💥 TRENDING: Gallery - Uncensored 2025

Monday, June 30, 2014

June Monthly Challenge Recap



Our challenge painting this month has such a lush, tropical feel. I feel like I am smack dab in the middle of the rainforest! This picture has so many elements to be inspired by, from the moth dominating the image to the textures and shapes and varied green tones of the leaves to that delicious pop of red flowers. Let's see what you chose to be inspired by!



Your turn!
Click the InLinz Link-up below to add your blog post to the hop!
Please add your exact URL to the blog hop for the
June 2014 Art Bead Scene Monthly Challenge Recap.
  

Saturday, June 28, 2014

Losing Inspiration - what to do when your mojo goes for a walk

There's been a lot of talk recently in some of the online beading groups I'm in, about losing inspiration and the ability to create - albeit temporarily. It happens to the best of us. Whether you are a hobbyist, a full-time artist or anywhere in between, we all have times when everything you make, or try and make, just doesn't feel right - or worst of all, you don't even feel like you can get started. Creative paralysis, I call it.

I hear you! We've all been there. And for some reason, it seems to be one of those things that is catching. One person starts to doubt themselves and then the doubts of others seem to creep out as well. I don't think it's really that it has a knock on effect to others, apart from that seeing people sharing their own fears and vulnerabilities mean it can be easier for others to share their own fears in turn. A lovely aspect of being a part of this online community is that when one beader falls, another beader is there to pick them up. It really brings out just how supportive this community can be, in this great big old back yard of the internet. People sharing words of encouragement and throwing out ideas of how to get that mojo flowing again. People offering up ideas on how to add an extra 'pop' to a design. Even people offering to share materials with others. Beaders and bead artists really are a wonderful bunch!

I thought, as this is something I've been reflecting on a lot during this year, I would share some of my ideas and methods on how to get those design juices flowing again. Hopefully, these ideas will act as a creative spark to some of you. 

1. Start with an Art Bead.

Lampwork lentil from Moogin

I bet we all have at least one or two art beads in our collections that we fell in love with but haven't dared use. DARE to use that bead you fell in love with! Base your colour palette around it, use it as the centre of your design. Select ingredients around your little piece of art and take it from there. Here's a post I wrote on working with an art bead as your starting point and being bold with your colour choices in particular, with your little piece of handmade as your guide. 

2. The Muffin Tin Challenge. 

If starting with just one bead is too daunting, then try this - the muffin tin challenge! It is as fun as it sounds, although it doesn't necessarily involve eating cake. Unless you want it to...This is a challenge that Heather Powers put forward here on Art Bead Scene a few years ago. (What do you think - should we run this challenge again? Hands up!) It's a really simple, really easy way to give your brain a little creative push. 

"Fill the cup of a muffin tin with everything you need for one project - so the focal bead, accents, chain, findings - whatever you would need to complete one project and put that in one cup.  Repeat with the other 11 cups.  You now have 12 projects in a portable container ready for you to put together.  Grab your pliers/tools and sit somewhere comfy with your muffin tin and put each piece together knowing all your choices have already been made - your mission is to simply arrange those beads in a sassy design and complete those 12 projects as quickly as possible!"


Don't these look yummy? You don't have to do 12 of course - just try and few if the idea of 12 seems overwhelming. When selecting your elements for each cup, don't worry about thinking about how you will put the final elements together. Don't put that restriction on yourself - you can sort that bit out once you have each mini-kit made up. And there are no rules for this personal challenge - if whilst you are working, an element you picked doesn't work anymore, switch it out. Having fun is the only condition of these mojo boosters! 

3. Work to a inspiration piece/sign up for a challenge.



You knew I was going to say this one, didn't you? Working from another piece of art (and it doesn't have to be a painting), or from nature, or from a piece of architecture - anything in fact, that sparks your creative mind!) can really give you so much inspirational material to work with. Look at this beautiful piece - there's not just the colours, but the imagery - the lush greenery, the butterfly, the vibrant red flowers.....the ideas of wings and leaves even. You don't have to make a literal interpretation of a piece if you don't want to. Look at the linear qualities of the leaves and the wings. The spikiness of the flowers. The chevron patterns visible within the leaves....there's so much creative brain fodder here! 

I put my hands up and admit, I do not always find the time to take part in our own challenges here on Art Bead Scene, and I really should. They often push me out of my comfort zone, but with a beautiful and inspirational piece to guide and support me as I take the leap. This month however, both myself and Claire took part - and here's what we created. 

(ceramic butterfly – Jo Lucksted; enamel leaf – C-Koop; ceramic button – Dottery Pottery)


Fairy button from Green Girl Studios, handwoven beads from The Curious Bead Shop

4. The Muse/Inspiration Kit.

Plenty of bead shop owners such as myself design and make up kits for you to work with. I even have a club where I send members mystery bead kits each month - The Curiosity Club. I design a brand new and exclusive kit each month, and signees have no idea what they will receive! I also often include specially commission and sometimes exclusive art beads and components to really make the kits extra yummy. Here's one of the kits member were sent out last year - the first one I designed when I first moved over to Northern Ireland, aptly entitled The Emerald Isle:


Members often say it is a great way to get their juices flowing and that, like all of these challenges, along with helping give their mojo a wee nudge, it can push them out of their comfort zone and get them working with colours, shapes and materials that they otherwise would not have considered. 

Another bead shop owner/artist who offers up inspiration kits is Claire Braunbarth of Smitten Beads. (By the way, Smitten is one of my absolutely favourite bead shops, as you can just tell that Claire's discerning eye has chosen every single item that she stocks - Smitten Beads has a cohesive, inviting and beautiful vibe to it. Based in the UK, Claire also ships worldwide, so don't worry!) She also stocks art beads - what more could you want? Here's one of her newest kits - A Walk on the Beach, featuring a lampwork heart from Tempting Little Charms:



It can really help to have someone else pick out the ingredients for you if you're feeling a little stumped. You can mix other elements in, swap things out - go with what feels right. Like all the other mojo boosters here, there are no hard and fast rules. 

I hope if you are feeling like your mojo has gone for a walk around the block, or that next time it does, you will find a little spark of an idea that works for you here. I think what each of these methods I have suggested have in common, is that they give you a starting point - a spark. Something to work with. You can wander as far as you like from that spark, but sometimes you just need that spark from elsewhere to get going. A match can be enough, but sometimes we need newspaper, twigs and firelighters to get our creative fires going. That's ok. Be kind to yourself. Not everything you make has to be the best thing that you have ever designed. (This sounds obvious, but it's often that perfectionist within that causes the paralysis in the first place!)

If you're stuck with what's in front of you - take a break, go and make a cup of tea, step outside for a minute, go for a walk. Take a trip through Pinterest or your other favourite inspirational site. Watch a film; read a book. Look up to the sky, the buildings and the nature around you. Inspiration really is out there, just waiting for you! 

I'm going to end this post with a brilliant quote from Picasso that someone shared on Facebook a few days ago, on creative block and where Picasso got his ideas from:

"I don’t have a clue. Ideas are simply starting points. I can rarely set them down as they come to my mind. As soon as I start to work, others well up in my pen. To know what you’re going to draw, you have to begin drawing… When I find myself facing a blank page, that’s always going through my head. What I capture in spite of myself interests me more than my own ideas."

In order to create, you need to start creating. When it comes down to it, it really is as simple as that. 

Rebecca is a Scottish jewellery designer, currently living in Belfast, Northern Ireland. You can read more about her and her work at her blog, songbeads.blogspot.com and see more of her jewellery at songbead.etsy.com. She also has a supplies shop at thecuriousbeadshop.etsy.com.


Friday, June 27, 2014

Inside the Studio :: Erin Prais-Hintz of Tesori Trovati Jewelry

Welcome to Inside the Studio!

Each week one of our contributors gives you a sneak peek into their studio, creative process or inspirations. We ask a related question of our readers and hope you'll leave comments! As an incentive we offer a free prize each week to bribe you to use that keyboard. The following week we choose a random winner.

Congratulations, Annette Bond! You have won a $25 gift voucher for either the jewellery shop or the  bead shop of Claire Lockwood.  Please send Claire an email with your information.
________________________________

This week we visit the studio of Erin Prais-Hintz of Tesori Trovati Jewelry.

Five years ago this month I was asked to join a brand new artist's cooperative gallery in Stevens Point called Gallery Q. The idea was to bring together local artists in a gallery where they could exhibit their work and sell it. I was requested to join them and it was a huge leap of faith for me. I wasn't sure that I had what it took to be a part of something like that, but was very honored to have been asked. After all, I don't have a degree in art, so could I really be considered an 'artist'? That concept sometimes still niggles at my brain and provides me with moments of self-doubt.

Since I joined I had a lot of time to get to know about arts management, from working the desk to hanging the shows. In 2010 my fellow artists talked me into putting on  my own solo exhibit. I found it hard to come up with a concept that was worthy of filling an entire gallery until the day that I was working in the gallery admiring all the beautiful local art. That is when it hit me that I would be inspired by the art on those walls like I was inspired by the art each month here at Art Bead Scene. It was one of the single most successful gallery exhibit that we ever had at the Gallery Q.

Flash forward to today. Last November I pitched an idea for a collaborative show to celebrate five years of local art. I tentatively called it the 'Hidden Q' show and my concept was inspired by the hidden Mickey's that you can find in any Disney property. Everywhere you look you can spot those famous ears... in signage, on wrought iron railings, in carpeting. They are subtle but a part of the culture.

My idea was much the same... put a hidden Q in each art piece, no matter the medium. You can imagine that some people were right on board from the moment I pitched it, and others were a bit more apprehensive. After all, they justified, you can't sell artwork with Qs in it, could you? But it didn't have to be overtly a Q.... it could be a curlicue, or a cue stick, or a queue... and it could be as obvious as large Q. Over the ensuing months, just about every artist in the Gallery Q jumped in, as well as some artists who had been represented there in the past.

Then the Master Gardeners approached us. They put on a very well attended Garden Parade at various home gardens throughout the area in mid-July. They asked if we would be willing to be a stop on the Garden Parade where they would have the Master Gardeners select some art to inspire special floral arrangements. How could you say no to that sort of collaboration?

I created the poster above to help publicize the event. And this weekend is the big gallery changeover, where all the art on all the walls comes down and the new show is set. This will be the biggest gallery exhibit yet! And while I am 'in charge', I am very cognizant of the fact that this is very much a show for every artist and a way to bring more attention to our Gallery Q. I will be making up a scavenger hunt that will feature all the Hidden Q art so that patrons can have fun looking for the Qs and enter for a chance to win a total of five prizes totaling $500 in gift certificates to buy art from the Q. I am even having a local bakery artist create an exact replica of that poster for a special birthday cake!

For my art, I decided that I would focus on fonts. I am a font junkie, so this was my chance to create a set of sculptural pieces that use the Q as the primary structure. I have always been a fan of Alexander Calder's jewelry and I wanted this to be my nod to his genius using common materials in unexpected ways.


I got out my Now That's a Jig from Brenda Schweder and started playing with forms and shapes until I found something I liked. From there it all sort of fell into place. I used dark annealed steel wire, hammered a special texture and created these links one by one. Nearly ruined my fingers in the process! One link got the special treatment with gold leaf. This is just a close up detail of the links. I wore this statement necklace to the recent Bead & Button show and it garnered a lot of attention from some important directions, so I can't really share the whole thing with you...yet. I will certainly be making more pieces with this similar style. I call this 'AlphabetiQ' ... do you see the Q?

As I was making this I started to see visions of other letters and I will be pursuing where that will lead. I am excited about having a direction for some new work and think that it will be quite interesting. I am excited that my 'AlphabetiQ' necklace is one of 14 chosen for the Garden Parade from all the entries, and I can't wait to see how my necklace will inspire the floral designer!

Since I can't very well sell that piece, I came up with another font based design that I call 'Q Marks the Spot'. These copper and brass pendants are each unique with their stamped textures and markings, but have the same abstract structure. I only started with eight of them since I thought they might not go over well. I was worried that my artistic vision could be deemed too weird. But now I think that I will likely have to create more of these since one of them sold to a woman who stopped into the Gallery Q before I even had them in the POS system and the show doesn't open until July!

I may not have gone to school for my art but each time I get the chance to do gallery work and associate with these local peers I feel more and more at home with the moniker 'artist'.


So that leads me to my question for you... do you think people are born as artists or do they have to learn to become one? Or both? What is your opinion?

The winner will receive a 'Q Marks the Spot' necklace that I will create just for you!