Creative Confidence & Tech Tips for Creating!

“It takes vision and courage to create - it takes faith and courage to prove.”
— Owen D. Young
FireFox Acrylic on Birch - 16"x20" (Loyalist Acrylic Confidence workshop demo)

FireFox Acrylic on Birch - 16"x20" (Loyalist Acrylic Confidence workshop demo)

When I have an idea, I start gathering reference photography. Sometimes I use photoshop to tweak, hybrid and create some new visual. It could simply be cropping images or exaggerating the colour/contrast. The result will be a lot of research and an image that feels right for a drawing/painting composition. Once desire creates that tension (aka. I NEED to create this into reality), I put out materials that I feel will support the vision ...

Yet even though I choose materials based on what I know they are and can do, I often don't know exactly what the outcome will be. This experimental attitude, that every piece I create is a step forward into an unknown and evolving conversation, I believe that because I am open to this reality is part of why my art often works out. The other part is a mixture of believing I could possibly do it combined with all that curiosity and excitement .... I won't know unless I try and just DO IT!

Self-confidence grows every time you keep a promise to yourself” —Asha Dornfest

The 'FireFox' painting above is a demo from my last Loyalist workshop, Acrylic Confidence: The Bold Basics'. My lesson plan was no different for teaching as it would be for my own work. I chose a reference that I was excited to create, despite any intimidations or challenges. There were of course a few hurdles I knew I'd have to climb (and lead the way for others) but I had a plan and a desire.... From there, the tension naturally overwhelmed the fear. The awe, wonder and excitement trumped any doubt and risk. This is courage at it's best.

A lot of the artists who took this class were first time painters. Many were almost finished a 16"x20" painting after working hard for 2 days. So proud!!!! They are now all POSSIBILITARIANS as they experienced first hand what can happen when you challenge yourself to try something you didn't think you could ever do!

“Confidence is that feeling by which the mind embarks on great and honorable courses with a sure hope and trust in itself.” -Cicero

I promised to nurture that courage. Of course, there are many ingredients that make up courage - aside to the willingness to be open, authenticity, trusting inevitable progress, and work really hard - I provided material knowledge and preliminary thought into a plan (although we we open! we made a lot of decisions and experimented based on brilliant ideas that came up as we went along), communicated and took it slow - a journey we took step by step together. Check out how they all took it from there and soared high! Their work is inspiring, and very much proof that spirit can be nurtured. xoxo

Patience, trust, persistence! - claudia jean mccabe

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Tech Tips for creating - start to finish!

  • Use standard sizes of supports right from the start, to ease the costs of potential framing.

  • Always photograph work as soon as you think it's 'finished', before framing and any kind of varnishing. It's a great way to reassure that decision, and if you use a good camera, it can go right into the archive.

  • Always paint the edges of canvas and cradled panels. I'll use a neutral colour that can often be found within the art which helps ground the work. My go-to's are payne's grey, carbon black and sometimes gold (which is semi-opaque and requires a couple layers).

  • Practice a signature regardless of media. If it's mixed media, I'll use a carbon pencil. When using paint, I choose a neutral colour similar to painting the edges or a couple shades darker or a lighter tint than the colour in the area I want to sign.

  • I used to flip flop - sometimes signing on the back, sometimes on the front, but after working in framing and realizing that the back get covered most of the time, I have started making an effort to sign on the front regardless of texture, medium ect.

  • Sign work on the front 1" in from all edges, no matter the support (ie. paper or panel), as both a mat or a frame naturally covers 1/4" of all edges. This is VERY IMPORTANT! If you take that into account, your signature will always look proportionate within the whole space and you won't run the risk of your signature looking cut off.

  • In regards to varnishing Acrylic art: There is too much controversy over this, and until more research is done, I won't be buying any specific varnish product. If anything, I will use a regular Polymer Medium to unify the sheen.

  • In regards to varnishing Mixed Media art: I have always and only ever used the tried & true Krylon Crystal Clear spray varnish, which is designed for all media. I shake the can well and spray many light misty veil layers only to set the media and never with the intention of creating a thick shellac-like barrier. This delicate approach still often changes the media, especially darkening lighter colours, and I accept that 100%. I'll go back in to sharpen if needed, but it's possibly why I use extreme high contrast to begin with (omg I just realized that!!!)

  • If you are wiring a canvas yourself, use d-ring hooks and appropriate wire. Here's a great article, and if ever in doubt, any frame shop can do it for a reasonable price.

  • Choose a framer you trust! Framing has a unique approach to design, and when done right, it will heighten the quality of your work and most importantly, protect it. I often recycle old frames, or buy them on sale, yet I replace components with acid-free matting and UV protective glass, with spacers for mixed media work. Expect to spend no less than $100 for custom framing, and build that into your cost if you are selling.

  • If you ever want/need framing advice, or have ?'s, I'm happy to help :)

The Sounds of Spring

Art is a form of love. Art is the ultimate gift. Art heals life. -Robert Genn

Here's to the Spring we await & we know is around the corner (even if it doesn't feel like it sometimes). Acrylic, Charcoal & Soft Pastel - 11"x15" (sold)

Here's to the Spring we await & we know is around the corner (even if it doesn't feel like it sometimes). Acrylic, Charcoal & Soft Pastel - 11"x15" (sold)

Life is happening ...

When a new year begins, it always seems like a blur.

We've accomplished a lot, even if we don't feel like we have. Somehow, amazingly, reality hits us around the spring. Time changes - we look forward to more ... and maybe, it's also good to look back a little.

I have a little chart that I've been updating since 2009. A simple excel file - one column for each year (what I've done). Then an ever changing column for what's upcoming (for clarity), and one for dreams (the almighty bucket dream list!). I can look back and see all the wondrous things I have accomplished ... also, look forward.

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This year, I just updated all the amazing new things! -- The 'Try It, You'll Like It' weekend workshops at Visual Arts Mississauga in February; Luc Sculpture teaser workshops in Feb & Mar, and the latest awesomeness at The Japanese Paper Place feat. PanPastels & Washi with 'Birds of a Feather'.

I dig the idea of accounting memorable moments (mostly good, and sometimes, not ((yes, I do include rejections and efforts lost!))). It's all motivating and inspiring. It's a tool that works for me ... since time does fly by - I never want to forget how lucky and alive I truly am. ♥

Fall & Winter Workshops 2016

Upcoming awesomeness!

VISUAL ARTS MISSISSAUGA

Art FUNdamentals •10 wks WEDNESDAY EVENINGS  Oct 5, 2016 - Dec 7, 2016 Time: 5:00 PM -6:30 PM, Level: Ages 8-9 *Link to register

Art FUNdamentals at VAM is a fun and progressive course comprised of over 600 lessons making up a 7 year program. Children never repeat the same lesson twice! Working at their own pace, students are encouraged to slow down and watch their imaginations speed up while developing and practicing new skills. Students work in small peer groups and investigate drawing, painting, sculpting, printmaking and much more while connecting the dots through art history, the principles of art and design and art practices from around the globe.

Teen Portfolio Prep-Secondary School•11 wks WEDNESDAY EVENINGS Oct 5 2016 - Dec 14, 2016 Time: 7:00 PM - 9:00 PM, Level: Grade 11+ *Link to register

Specialized courses designed for students who plan to apply to a visual arts program at the secondary or post-secondary level. Along with the opportunity to develop new portfolio pieces, students will be coached on presentation, critique and interview skills. Each student will participate in a private mock-interview and portfolio critique. Currently in Grade 8 and applying for Fall 2017 entry to Secondary School Visual Arts Programs. Emphasis is on preparing portfolio-ready work that meets the requirements of regional arts program in Peel District, Dufferin Peel Catholic District and Toronto District School Boards. Materials included. Students should bring a sketchbook and expect some weekly homework.

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Breaking_web

Acrylic Confidence - The Bold Basics • WorkshopPart 1- 5 weeks, THURSDAY MORNINGS October 6 to November 3, 9 am to 12 pm *Link to registerPart 2 - 5 weeks, THURSDAY MORNINGS November 10 to December 8th, 9 am to 12 pm *Link to register

Discover the essential techniques you need to paint confidently with acrylics! Understand the technical properties of acrylic paints and mediums, fundamental design, colour and value, and how the right tools and tips all work together to help you achieve astonishing results. Key techniques will explore traditional and experimental approaches to painting with this forgiving, versatile medium, giving you a new understanding of the myriad ways you can use acrylics to create anything that catches your imagination. Benefit from demonstrations, advice and personal guidance for beautifully completed paintings that combine knowledge and skill with the joy of painting!

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creative-cards-sample-web

Creative CardsSaturday December 10th 2016 - 9am-4pm

Get ready for the holiday season! Express creativity, joy & gratitude while continuing to improve your painting skills and learning a variety of interesting techniques to expand your ability to create with mixed media. Using acrylics, drawing tools, and collage elements in combination with tips for stylish presentation, this festive card designing workshop welcomes all ages and all levels of experience, inspiring a wide variety of ideas for making your greetings this year extra special.

Graceful Experiments

In the last year, I have nurtured a love for PanPastel colours since teaching Drawing Wild Animals with Craftsy, inspired by a series of Endangered Animals where their pastel innovation excited my spirit and creative process.

Although I have not had much experience using washi paper in my work, PanPastel recently asked if I would demo for Washi Wednesdays at The Japanese Paper Place.

I have been very excited to experiment with a selection of their beautiful, delicate papers, in preparation to demonstrate PanPastels & Mixed Media on Wednesday March 30th 2016.

Demonstrations will repeat throughout the day at approximately 1:00, 2:15, 3:30, 5:00 and 6:00. Please drop in at your convenience. It's Free!

It's the last demo to be held at their current warehouse (77 Brock Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M6K 2L3) as The Japanese Paper Place is moving!

This could very well be a transformative, amiable direction in my artistic voice ....

I very much look forward to sharing my journey with you!

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In the last few months, I had been waiting around to have time and a light bulb of inspiration to create. Perhaps winter blues, a touch of depression, and loss of focus - stress got the better of me. Although I wanted to sketch, to doodle, to experiment (I even splurged at the art store for some new sketchbooks and ink, in a moment of inspiration after visiting the AGO to see Turner's Painting Set Free exhibit) motivation seemed to be a random, fleeting, wondrous thing that fell through my fingers like apathetic sand... until I recently read this quote:

"The advice I like to give young artists, or really anybody who'll listen to me, is not to wait around for inspiration. Inspiration is for amateurs; the rest of us just show up and get to work. If you wait around for the clouds to part and a bolt of lightning to strike you in the brain, you are not going to make an awful lot of work. All the best ideas come out of the process; they come out of the work itself. Things occur to you. If you're sitting around trying to dream up a great art idea, you can sit there a long time before anything happens. But if you just get to work, something will occur to you and something else will occur to you and something else that you reject will push you in another direction. Inspiration is absolutely unnecessary and somehow deceptive. You feel like you need this great idea before you can get down to work, and I find that's almost never the case." -Chuck Close

This was all timely with the demo request because I am mostly a project based artist, and I am grateful. Thankfully, throughout the winter months, I have still been open to booking and collaborating despite how I was feeling. This zest has reminded me that although it's is OK to feel the blahs and we should be gentle with ourselves when going through tough times, it is important to remember what it is you truly want, and honour your spirit... because this understanding is what gets us back to dancing our way to BIG dreams! Self-motivation is part of the creative process. So with this spark of truth, I am going to fight these blahs every inch of the way forward! I am making the effort to create. This is where all the wise words come into play ... in order to make dreams come into reality, it takes determination, dedication, self-discipline ... patience, trust and persistence ♥

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The Dancing Brush • one of my favorite brushes in the world!

It all started in 2010 at a demo, when artist Peter John Reid handed me a unique, crazy extra long rigger brush, that he though would lend well to what I was painting at the time. It was obvious I had way too much fun painting with this brush, and with a gentle smile, Peter so generously gifted it to me. From there on in, this special brush has become an exceptional tool in my work.

I call it THE DANCING BRUSH.

Almost every artist I demonstrate this brush to has wanted it and asked for the source. Back then, I had saved a link for the original one, but since the brand is now obsolete * sorry!* the good news I have found that DaVinci makes a very, very similar brush! The biggest differences are the tiny handle and more bulk from the belly to the tip (which has more of a point), yet the bristle length is the same (55mm long) made of synthetic filament (imitation Squirrel hair) and has results that are similar enough to make me * squee * with joy while using it!

DaVinci Short Stroke Brush, pointed tip | Series 706

DaVinci Short Stroke Brush, pointed tip | Series 706

This brush allows me to 'let go'. You can of course us it to effortlessly create perfect, pin-stripe lines - but with jiggles and wiggles (think, a jazzy groove!), it adds playful abstraction with unpredictable variegated lines and peculiar, out of the blue dashes!

It is available on Amazon.ca - although not cheap (DaVinci is a high end brand), it is worth every penny if you keep it in your usual brush kit, reach for it often, and take care of it.

Here are some examples/inspiration for you, or works that benefited from The Dancing Brush!

Enjoy xo

The dancing brush was used to create impression of foliage 'scribbles'

The dancing brush was used to create impression of foliage 'scribbles'

The Dancing Brush was used with the Interference Gold accents in the background.

The Dancing Brush was used with the Interference Gold accents in the background.

The Dancing Brush is THE BEST for pin stripes!

The Dancing Brush is THE BEST for pin stripes!

Many elements of this mixed media piece were created using The Dancing Brush, from gestural scribbles, to dots!

Many elements of this mixed media piece were created using The Dancing Brush, from gestural scribbles, to dots!

Using The Dancing Brush with Interference Turquoise, this piece came alive!

Using The Dancing Brush with Interference Turquoise, this piece came alive!

Wallacks-Demo-Feb-2012

Wallacks-Demo-Feb-2012