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I'm travelling into a new way of working, a new country, a new language, and a new hobby which I'm passionate about. Come with me for some of the journey...

Showing posts with label Fodder School. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fodder School. Show all posts

Friday, 4 October 2024

My Fodder School Year - with YouTube Hop

Hello all, just dropping in to let you know that I am sharing some reflections on my year in Fodder School as part of the Fodder School 3 YouTube Hop.  You'll hear me musing about the joys and the lightbulb moments as well as some of the creative struggles I encountered along the way.  And naturally I'm sharing a quick look at the projects I made - 10 out of the 12 months, so not too shabby!  And one of these days I'll catch up with the two I missed...

Start with my video here and then, of course, as with any good Hop, you can move on and explore Fodder journeys that have been taken by some of the participants as well as a few of the other teachers.  This hop contains a wealth of inspiration all by itself, whether you took part in Fodder School or not.

The links you need for the Hop are in the description below the video once you get there.  I hope that you'll enjoy seeing the variety of mixed media and collage art projects that we tackled in one year of Fodder School, and that you are inspired by the variety you will find in how each of the hoppers executes the same lessons. Enjoy the show!

The amazing instructors for this year of Fodder School - some of whom I mention only by their first names in the video - were Di Venter in October, Tiffany Sharpe in November, Barb Smucker in December, Megan Quinlan in January, Jennifer Penick in February, Shay Kent in March, Chris Karpiak in April, Susanne Randers in May, Sarah Gardner in June, Kecia Deveney in July, me (Alison Bomber) in August, and Yetunde Rodriguez rounding things off in September.

I'll be back on Monday with the first of an exciting series of posts for October - so I hope to see you then.  In the meantime, have a great weekend, everybody!

Every day, every year, every new season is a reset from the last, and you are still hungry for success, to do things better and better.
Fernando Alonso

Friday, 20 September 2024

My Fodder School Month

Hello all!  Yes, I know, I know... I vanished completely!  I hope you're all doing well, and apologies for the long silence (though silence can, of course, be a good thing... see the quotes at the end!).

August was my Fodder School teaching month and it was all a bit overwhelming.  As well as creating bonus lessons to expand on the original berry houses... 

... I was fielding questions and commenting on participants' projects across four different social media platforms!

And people were making so many amazing things inspired by the classes... from taking the leap into their own sketching and painting, to incredibly inventive tiny houses of all shapes and sizes.  Here are just a few of the extraordinary projects I visited on my virtual travels:




Here are a few more close-ups of my bonus Fodder houses...




And here, of course, is where all the inspiration started - with the original Very Berry Houses.




Although registration for Fodder School 4 is now well under way, you can still buy Fodder School 3 at any time, and enjoy the full twelve months of mixed media inspiration with lifelong access (including access to the Fodder Challenge classes from July 2023).  Just head to Willa Wanders for all the details... 

So I'm sort of back up and running now, but running is really the word.  I've got a work trip to the UK coming up, including running in person workshops at Country View Crafts and there are many things going on behind the scenes with PaperArtsy stamps-wise... so I can't promise to be a regular here again just yet, but I'm going to try to do much better!

Silence is a source of great strength.
Lao Tzu

Learn to be silent.  Let your quiet mind listen and absorb.
Pythagoras

Saturday, 1 June 2024

Collage Quartet

Oh dear, I'm so behind here!  It's the 1st of June, and I'm still catching up with sharing what we got up to in April in Fodder School... but I promise it's worth the wait.  It was an absolute creative treat.  The lovely Christine Karpiak offered up so many different techniques and ideas, and the final project was definitely right up my street!


The classes took us through a process of gathering and making fodder in many different ways, and then using that fodder to create a series of dimensional collages.  

My finished collages have a subtle, natural look to them that makes me so happy, but it's easy to overlook just how many different elements went into the fodder gathering and making.


There's clay-work, eco-dyeing, rusting techniques, stamp-carving, several methods of creating fodder papers, nature-foraging... and it was all so much fun.

I did my eco-dyeing with red cabbage... it's a staple ingredient here in the Czech Republic, so I thought I might as well go with the local produce!  


I was astonished at how playing with the acid/alkali balance of the dye created a gorgeous range of colours, so subtle and all beautiful in their own way.


I'm no stranger to rusting - there's usually a bit of metal or two decaying (deliberately) somewhere in my art studio...

... and I really enjoyed incorporating the rusting side-effects into some of the paper fodder making.

Those papers weren't the only ones we made... we also played with other methods of creating delicious collage papers.  As usual, I was working with my happy colours.


And my colour palette was also strongly influenced by my clay pieces, which were actually one of the first things I tackled.  I added a bonus session to the Fodder School classroom on these, as I used a different method from Chris for painting mine.


(If you join Fodder School, you get access to all the monthly bonuses too, of course.)

Just the fodder by itself made me extraordinarily happy, so I knew the collaging was going to be a breeze!  Working in a series is one of my favourite things to do.  And using old book covers as a substrate is another of my favourite things...

I put on some music and just allowed myself to become immersed in composition.  So meditative as a process. 

That word composition is so apt... arranging the elements on the book board substrates is all about harmony and rhythm, balance and counterpoint, just as it would be in music composition.

My quartet didn't feel quite balanced until I had added a significant word to each panel. Tim Holtz Quote Chips to the rescue...

They're positioned for harmony, counterpoint and rhythm, of course, but also for meaning.


Since the collages are mounted on book boards, and book pages play such a significant role...

... somehow I needed words in my final layers too.

Really and truly a beautiful month of creative exploration and joy.  So many of my favourite things, and a few new ones too.

I found myself in that sought-after state of creative flow so often this month, and I think it shows in the final quartet.  They make me deeply happy.

If all this is getting your creative juices flowing then this is a great time to sign up for Fodder School 3.  We're just starting the June classes - which include a mailart swap around the world!  It's only for Fodder School 3 participants, of course, so find all the details for registering here, and you get access to all the classes already available, as well as to those yet to come... including mine in August!

Happy June to you all... I hope you're enjoying a creative or restful or excitingly busy time (whatever you prefer) and I'll see you again soon.  After all, I need to share May with you before June catches up with me too far!  Happy crafting, all.


A word after a word after a word is power.
Margaret Atwood

Books and doors are the same thing. You open them, and you go through into another world.
Jeanette Winterson


Monday, 25 March 2024

My life in a box - or outside it!

Hello all!  The March Fodder School classes have been full of joy and moments of reflection.  The invitation from this month's teacher, Shay Kent, was to tell our life story on a decorative board, and so began a process of gathering, making, sifting and composition.  I found my way to an assemblage of visual poetry which makes me deeply happy.

This post is a long one, exploring some of the story of my creative life journey in words and pictures and objects, so you might want a cup of coffee or a glass of wine at hand.

(I obviously won't be sharing any of Shay's techniques or instructions here - you'll need to join Fodder School for all those details! - but I am going to include a bit about how I constructed my "board", since it's nothing like hers.)

You'll notice very quickly that a) it's not a board, but a box (or a crate, really); and b) it's not my whole life story.  It's an array of elements that hold meaning in my creative life journey, shaping who I am and how I live my life, full of stories about the things that matter to me, both in words and pictures.

Not so much my life in a box, as a life lived outside of many boxes...


Instagram doesn't really allow for long form descriptive writing, so I've decided to share some of the stories and meanings which are threaded through the elements in this wooden crate here on the blog, where War and Peace-length posts have always been traditional.


First, some practicalities... starting with the choice of the wooden crate - picked up for free in a supermarket fruit and vegetable section.  If you've followed me for a while, you'll know that much of my craft studio storage makes use of wooden crates (all picked up for free).

For years, they have transported both books and art supplies to and fro when I've been on the move for work.  (A long ago What's On Your Workdesk Wednesday post even shows how, having been used to pack and transport the supplies, the crates then became the shelves on which I kept things while working away from home.)


And now they help store stamps (and lots of other supplies) on the shelves in my studio, having had a coat of white paint to zhuzh them up, along with some kraft/wildflower wrapping paper coverings.  They work beautifully as storage both upright and on their sides...

Some (small) crates are used to display the many (many) tags I make, ready for flipping through for inspiration...

And some cope with much messier storage of fodder, or part-made or waiting-to-be-made projects.

So when I was initially collecting possible things for inclusion, it was automatic to me to gather them in one of the shallow crates I grab whenever I see one in the supermarket which is nearly empty of spring onions (or raspberries or whatever it happens to be).  

It wasn't long before I realised that actually I'd far rather have a wooden crate up on the wall than a pinboard.  It fits much better with the rest of the studio aesthetic, and it makes it easier to display lots of the heavier, dimensional objects which it was important to me to include.


But I also needed a surface I could pin things into, so I grabbed a couple of the (many) cheap canvases I have hanging around the craft room, and tried to work out a way to fit those in the crate.  (I've kept that label - "Czech Farm" - on the side... my move to the Czech Republic is definitely part of this creative story.)

To secure them, I used a bradawl to make holes where they were needed...

... and then screwed right through the crate into the wooden frames of the canvases.  

Not only does the layered arrangement give me the dimension and architecture I love to have in my artwork...

... but it creates a perfect "shelf" on which to stand the glass bottles (of which more later - they are significant!).

I knew my life wasn't going to fit in one box, so I wired some hooks to the bottom of the crate to allow for overflow.  My life has never fitted in conventional boxes...

Then it was a question of choosing and arranging my gathered memorabilia along with the lovely fodder made with Shay, so enough of the practicalities.  It's time to dig a little deeper and tell you something about what it all means to me.

Obviously, there's a reason I chose to be known in the online world as Words and Pictures.  Many of you will know that most of my working life has been spent in the theatre, working first of all as an actor (aeons ago) and then as a text & voice coach, specialising in Shakespeare. (Find out lots more about that side of my creative life on my main website, Words and Pictures - where you can also sign up for my newsletter.)  That included ten years working with the Royal Shakespeare Company, as well as with theatre companies around the world.

Words and wordplay have always been an obsession of mine, especially Shakespeare's language, so it is only right that his name and some of his words feature prominently in the crate.  And there is a direct through line to my Pictures side because those large pieces of text are actually from my recently released PaperArtsy Printed Tissue, glued to some fabric.  And PaperArtsy, of course, have played a major part in my creative story... more of that as we continue.


The bottles are important because they mark a really significant moment of realisation in my creative journey - definitely a lightbulb moment (though the lightbulb didn't make it into the final layout!).  I had no idea, none whatever, when I decided to leave my full-time position at the RSC and go freelance as a text & voice practitioner, that this visual creative journey would surge into being.  I had dabbled in miniature-making for much of my life to help out with my mother's dollshouse hobby, but painting, drawing, inking, stamping, paper, mixed media, watercolours... nope.  Never.


But that's what happened.  This blog, started in 2012, charts those early days of discovery, exploration and obsessive experimentation, and quite a lot of the rest of the journey too.  Don't get me wrong... the learning curve continues.  I still discover, explore and experiment... that is the essence of creative play and it's at the heart of my Words work too. 


The glass bottles mark a moment when it dawned on me that there had been a real shift in my brain patterning.  I was suddenly filled with a compulsion to possess (touch, use, play with, make art with) vintage glass bottles, and I sourced boxes and boxes of them (mostly on Ebay).  It was the moment I surrendered to the discovery that I was now just as obsessed with visual, tactile, artistic objects as I was with words.  I'm not any less obsessed with words - it's both Words AND Pictures now.


I think my deep and abiding love of nature is pretty clear in the crate.  The little wooden leaf clusters are left over from the wedding invitations I designed and made for one of my oldest and closest friends - you'll notice they've all got leaves missing!

And my colour journey is also very evident - the blues, greens, browns, purples, turquoises and greys - as well as my love of texture and different materials... wood, glass, metal, rust.


I love anything which captures light - the glass bottles again, but also the acetate and/or embossing powders in the various tags and artwork I've included.


Let's detour into those artworks... Long time blog followers may remember that I used the name "butterfly" in the early days (I'm still "butterfly crafter" on Pinterest).


I didn't realise as I was selecting them, but it turned out the main tags I chose to feature all have butterflies.


There are two main pairs of tags (and another pair plus one).  Making things in pairs and sets and series has become very much part of my creative mode.  Even though the tag pairs are slightly separated here (one of each pair in the crate, the other dangling beneath), they still call to one another.


They are Tim Holtz Idea-ology butterflies... he's a massive influence in my creative journey.  In fact, it was discovering his Distress Inks that started my whole visual art journey.  These tags are made with Distress Inks, my very first crafting love (soon to be followed by Tim Holtz designs in Idea-ology, Sizzix and all the rest of the Distress mediums!).

The other huge influence has been my creative partnership with PaperArtsy.  Very early in my journey, Leandra Franich got in touch to invite me to be on their Design Team, and many happy years of doing that then led to me to designing stamps for PaperArtsy.  That started with words... quote collections, with each set geared around a theme - Trees & Flowers, Music & Silence, Friends & Friendship, Night & Day and so on.  Words gathered from across the centuries and around the world, many of which I had been collecting in notebooks for years, which could now be available to me (and others) as rubber stamps to be added to art and craft creations of all kinds.  


In the meantime, I had started to explore watercolours, both loose, free-flowing watercolours (like the one included here in the crate), and also much more precise and detailed botanicals.


That botanical watercolour journey intersected with my PaperArtsy partnership to create the botanical sketch stamps you can see in action on a couple of the butterfly tags. (Violets from the Violet Edition and rosemary from the Rosemary Edition.)

 














Those botanical stamp sets include theatrical, historical and personal memorabilia too, so it all comes full circle back to theatre and words!  And there are personal memorabilia here in the crate too, which brings me to the other main stories running throughout the display.

Why did I move to the Czech Republic?  It's a question I'm often asked... the simplest answer is that it's my family heritage.  My maternal grandparents were both from here.  That cinefilm reel not only references my theatre/film connections, but came from my grandfather's big collection of films.

The postcard comes from a huge collection gathered by his cousin, Martha Pollack, on her worldwide travels with her sister Edith.  My stamp designs include some of her school reports from Vienna in 1903 as ephemera - I really wanted to include one of those in the crate, but decided it was too fragile to be up on the wall, so the postcard is a substitute!  Her side of the family fled to the US (where Martha became a renowned concert pianist), but my grandparents decided on the UK, so that is where I was born and brought up... luckily, since that's the home of Shakespeare!

But when I decided I had had enough of being constantly on the move (the whole of my working life has been peripatetic - even those apparently stable ten years with the RSC) and wanted to put down roots, both literal and metaphorical, the Czech countryside is where I chose to do that.  (My mother had been spending half of each year over here for 20 years, so I was used to visiting, and there was a network of friends and support already in place, plus I am entitled to Czech citizenship because of my heritage, so I've got the passport!)


The rusted key emerged out of the attic as it was being converted into my new bedroom.  No idea what it opens or winds - a clock, maybe?  What is now my craft studio was originally a cow shed, so I'm not sure why there would have been a clock in the attic above it.


I wanted to live a life here in the Czech Republic that was kinder both to the planet and to me.  A bit less time spent jumping on jet planes and a bit more time spent walking in nature.  (If you've seen my other Instagram account Bohemian Home,  you'll know I've got plenty of that!)

I knew I would love exploring the Bohemian countryside, but I didn't expect to become quite so busy in the garden.  Just as the art journey was unexpected, so was gardening... but it's the other big story in my life and in the crate.

I always wanted to grow some of my own food, but it never occurred to me that I would be buying hundreds of flower seeds and bulbs each year too!  The dried flower stems signify that new world of gardening opening up.

There are always plenty of them drying on the windowsill, waiting to be included in art works of all kinds...


And the eggs are there for the hundreds of birds I encourage to join me in the garden.  They're eating me out of house and home, but I love having their company and their singing to brighten each day.


The dried flowers also appear on the tags in the crate.  It wasn't conscious at the time, but it turned out to not to be accidental which tags I chose.  As I was photographing, I realised the tags I picked out not only have the dried flower stems from the garden on them, and the butterflies, and my own botanical stamps, but many also have words from my PaperArtsy quote collections (these two are snippets from quotes on the Nature Edition)... 












... and this quote from Gardens & Growth happens to reference the garden story.  (And it also taps in to one of my most recent creative adventures, teaching in Fodder School - the floating quote technique is the one I taught for the Fodder Challenge!)


Even the ones which have Tim Holtz Idea-ology stickers or metal quotes have unbelievably apt words for this project... 


I promise I didn't choose them for those "story" references - they were simply the tags I grabbed in the early stages, and it's only later that I found how completely perfect they were, even though they were made years ago.  I love it when your unconscious mind is in charge!


Everything in the crate seems to fit with everything else somehow.  Of course, that's to do with the colour story, the limited palette - but it's the palette I return to again and again, and it's the palette of nature - that's why it's so prevalent.  (My palette also shifts with the seasons as nature's does.)  But it's also about how interconnected the strands of my life are, the Words and the Pictures (and the theatre, the nature, the garden, the poetry).  Each aspect feeds, inspires and influences the others.


Reading this back, it all sounds very intentional as a creative journey, but I promise each step of my life has been far more accidental than planned.  But I will admit that there is a level of poetic manifestation or dreaming at work.


The poetry fragments on the fabric in the crate reflect that.  They come from my very latest designs for PaperArtsy.  One is by William Shakespeare - Prospero's words from the end of The Tempest.  (Not a favourite play of mine, but a favourite speech... I love that the thought about dreams is hovering in mid-air so weightlessly.) 


But the other two are from The Lake Isle of Innisfree by William Butler Yeats (see, I've even paired my Williams).  It's a poem full of yearning to "come into the peace of wild things", as Wendell Berry puts it.  Yes, I'm coming full circle back to words again as a moving force in my creative life.


Instead of the usual quotes, I've added the whole Yeats poem at the end of the post, along with Swineherd by Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin (a definite partner piece to the Yeats, at least in my mind).  

I think you'll find in both of them the poetic inspiration behind both my move from the frenetic people-based work of the theatre to a more solitary existence in the art studio, and my geographical move to the middle of nowhere in the Czech countryside.

They are words which have quietly, from somewhere deep within, been shaping the journey of my life.  (The text & voice coach in me wants to add that they are both best spoken out loud.)


Thank you for joining me for this journey through my journey.  As I said, it sounds a lot more calm and controlled than it actually is.  The lived experience is much more of a creative chaos... I'm really making it up as I go along.


It's only on reflection that I can see the threads which connect across the years... much as the initial creative chaos of any project becomes more orderly and reflective in the final version. 

I ended up revealing far more of myself in my project than I originally intended (another accident), so thank you Shay and Fodder School, for encouraging me to take these moments of reflection and discovery with this month's amazing offering.  And thank you to all of you for being there along the way.

Happy crafting, all!


Swineherd

When all this is over, said the swineherd,
I mean to retire, where
Nobody will have heard about my special skills
And conversation is mainly about the weather.

I intend to learn how to make coffee, as least as well
As the Portuguese lay-sister in the kitchen
And polish the brass fenders every day.
I want to lie awake at night
Listening to cream crawling to the top of the jug
And the water lying soft in the cistern.

I want to see an orchard where the trees grow in straight lines
And the yellow fox finds shelter between the navy-blue trunks,
Where it gets dark early in summer
And the apple-blossom is allowed to wither on the bough.

Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin


The Lake Isle of Innisfree

I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree,
And a small cabin build there, of clay and wattles made;
Nine bean-rows will I have there, a hive for the honey-bee,
And live alone in the bee-loud glade.

And I shall have some peace there, for peace comes dropping slow,
Dropping from the veils of the morning to where the cricket sings;
There midnight’s all a glimmer, and noon a purple glow,
And evening full of the linnet’s wings.

I will arise and go now, for always night and day
I hear lake water lapping with low sounds by the shore;
While I stand on the roadway, or on the pavements grey,
I hear it in the deep heart’s core.

William Butler Yeats