I have learned my process is oftentimes the sole product necessary.
This was one of those days.
For some reason "russet" spoke to me. I didn't actually know yellow was included until I read the dictionary entry. I added yellow to my thumb and printed on the page.
I did a bit of “brown study.” Dictionary pages with brown paint watered and splattered in russet and sable. A future mixed media background, perhaps, waiting to tell me a story I can’t know yet.
Looking at the mixed-media-page-to-be, I see images waiting to be brought out. My hope? I can translate the images I see.
I also played with a telegraph pole image.
Originally the little boy was in front of the telegraph pole workers. He seemed so excited, I decided to put him atop the pole, like a visitor from the future. Illustration is from a vintage children's book. Background, acrylic paint and gesso.
A foreign object to many today, a vintage vignette. I am not sure why I love it except it mimics the lines from my earlier work about the road outside Frazier Park. There is a reason for everything.
I also played with two companion pieces using picmonkey but the program was being finicky or I was, perhaps, not using it correctly or well so…. my work vanished.
Like I said, sometimes the process is the sole product necessary.
What's up with your creativity?
= = = = =
This post is inspired by (and a reflection of my participation in) Art Every Day Month, a creative adventure hosted annually by the incredible Leah Piken Kolidas. Join us and be inspired!
Julie Jordan Scott is a writer, creative life coach, speaker, performance poet, Mommy-extraordinaire and mixed-media artist whose Writing Camps and Writing Playgrounds permanently transform people's creative lives. Watch for the announcement of new programs coming Fall and Winter, 2014 and beyond.
Check out the links below to follow her on a bunch of different social media channels, especially if you find the idea of a Word-Love Party bus particularly enticing.
Please stay in touch: Follow me on Twitter: @JulieJordanScot
Be sure to "Like" WritingCampwithJJS on Facebook. (Thank you!)
Follow on Instagram
And naturally, on Pinterest, too!
© 2014