really resonated with her. She’d already started on her goal to get focused this year by cleaning up her studio (and that’s a pretty big project for many of us, I know!) And then, she said she, “placed one photograph for reference on the wall in the studio. It is of a painting that speaks to me and my goal is to create pieces that belong with this painting.” I don’t know if she’ll make anything literally big or complex, but I love that idea of committing to that painting. It will give her a focus on something that she feels personally connected to, which can take some bravery. And that is a statement!

 

The Big Idea

So, whether or not you’re ready to take on something big, in whatever way you define it, or just want to play around this year, I’m hoping to make setting goals, or at least working on a focus, to be a bigger part of what we talk about throughout this year. It’s something I’m going to focus on with the Virtual Art Box, hoping for those of you who are up for it, to make what I share with you a more active kind of information exchange. Most of us aren’t reading this to simply pass the time, are we? This material and our creativity drive us to make art, right? So, let’s do that and make art that we are personally passionate about! I can’t tell you how fulfilling it is to take risks and push yourself. You won’t always succeed but, man, when you do, there’s nothing like it!

We’ll go over a few other ideas for possible goals and focuses you might want to take on over the coming year if you’re not sure what you want to do yet, if anything. There really is no rush so just let ideas wash over you until something grabs you.

Myself, I need to put a rush on some things. I think we finally have the technical end ironed out for the new Virtual Art Box so I’m getting ready to get sign ups set up on the website. Just need a few more tests. Then back to whipping the content into shape. That’s my focus this week so keep an eye out for newsletters for more info and I’ll update you on the blog this next week and as well. Get on this list here to be notified first for special discounts.

 

Nudge Sale is Still On!

Don’t forget we have that nudge sale going for another week or so. Almost everything is on sale so if you need more inspiration at your fingertips as you set yourself up for a great creative year, hop over to the website and snatch up a great deal on beautiful print and digital publications!

 

 

Happy first full work week of 2020! Hope its a beautiful and creative one!

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