Who knew that taking a depth year would mean in-depth time at home, in-depth conversations about health and viruses, in-depth time alone?
The first week of February I went to NYC for a wholesale gift show. I also viewed art at The Met and MOMA. Sadly I got the flu while there, so at home I spent the rest of the month inside. . . healing, pondering my life, saying goodbye to an old friendship that no longer suits. It was quiet and contemplative.
I got so used to staying in, that when Massachusetts issued a stay-at-home order in March, it wasn't a big change to my life, or so I thought. What didn't register were the weekly things I just did as a matter of course: Sunday lunch at a local Mexican restaurant with my husband after church -- they may not know our names but they know our favorite table and drinks order; lunch at the local sandwich place where we do know each others names, where they're fine that I bring my own to-go cup; occasional trips to Michael's to be inspired. I miss those people & interactions.
With all this time at home, and the freedom from deadlines or things I need to do, I decided to tackle the year-long online art workshop I'd signed up for. I recently got the prompt for week 12 and since I was only half done with week 1, I thought I'd jump back in. I sort of liked what I'd done before, but when I followed the rest of the instructions I absolutely hated my overall piece. The more I tried to fix it the worse it got. Finally I tore the pages out, walked into the room where my husband was selling on eBay and announced I was having an existential crisis. I can be so dramatic at times!
Bits of the page I did like
And then he asked "Do you know what you want your art to look like?"
I'm not sure anyone has ever asked me that question. And I was ready. I do know what kind of art I want to make. I know what I want my art to look like. I know I can take inspiration from others, but in the end I want my art to look like mine.
I felt so free with that realization, took the ideas I liked out of what I'd done, and made something completely different.
stencils, paint, stamps, embossing powder, ink & collage
Stencil, gel prints, glitter glue
The start of a new journal of art musings
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