Art

May 15, 2009

Alisa Burke: where fashion and art meet function

Alisaburkeclutch Artist and author Alisa Burke can make anything out of canvas. Everything from her wall art to fashion accessories roar with vibrant colors and rich urban textures and begin with canvas as her base.
Alisa's wonderful clutch purses are now available for custom order! Starting at $40 per bag, you can now have your own unique piece of art to carry around with you that will certainly be the envy of everyone around, and quite the conversation starter!
For information on ordering your own custom Alisa Burke Clutch, visit her ordering page. Keep your iPhone and lipstick in a functional work of art~ they'll love you for it.


Alisa Burke Links:
Alisa's Etsy
Alisa's Website
Canvas Remix (Alisa's Book)

May 07, 2009

Indie Rockers~ Kiss Kill: A Driving Force

Kisskill1 Written by Pamela Detlor

Pop-punk band Kiss Kill’s music has been likened to Tracy Bonham, Garbage, and Tegan & Sara. The band, co-founded in 2007 by, wife and wife, duo Michelle (vox/violin) and Dusti (bass), has since morphed into a quartet of four equal parts with Jeff (guitar/vox) and Mike (percussion).
Operating out of Portland, OR, the group has built a following across the Northwestern US. When they’re not rockin’ the stage both Michelle and Dusti are employed as social workers. Their belief in giving back has inspired them to stay involved in the queer community whenever possible. Michelle often speaks at high schools, and treatment centers about her previous battles with anorexia and self-mutilation. The bands next big gig is a May 22nd fund-raiser for SMYRC (a GLBTQ youth mentoring organization in Portland). The event will consist of the theatrical play, “She Had Wept” (based on selections from Michelle’s book of the same title), followed by an after-party featuring several bands including Kiss Kill. A silent auction is also planned for the event. Donations to the auction include art from Jann Arden, Linda Woods, as well as local Portland artisans. If you would like to donate $$ or prizes for the auction please contact Michelle @ http://www.kisskillrocks.com/

Kisskill2 The ladies took some time from their busy lives to answer a few questions:
Why is it important for you to give back to the GLBTQ community?

Both Dusti and I feel that although society in general has become more progressive, it is still extremely difficult to be a queer adolescent.

30% of the completed teen suicides are committed by LGBTQ youth. 50% of all queer youth state that their parents have abandoned them due to their sexual orientation. Over 55% of gay men have problems with substance abuse and 30% of the queer community suffers from alcoholism. The numbers just get worse and worse: homelessness, parental physical/ verbal abuse, high school drops out rates, etc. It’s truly horrifying; and to think that we, as a society, are doing this openly to our youth…

I (Michelle) for one can only imagine how my life would have been different if I might have had a positive queer role model in my life. I can’t say that it would have all been rainbows and butterflies with puppies and sunshine…We just think that having well adjusted LGBTQ adults actively supporting and giving back to their community is one of the only ways society will be able to break down the walls of stereotypes and statistics.

Our hearts and sympathies go out to Sirdeaner Walker: whose son, Carl Walker an 11 year old Massachusetts boy, hung himself after suffering from anti-gay bullying in his middle school. It’s all so terribly tragic!

Michelle, you are very open about your personal life struggles. What motivates this?

When I was 19 years old, my younger sister wrote me a letter that changed my life forever. She wrote: “Do you know how I love you? I always have and no matter what you do or what you choose I will always love you… it’s just so hard to say goodbye… I understand a little now- not goodbye but see you later. I love you.” She loved me so much that she could understand if I needed to kill myself; she just wanted me to be happy.

At that moment, I realized how love was perhaps the one thing still worth fighting for. I made a promise to myself from that day forward: I would be “that love” to the world- that my life was meant for something so much greater.

I see no reason in hiding from my past. I try to vocalize my struggles as much as possible because I have always dreamt my music and poetry would one day be the hope and the love that one person might need to change their life so completely:

Your whole life can change in a single moment- life is comprised of a series of choices and actions that make up these moments. And in life, the only thing that remains constant, is the idea that love is the driving force that encourages the soul to move forward…to seek out the light amidst the darkness…to strive for things greater than despair. Be aware of others. Love them because they are human, because you are human; because love will heal all wounds and love is the one thing that many find themselves without.

Kisskill3 Your lives have been the topic of a soon to be released documentary. Can you tell us a little about that?
The film follows the wedding planning process and the actual wedding itself. We were married on Hahei beach, in New Zealand on March 12, 2007. The documentary highlights the struggles that we as a couple faced during that time: with our families, politically, personally, and of course together. The film also focuses on our back-stories and interviews many people from out past. Both Dusti and I share our crazy life stories concerning our journeys through alcoholism, anorexia, and self-mutilation. In the end, the film takes place over several months and illustrates both the struggles and the triumphs we endured.

Now that your first CD has been released, what goals come next?
As a band, we are happy to have this first EP out of the way! We call it an EP because we are still interested in recording these songs and our newest (previously unrecorded) songs professionally. We are shooting for sometime this summer to get into a “real” recording studio and bang out a kick ass record. This EP was actually recorded in our living room and Jeff, the guitar king, mixed and mastered this baby all on his own. We are very happy with the outcome but look forward to a professional record soon.

We are also tentatively planning a “mini-tour” around the Western United States. Where we hope to hit our hometowns of Moses Lake, Washington, Laramie, Wyoming and Mesa, Arizona. But as of right now, we are all just mindlessly slaving away at our prospective day jobs- trying to make enough money to pay for said “mini-tour.”

What is your favorite thing about performing live?
Well, I (Michelle) for one am terrified of being on stage. I have extreme stage fright, so perhaps Dusti is the more qualified lady to answer this question…

(Dusti) Even as a teenager my greatest dream was to become a rock star. Music has always been the most influential force in my life. I can remember going to the live shows of many great female musicians (Ani Difranco, Melissa Ferrick, Courtney Love) and being in complete awe not only of their talent but of their passion and attitude on stage.

When I perform live, I just want to Rock… it’s that simple.

April 08, 2009

art.

Go here. click on "Art." enjoy. Peace. Ngaire x

April 06, 2009

Indie fixx.. and the fabulous Feed Your Soul free art project.

Hi and hello.
Ngaire here, with my first snippet of loveliness to share.

feedyoursoulheader_500.jpg
There is some beautiful free (!!!!) printable art here at "Feed Your Soul".  The Feed Your Soul free art  project is the brainchild of Jen Wallace of Indie Fixx. Jen has invited indie artists to share a piece of their art , (there are several each month..) for admirers to download, print and enjoy. There are some fabulous prints to choose from.. like this one by Jo Ashey.

For the full story of the project, click here
 and for the full range of downloadable art, click here.

and dont forget to say thankyou... art for free is truely a gift.

An artist cannot fail; it is a success to be one.
Charles Horton Cooley

until next time.


peace.

bliss,


Ngaire
x

Artist Profile: Mary Ann Wakeley

Maw_portrait

Written by Maria Hammon


Mary Ann Wakeley is a painter of amazing and vibrant abstracts. Many of her gorgeous pieces can be admired in her Flickr page and purchased at her Etsy shop.  She is currently exhibiting her work  at Artoteque.  She has been featured recently in the Humana Maelstrom Zine and at the Resurrection Fern blog.  We are very happy to have her now as one of our feature interviews!

 

Q: We all begin somewhere, surrounded by a supportive group of people who make us break barriers of fear and go towards the accomplishment of our dreams. What is your story? At what point in your life did you realize you wanted to be a painter/artist?

 

A: In my mind and heart, even as a child, I knew I was an artist. It was really a matter of letting the need to express myself come through strongly enough to recognize it and let it happen. Growing up I was most content when I was off doing my own thing creatively. When I wasn’t making something I was engaged in physical activities with my siblings or friends, or helping my mom with taking care of younger siblings as I am the first of six. I am still like this. When not painting I love to exert myself physically through running, walking or jumping on my mini-trampoline. It helps my state of mind and keeps the cobwebs out so I can enjoy painting. And somehow I manage to work a minimal amount of domestic activity into the routine.

The urge to be a full time painter struck full force after I turned 40 and had just gone through what was at the time a very sad event. But I came through it and art revealed itself to me as something I needed to pursue. In fact it seemed as though it was sitting there like a good friend just waiting for my attention. I have since committed myself to it like a person commits to caring for a family member. I have been supported very strongly by my family, friends and other artists from around the world.

 

 

Etre_libre Q: Where does your inspiration typically come from?

A: Right now it’s music. I listen to all kinds from R&B to rock to French rap and certain sounds and beats set me off in a direction for painting. I feel less visually inspired these days than audio-inspired. I have been translating sound vibrations into paintings. Because I am so influenced by the weather and the seasons, music is a tonic for me. I only listen to what contributes to a positive state of mind. This is all translated into painting whether it is through the color, the strokes or both. I enjoy looking at art, but I do less of it these days than I used to. I prefer not be influenced by what everybody else is doing so I don’t read art magazines any more. I do enjoy looking at art in mediums I don’t work with…. certain elements that I like may find their way into my work, but never in a copied form. It’s the transforming of an element in my way that I enjoy when I work. I like trusting what’s in me to come out and the pleasant surprises I can show myself.

Another aspect of inspiration is my interest in interior design and living environments. I have a thing for visual order and eccentric spaces, so I do get inspired by seeing how creative people live. I am interested in the organization of forms in space whether two dimensional or three dimensional, so I see it as all connected. It may not be a direct influence on what I do in my work, but it does inspire me.

 

 

Hors_d'haleine Q: How and how often do you create art? Is there a particular time of the day when you feel the most inspired?

 

A: I paint every day, seven days a week, barring outside events that take me out of my work environment. I work in my home, in what was formerly my dining room and this works for me just fine for now. I have never wanted to leave home for a studio somewhere else. I like the spontaneity of being able to roll out of bed to paint if I choose too. I don’t have a best time of day to paint although I usually feel most energized in the afternoon… morning feels like warm up and then I hit my stride early to late afternoon. I sometimes get a strong urge to paint late at night, but indoor lighting visually alters what I am doing so much that the next day the work doesn’t look the same. I haven’t purchased the right lighting to be able to work at night yet.

 

Q: What artists have inspired you to become an artist yourself?

A: Very early on—when I first took classes in interior design late 80s—I was very inspired by Georgia O’Keefe. It wasn’t so much her painting but her life story that intrigued me. This interest in art and the life that inspires it still fascinates me. When I look at an artist’s work, I must learn about their life and understand how it all connects. I am drawn toward strong-willed, persistent, pioneering individuals who are not afraid to do their own thing despite outside circumstances.

Artists whose work and/or life have continued to inspire me are: Louise Bourgeois, Howard Hodgkin, Robert Rauschenberg, Alice Neel, Joan Mitchell, Joan Snyder, Hans Hoffman, Gwen John, Willem deKooning, Jackson Pollock, and Louise Nevelson. I am a big fan of Klimt, Hundertwasser, Lucien Freud, Elizabeth Peyton, and many more who work in a variety of mediums.

 

Q: Can you share your most rewarding experience as a painter?

A: I can’t say there has been a single rewarding experience. I am grateful daily for the little things. If someone sends me an email saying I inspired them in some way, it is hugely rewarding. When a painting sells and someone writes to tell how happy they are with it, it is rewarding. When the gallery in Paris expressed an interest in representing my work, it was very rewarding. Being asked to be interviewed for a blog like yours is a treat! Each moment is treasured.

Paysage_de_l'amour As a woman artist, what has been the biggest obstacle that you have come across in your career path, and how have you been able to overcome it?

I haven’t experienced any obstacles as a woman artist. I enjoy being a woman and an artist. There are challenges to deal with in every facet of life regardless of what we do or who we are. I feel that we make our choices and life gives us what we ask for consciously and subconsciously. The challenges that I deal with are more generic… like how to best manage my time from moment to moment without letting external things weigh me down. I don’t try to control everything like I might have years ago… just do the best I can and let the rest go. As time goes on, I am learning more about myself in terms of what I need to be truly happy versus what I think I need to be happy in the future. I feel that we need to define our current needs and the let the road rise up to meet us, artists or not. It makes me happy to be doing what I love to do. I enjoy positively influencing others through my work and being supportive as a fellow artist. Having the means to continue on is important so I stay focused on the work and keep my eyes open for ways to get it out there. I am confident and have great faith that as I and my work evolve my needs will be met without limits or obstacles.

 

Q: Do you have any advice to share with aspiring artists?

A: If you have the desire to express yourself through art, just do it by starting wherever you are. Don’t make excuses for why you can’t do it. Be resourceful and remember you have the answers to how to make it work. You don’t need an art degree or schooling. The important thing is to follow your heart and experiment. When I first started out I looked at a lot of books on art and educated myself about artists I liked. I was automatically attracted to abstract expressionists but also to certain figurative painters so I bought many books and really enjoyed absorbing their work. I am not one to ask people a lot of questions… I tend to figure things out in my own way. But I do research what interests me. The Internet is wonderful so look at artists’ websites and blogs. You will be magically led to what you need. I started out by painting images of things I liked, like nature and family. My abstract work didn’t appear right away.  It is essential not to let fear of any kind paralyze you—have confidence in yourself and what you do regardless of your level of experience, and have fun. Stay true to yourself when it comes to how you want to show your work rather than listen to what other people tell you about what you need to do when starting out. As individuals, we have to find the way that is right for us. It is like finding the right way to eat…. we don’t all follow the same eating patterns to be healthy. I am happy to share what I have learned with others and encourage people to contact me with questions or comments on my work.

 

La_vie_est_belle Q: Are you a natural dreamer?  Can you share your biggest dream today?

A: I don’t have a really big dream but yes, I am a natural dreamer. I am less concerned with superficial, material happiness than I am with an abstract feeling of well being. I am learning to feel the happiness of dreams in my present experience by not sweating the small stuff, and reminding myself that all things will pass. I consistently work on not labeling things good or bad because these are relative terms. I focus on positive intentions of peace, happiness, feeling good about myself and others—it is amazing what goodness comes into your life when you can do this on a regular basis. I am eternally optimistic about life and the goodness of others. My biggest dream in this regard is to continue doing what makes me happy, confident that it will have the most positive influence on the world and see what happens.

 

Q: Where do you see yourself in 10, 20, 30 years from now?

A: I am totally open to what the future will bring. I see myself happy, making art, surrounded by family and friends, much like I am now, and am leaving the unfolding of the details up to the universe.

March 20, 2009

Artful REVival with Rachel Whetzel

Written by Maria Hammon

Rachel Whetzel  can make dolls with thrifted doilies and tea saucers, she can grow heart shaped tomatoes that rock your heart out and can pretty much make anything she touches look amazing.  I am  delighted to have the opportunity to share an interview with one of my favorite people in the blog world.

SelfPortraitQ: I love your personal statement on your blog about who you are, “Thrift junkie. Free Spirit. Believer. Artist. Photographer. Mom to boys. Rust Lover. Worm Farmer. Blogger. Creative Soul. Rule Bender. Spider Saver. Coffee Drinker. Cream Lover. Sailor Mouth. Music Listener. Phone Talker. Garden Grower. Mess Maker. Risk Taker. Good Intender.”  It just says so much about you and your personality!  What, do you think, is the single most significant thing in your life that has shaped you into the person you are today? 

A: I really think that who I am TODAY is such a combination of experiences. I don't know if I could pick just one. BUT I think that the single thing that has had the most INFLUENCE on how I reacted to all those little THINGS is my mom. She is the one who tended my creativity as a child, and encouraged it to flourish and grow. She is the one who planted the seeds that make me who I am today. She taught me, and allowed me to BE me without judgment or reservation. 

 Alteredclock

Q: I know you are such an avid blogger, twitterer, flickrite, crafter, mixed media artist, reader, communicator…and all those things you are as previously described, so my question is, how do you find the time to do it all?  I’m sure at some point you also need sleep, don’t you? Share you secret, I really need to know.  

A: LOL well you see... there is this little trick I use. It's called NEGLECTING OTHER THINGS. It's really pretty simple. I just put off sweeping, and dishes, and scooping the cat box. Unlimited texting helps a lot too. I do a large amount of my tweeting that way, and most of my other creativity, I smoosh into patches of time throughout the day. My hubby and I have also traded laundry and trash duties. Taking out the trash takes WAY less time than laundry... :)

Addressbox Q: What is your biggest source of inspiration?

A. I have found so much inspiration here on the Internet... Of course, Linda and Karen have inspired me. In ways I can't begin to explain, their friendship has given me confidence in myself that I have wished for, but never really had before. If I were to pick one source for inspiration, I would have to say that anything rusty or vintage really gets me happy. I start thinking of all its possibilities, and things that I could make with it, and the creativity starts flowing. Yup. Rusty Vintage. Gets me going EVERY time.

Q: Coffee7 Share with us your most favorite recent crafty project or mixed media (or both!) and tell us why you love them so much.  

A: My address box makes me smile a lot. One of my more recent happy creations was a doll I made for a friend of mine. It evolved into a whole creation that I planned on, and yet couldn't have planned on, and became better that I had hoped.

Q: You have a wonderful way of creating ART using all type of different mediums or vintage items, when did you begin creating art?  How did you journey begin?

A: Art began for me, when I was a little girl, and my mom would let me paint my face and my sister's face with watercolor paints. I remember painting all sorts of things and drawing all the time when I was little. I never got in trouble for making an art mess. I can't even remember NOT having art in my life. That's how young I was. 

Canvas Q: Can you share anything about any new plans or projects in the horizon?

A: I just officially registered myself as an artist "doing business as" with some encouragement from Linda, and I hope this summer to start on a journey of teaching art and encouraging kids to be creative and STAY creative. I'm not sure when that moment in time comes, when a child ceases to believe that they are an artist, but it's my goal to give them tools to stop that moment, and encourage them to keep believing that about themselves, even into adulthood. I also plan to start teaching some classes here on line. Updates about that will be posted on my website. My long term goal with that, is to open a shop that hold space for creativity and play for children of all ages. A place where if you wear your painting clothes, you get a free cookie. :)

 

Mail                               ________________________________________________     

Links:

* You can find Rachel's art on line in her etsy store.

* You can also find her hosting art journal prompts on a blog called A Year in the Life of an Art Journal.

* She can also inspire you and invite you to join in her own challenge blog called the GutterGirlz.

Nest * You can read her daily twitter updates here or visit her in her personal blog.

* You can delight in her photography here or here.

And if all that wasn't enough, she also 

works on line for the Tally Scrapper where last year, she hosted art journal prompts using Linda and Karen's book Journal Revolution as inspiration.

March 17, 2009

Jet Setting with artist Noelle Griskey

Sfo Artist Noelle Griskey of Pink BathTub Designs is inspired by the things in life~ from tiny things like a tomato in the garden to the big things like the  magic of a trip across the pond to new lands to explore.  She expresses her love for life and travel through her paper arts in a variety of journals, note cards, prints, and more. Each delightful piece is printed by hand. We were instantly drawn to her Airport and Area Code journals and note cards that reminded us of a fun part of world traveling~ figuring out where you are and how to make a call. And, in the case of  SFO and 415, it reminded us of going home.  A great little gift to give a traveler for under $10. It would  also be a perfect housewarming gift for someone new to that area. She offers many cities to choose from as well as custom orders.

Noelle  has two etsy shops, one for her JetSet Series of journals and travel inspired note cards and PinkBathTub  for her recipe cards, ACEOs, prints, stationery, and tags.

Check out her blog, her flickr, and follow her on twitter.

February 04, 2009

Artist Kimberly Reed: Back In The Studio

Kimreed2 In May 2008, we introduced you to artist Kimberly Reed and her paintings full of bold color and brush strokes. In the months that followed, Kimberly's life took some dramatic turns with the sudden and unexpected death of her husband. This very brave artist is back in the studio again and has been blogging very openly and honestly about her life now. We are moved by her words and are once again delighted by her art which she's also made available as prints and greeting cards.


Links:
Kimberly Reed's Etsy Shop
Kimberly Reed's Blog

October 24, 2008

Becky Kelly ~ Illustrating with Hope and Light

Written by Maria Hammon


Becky Kelly an illustrator of beautiful things. She is a passionate woman filled with joy and strength. She is a warrior and a mother.  Her art in children's books, greeting cards and prints reminds us of childhood when time was spent dreaming of magic fairies in forests with sparkling stars in the sky and animal friends who had regular tea parties with us.  I was delighted to have the chance to  interview the very busy illustrator.

Becky   1.       When did you decide you wanted to be an illustrator? Was this something you knew since childhood or something you decided as a young adult?

One day in third grade, my teacher, Miss Stanley put a drawing I did on the bulletin board, she told the class how nice it was.  Each day I drew something new and she would pin it up on the bulletin board with all the enthusiasm a fabulous third grade teacher could muster.   I knew I wanted to draw for the rest of my life.   (I'm sure she was thinking to herself, "Not another picture?- Doesn't that child's hand ever get tired.?")

Earlier, in kindergarten, my teacher read a Beatrix Potter book "Peter Rabbit", and "1 is One" by Tasha Tudor.

It was so enchanting, I think I flew in the air for days.  Before that, I can remember looking at colors, bright beautiful colors, and raindrops trailing down a big window.  I would follow them with my finger and look at the colors reflecting in the drops...

My mother taught me to read with Robert Louis Stevenson's "A Child's Garden of Verses"  Jessie Wilcox Smith illustrations.   

It was really a passion.   

Were you encouraged by your dad to paint or was it just a natural gift that he helped you develop?

My father and I would stop when on drives in the country, or when our family was staying at our cabin near Greenbrier.  We would often put up art easels together in the country side and paint the scenery.   We were always painting, my dad taught a few classes and I would tag along and learn.

My parents encouraged, but didn't push me to be an artist; but that it is all I wanted to do. 

Studio2. What is a typical day like for you?

(Things are unusual for me, I have a son with a chronic illness. I have learned to become flexible depending upon what is going on that day.)

Usually, I have a cup of coffee and head off to my studio, located beside my home.  It is bright and airy environment and  I love being there.

I start my day with prayer, and ask God for help daily, help with caring for my family.  I ask for peace and courage.  I pray God will use me and my work .

Then, it's off to my laptop to check Emails.   It is one of my favorite parts of my job. I try to respond to each one.  

To organize my day, I'll write notes about what needs to happen that day.  Some days I'll be sending out portfolios to prospective clients,  or respond to work offers or requests. On days I am starting on a new project, I'll surround myself with things that inspire me, like Illustrations from the 20's and 30's. Looking at new trends and current styles of art  helps me think of new ways to make my work pop, or make it more interesting.   

Around lunch time I take a break and check on my son.

I like to take a break at lunch and do something totally different, like read a magazine, or run a few errands.

After lunch is when I do most of my painting.  I love this time and try to keep it sacred.

I have two dogs that are so much fun to play with and inspire me.  I let them in the studio doors, then out the studio doors...then in, then out....  
3.     What is the best thing about being an illustrator?

Good question,  I love the act of painting and creating.  It really is therapy for me.  I like telling a story through my art.  I love color.  Color is never boring, it is rich and exciting and ever changing.

4.       As a working mother myself, I always want to hear how other women handle juggling motherhood with working.  And in your case, with your son's ongoing battle with a chronic illness which keeps a lot of your time tied up with doctor's appointments and treatment options, just how do you do it all?

That is a million dollar question!  Really, any mother of a child with a chronic illness goes through the same things.  It isn't what I would have chosen, but this is our challenge and we try to do our best with it.   

Payton, (now Rob) is an amazing kid.  Although he has this illness, he hasn't let it define him. He has a quick sense of humor and keen observation.  Often, he deflects uncomfortable questions about his illness into challenging and entertaining banter, laughing at the situation.  He is very bright.   I believe God must have known what was coming and had great mercy upon me, because he is really amazing. 

Although Rob has missed most of school since the forth grade, he has managed to keep up and make excellent grades (definitely not due to my teaching ability.) His quick wit and intellect keeps me on my toes.

There are some days when I think I can't do it anymore...when I think he is better, then the Eosinophilic Diseasecomes back with a vengeance.   It feels like the stomach flu, but doesn't go away.)  Most kids with this illness can't eat food.  I have a hard time wrapping my brain around it.  For the first few years, Rob couldn't eat food and drank an amino acid formula.  Every two weeks, we would enter in a new food and he would either pass the test or fail. 

This illness is very rare, but is being diagnosed more now, as doctors become more aware.

I do a lot of research, share ideas with other mothers in an online support group and try to help my son with his challenges,  

Through researching other kids in remission with this illness, I discovered interesting articles on a medication, Ketotifen.   The medication is not approved in the United States. I contacted another mother with a daughter in remission on this medication,   The woman has a Ph.D. - a research scientist, her husband is a pediatrician, I felt their research was worth taking to my doctor.  Our doctor had heard of the medication and prescribed it.    It has helped our son's illness go into remission, but we still have many side effects from the disease, and his immune system is still very weak.

2009_wall 5.       Wow, I can only imagine the kind of energy this must take from you. Having all this going on in your life, where do you go to in order to draw inspiration to keep creating your beautiful art?

Watching children at play, reading and (#7)

I enjoy the simple, light fairies of the 20's and 30's.  These fairies painted by artist like Jessie Wilcox Smith,  Ida Rentoul Outhwaite, Mary Cicely Barker, and Arthur Rackham inspire me.

6.       My daughter is very fond of your fairies. There is so much magic in all of them! Was the fairy world a part of your childhood life in some way?

I was always a dreamer and still am.  Being from West Virginia, (Scott-Irish)  folklore tales of fairies and elves been passed down through generations.  Mind you, these fairies are not evil fairies. Oh sure, they can be mischievous, but they were mostly for entertainment and lived in their own world, unaware of anyone watching. My father told us stories about fairies and elves and we would imagine them in the woods near our home, having tea parties, with a few frogs and chipmunks.  There were large rocks in the hillside near our home.  These were tea tables.  Little acorn caps served as tiny cups for tea.

*For more information read about the "Devil's Tea Table" in The WV Mountian State Journal article.

7.       When did you create your first fairy drawing?

Several years ago, fairies were not very popular in the US, but there was a trend of enchantment and sparkle embellishments in fashion and in design.  This inspired me to do fairies.  Now I see fairies in art all over the place.  I don't like wicked looking fairies, they seem dark and creepy.  I enjoy the simple, light fairies of the 20's and 30's.  These fairies painted by artist like Jessie Wilcox Smith,  Ida Rentoul Outhwaite, Mary Cicely Barker, and Arthur Rackham inspire me. 

8.       Is there a particular illustration you have done that keeps a special part of your heart, a favorite of sorts? I know for my daughter and I we can never find just one, we love them ALL!

I like different fairies for different reasons.  Many pieces depend on what I was doing or who insipired me at the time it was painted.

Some are of a child I knew, like my niece Kate Mcdanial was a favorite model.  My son is older now, but when he was little, there was inspiration everywhere I looked.  I would see a child in a playground, or at my church and the child would inspire the artwork.  Sometimes, they'd be doing something that would be incorporated, like carrying around a stuffed monkey, or teddy bear.   My sister was an adorable little kid, she is often in some of the images (the little blond haired fairy- the one that looks ornery).

Daydreams2009 9.        My daughter and I look forward to your calendars each year so that we can begin our year right.  In fact, for the past few years we have had a habit of buying two of the same mini calendars, one for her and one for me.  Mine I keep at work, and she keeps hers in her room.  For us, it is a way to stay connected. We tear apart the little calendar pages every day and we save the ones that are our favorites so that we can paste them in our journals later on as inspiration.  We often find it exciting to see that we happen to pick the same ones!  Your 2009 calendars are ready and we couldn't be any happier! Can you share what the main theme of your illustrations will be for the 2009 calendars?

Thank you, those calendars are my favorites.  The design team at Andrews McMeel, Marti Petty, senior editor, Stephanie Farley, art director; Erin Hill, designer and Chuck Harper, production, put the calendars together so beautifully.  They incorporate seasonal illustrations.  I love the colors and the way they put the calendar together.   We try to capture the simple moments, the ones that feel magical.

10.   We have also purchased your whimsical inspirational books. My Mother Gave Me the Moon is still one of my favorites! I remember you have one for teachers, and also one for grandmothers. In fact, we have given both of those away to some of Sabrina's teachers and one to her grandmothers.  Are there any other books in the horizon?

My Mother Gave Me The Moon is one of my favorites, too. It was beautifully written by Patrick Regan.

This year we have two new books!  A new mini mothers book, "My Mother Gave Me... "  and a new mini baby book, My Little One.     I have enjoyed doing books with Andrews McMeel, they have treated me so well.  The people I work with are incredibly talented.

Book_mothermoon 11.   Is there something in particular you wish to convey, or share, through your illustrations?

   I hope to convey light and hope.  I hope they make people feel good, and think of good things.  I always ask God to use me.  It is amazing to me when someone emails me to tell me how an illustration on a card or book brought people closer, or mended a broken relationship.  One email really touched me, from a woman.  She had been abused, and she would look at the illustrations to help her cope.  

I will never understand the power of God to work through something for His good.

Sometimes I struggle with the fairy thing and Christianity, but I think of fairy art as creative storytelling, and I believe that is good.  

12.   What does your son think of all of your magical creatures and beautiful characters? 

Well. let's just say he is a boy and 16, -not too impressed.

Secretly, I think he thinks it is cool I can work from my home and I do something I enjoy for a living. 

13.   I often find myself asking this question, only because I always wonder what creative, talented people think about when it comes to the future, but where do you see yourself in the next decade? Any particular plans about what you would like to do or create?

I don't know what is next.    I'd love to do children's books.   It is exciting to dream think about the future.   We are looking for a card company in the UK.

Secretkeeper_fairy_02 I've been doing a few Children's products and love these!

Fairy Secret Keeper Box

I used to have the future all mapped out with my own plans.  Be a successful artist, have a successful business, do my own line of greeting cards, and then do children's books.

But, as I've grown, I've learned that it isn't so much about achieving my dreams- it's more about doing whatever God has purposed you to do.   That is when I am happiest.  It seems like when I surrender my will and ask for help, things go much better...The things I love to do have been provided.   I want my son to be able to enjoy a full and healthy life and I'll do everything I can to give him that opportunity.  Until my son became ill I had no idea what caretakers went through daily. 

Sometimes, my faith is tested, I can get really depressed and I'm not a pillar of confidence.  I've painted illustrations from hospital rooms, while sitting with my son (painted get well book Brighter Day's Are On The Way- from a hospital room,  isn't that  ironic?)  I've painted starry night skies while "on hold" fighting with insurance companies. 

I have to ask for help with my "unbelief" to trust that things will be okay.  That my son will rise to the challenge in life before him, that he can be well enough to go to school this year. 

I ask for help when a good opportunity comes that I'll have the time, strength and inspiration to do the art work with excellence.  

Photo When I look back, there were times when Rob was very sick and I was juggling doctors visits and homebound school visits to exhaustion. He would sometimes need to be carried to the doctor’s office.  

I was not of the best state of mind to paint lovely pictures. I've cut back on my work.

But I have to find peace, ask for His help and ask God to put me in the palm of His hand.  To walk me through each day, one day at a time.   

I believe there are seasons to peoples lives, and it is winter here...but spring is right around the corner.   

So, I'll put on another log, have a cup of cocoa and enjoy the silvery branches of winter and dream of Spring to come.

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Thank you Becky for sharing these wonderful responses with us.  And for all of you who want to have signed art by our featured artist, you can get Becky Kelly's signed prints on Etsyand you can read more about Becky and 50 other artists from Virginia at The Art and Soul of West Virginia.

October 06, 2008

A Tale in Photographs: The Harsh Desert

Harshdesert_3 Photographs by Jayel Aheram will be on display and available for purchase at the Incredible Artist Gallery in Palm Springs, California, from  October 9-26, 2008. Jayel will be at the gallery on the 23rd and 24th to discuss his work as well as introduce new photographs.

"The Harsh Desert" is a tale in photographs. Jayel Aheram presents a collection of things seen, experienced, and lived while serving in the harsh deserts of Iraq and elsewhere. A unique view of events rarely seen in the nightly newscast, a point-of-view of one troop in a war zone and at home, and a glimpse of a vastly different and sometimes beautiful Iraq.

Following on from the tremendous success of his February's hit solo show and his participation in Art4aCure, US marine Jayel Aheram returns with a new show and new incredible photographs. Jayel has recently returned from a tour of duty and will be joining us.

"The Harsh Desert" will be one of the most talked-about shows of the season, so you cannot afford to miss it!

Special Events:

Thu/Fri October 23rd/24th, 7-10pm: Meet the artist.

Sat, October 25th, 7-11pm:  Artist Reception - Meet this incredible photographer as he introduces his stunning new works.

Jayel Aheram is a United States marine based out of Twentynine Palms, California. Still on active duty, he was deployed to Iraq's Al-Anbar province.

Incredible Artist Gallery
333 N Palm Canyon Dr
Palm Springs, CA 92262
(760) 325-5917

If you can't make it to the exhibit, be sure to stalk his flickr, his twitter, and his photography site. He's an amazing photographer who tells great stories of real life with his camera.