Showing posts with label creativity tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creativity tips. Show all posts

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Fall and Winter Classes in Phoenix, Arizona, 2013


 Chili Peppers
Watercolor pencil on paper
by Rosa Phoenix


I've enjoyed beautiful summer in San Francisco this year, and I'll be heading back to Phoenix, Arizona soon for the winter.

I've posted my upcoming classes and events on my website.

You can see it by going to www.rosaphoenix.com and clicking on Classes.

I'll update this as I add more events, so please check back for the latest schedule.


Thursday, June 6, 2013

Copy of Venus, Satyr and Cupid by Correggio


pen and ink drawing by Rosa Phoenix
on letterpress paper


I was looking through an art book of masterpieces of the Louvre Museum. 

I found some letterpress stationary paper and made the drawing on it. 

I took a photo of the drawing with my iPhone, and then I edited and filtered the image in the Camera+ app.

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Creative Collaboration

Lovebirds
watercolor by Rosa Phoenix


"Love is, above all, the gift of oneself."  

- Jean Anouilh





A few months ago, in the Fall of 2012, I partnered with the City of Phoenix, Arizona to teach free and low-cost art classes at senior centers.

My first experience teaching, it is the most wonderful collaboration.

Most of my students are beginners. Many have physical disabilities, or are recovering from illness, injury, trauma and grief.

They come to class with an open mind and heart. 

They are shy and embarrassed, because they don't yet know how to draw or paint. 

They are drawn to my classroom because something in them wants to create, express the beauty around them and within them, and to learn the skill of the artist. 

They know instinctively, that creative expression is their birthright as humans.





"We can do better than I can."

- Lykke Li





I think the highest form of creativity is collaboration.

The spark of energy exchange that happens when two or three or more share their ideas, is so much greater than what one person can accomplish alone.

That's why I love teaching so much.

To be able to share my love of art, and to teach people the skills to create their own works of art, makes my heart happy.

My students greet me shyly and say, "I can't draw," or "I can't paint." 

Within half an hour, they are happily drawing or painting, and watching themselves do it with amazement.

Their sense of sight, and their observation skills awaken. 

Suddenly, they are looking around them at their familiar world, now rich with colors, shapes and shadows that they had never noticed before. "It's beautiful!" they say.

Their ordinary world becomes an extraordinary world, because they now have an artist's vision.



Lotus Pond
acrylic painting 
by Rosa Phoenix



Wouldn't it be wonderful, if we could live this way every day?

We can . . .

. . . be the student, with open mind and open heart, willing to learn, willing to improve, aspiring to a higher expression . . .

. . . be the teacher, willing to share the skills and knowledge with others . . .


In my daily work, I do both, teaching and learning, sharing and collaborating.

My students continually inspire me with their dedication and motivation. They inspire me   because they make so many contributions themselves: volunteering, teaching and giving, with all their hearts.

We share our best selves with each other. Let's keep doing this, and uplift the world.

Friday, December 28, 2012

Winter Forest Watercolor Lesson



Winter Forest
watercolor painting by Rosa Phoenix



Happy Holidays!

Believe it or not, it's cold and wintry here in Arizona, and there's snow in the mountains!



We painted a wintry forest scene in my watercolor classes. 

This is a nice lesson for beginners. We learn about wet-on-wet technique, using masking tape, and color perspective (distant objects are lighter in color and appear blurry, while closer objects are darker in color and have more definition).



Step 1






We start by masking off the bottom part of the painting with masking tape, then applying a pale wash of paint (using lots of water) to the paper in a cool blue lavender color. 

This will be our sky.


Step 2






While the wash is still wet, loosely paint in the most distant layer of trees, using a slightly darker lavender paint that is very wet. I use a small round brush, using a quick back-and-forth motion. It doesn't have to be detailed, because the trees are very far away. 

We want the trees to blend in with the sky, to get a misty look.


Step 3








While our background tree layer is still wet, we loosely paint in the middle layer of trees in a blue green color. The colors will blend together and that's OK.


Step 4







We let our painting dry, and then we paint in our final layer of trees that are closest to us. We use a dark blue-green color paint, and we use less water this time, so our trees have more definition.

Finally, we remove the masking tape and paint the bottom part of our painting. I painted a wash of icy, light blue color.

My students used their imaginations to create a scene here: one painted snowy hills; another painted a deer, and another painted a river with fish jumping in it!







Remember to stay creative and open to possibilities. It's a wonderful way to live life!

Friday, October 26, 2012

Autumn Colors: Watercolor Painting Lesson





It's Autumn in Arizona! 







What better way to enjoy the changing season, than by walking in Nature, and seeing the autumn colors?

I took these photos on a hike to Horton Springs, near Payson, Arizona. 

Up in the mountains, the trees grow tall, and their leaves put on a spectacular display of color, illuminated in the sunlight!



the creek from Horton Spring


The change of seasons gives us a chance to reflect on the changes in our lives. 

It's a time to celebrate our growth and progress! 

Autumn is a colorful reminder that we can make a brilliant impact here on Earth.





I'm very excited about a new change for me this season: I'm teaching art classes!

I love it, because I am sharing the joy of creativity with others.  


*****


Here's a beginner's lesson in watercolor painting and color mixing, inspired by autumn colors:





First we learn about the color wheel. 

By mixing the three primary colors (red, yellow and blue) we can mix all the colors we need. Do you see the beautiful colors of autumn?





It takes just 3 steps to make our painting of autumn foliage:

Step 1





First we wet the paper, then start dabbing primary colors onto the paper. 

The colors mix together right on the paper. (This is called wet-on-wet technique in watercolor.) 

Then we let it dry.



Step 2

We use a cut piece of sponge, dip it in more paint, and dab the paint on the paper with the sponge.












Here is what it looks like, after we have added color with the sponge. Do you see how it creates texture?


Step 3




To finish the painting, just use a small paintbrush to make the tree limbs and branches. The brown color was mixed using all three primary colors: red, yellow and blue.

And we are done, in 3 easy steps!

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Are you a Visionary? Use Visualization techniques to turn your dreams into reality

 photo by Rosa Phoenix


Are you a Visionary? Are you using the powerful mind technique of Visualization?

Visualization is a buzz word that I've been hearing a lot about lately. It's a technique that visionaries, artists and creative people use naturally to produce great works of art and inventions. It's also a technique that many successful people use to set and achieve goals.

I was searching online for a good explanation of visualization, and I wasn't able to find one easily. So I wrote a short, simple summary of how to use this technique. This is available at 365 Just Show Up, Dr. Audrey Low's blog about creativity and the daily practice.

If you are interested in learning about visualization, please follow the link to the article here:


Are you a Visionary? How to use the power of Visualization @ 365 Just Show Up

Monday, October 4, 2010

Alice Waters

sketch by Rosa Phoenix


This is a contour drawing I did of Alice Waters.

Alice Waters is well-known in the San Francisco Bay Area and beyond for founding the Berkeley restaurant Chez Panisse, and for championing local, organically-grown food.

She also created the Edible Schoolyard project at Martin Luther King, Jr. Middle School in Berkeley, California, which is an educational program that centers around students growing and preparing their own food at school.

I briefly lived in Berkeley in 2008, in the neighborhood known as the Gourmet Ghetto (so-called because of the many wonderful markets, specialty food shops and restaurants).

Of course Chez Panisse is there and Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School's Edible Schoolyard garden, where I enjoyed occasional morning walks watching the squirrels taking the best figs from the fig tree. So I admire Alice Waters and what she has done for Berkeley, food, local farmers and the community.

A contour drawing is a nice exercise to try. Use a single line to make your drawing and don't lift your pen or pencil from the page. You are supposed to make a contour drawing without even looking at the page, but it's OK to cheat a little bit. This is a good way to stop thinking about what you are drawing, and just rely on your eye and your hand. 

You will have to draw slowly to get a good drawing. 

Try it, you will be surprised at the results!


LINKS





Saturday, August 28, 2010

365 just show up: How to find your Muse


Burst of Blue
painting by Rosa Phoenix

I'm guest blogging on 365 just show up. It's a new blog about the creative practice.

Maybe some of you also follow Audrey Low, who has the fabulous blogs Papaya Tree Limited and Wildhoop Productions. Audrey created 365 just show up to encourage people on the creative journey. (Audrey creates a lot of fascinating work herself, as an ethnographer, writer, photographer and documentary filmmaker!)

Click on the link below to read my post, How to find your Muse:

http://365justshowup.blogspot.com/2010/08/how-to-find-your-muse.html

Friday, July 30, 2010

Are you a Consumer? Are you a Producer?

 Photo by PressPhoto


I hear the word consumer used a lot, as a measure of personal and collective financial health. We live in a consumer culture. We read Consumer Reports. We measure various consumer statistics to determine the health of our economy. When consumer spending goes up, we feel better, because we think we are richer.

What does the word consumer mean? Literally, to consume means to eat. According to Mirriam Webster Dictionary, the word is derived from Latin consumere, which means to take.

Consume has various meanings:
 
  1. to do away with completely, to destroy (fire consumes buildings)
  2. to spend wastefully, squander, use up (time-consuming)
  3. to eat or drink especially in great quantity, to enjoy avidly, devour (consumed a feast)
  4. to engage fully (consumed with curiosity)
  5. to utilize as a customer (consumer goods)

We are all consumers. We are constantly making exchanges with others. We exchange money for time, services, things.

I believe there is an over-emphasis on the word consumer. There is an imbalance, because we don't often hear the word producer.









So what's a producer? According to Mirriam Webster Dictionary, producer also has various meanings:
  1. one that produces; especially one that grows agricultural products or manufactures crude materials into articles of use
  2. a person who supervises or finances a work for exhibition or dissemination to the public (like a movie producer)
  3. an autotrophic organism (as a green plant) viewed as a source of biomas that can be consumed by other organisms
So the producer grows the food source, or in the case of the green plant, it is the actual food source, that will be consumed.

I think a producer is a maker, a grower, a creator. Someone who can take raw materials and make useful things out of them. Someone who can generate, invent, improve, craft, cook. A producer uses hard work and wizardry to make something that wasn't there before.

What if we valued producers as much as we value consumers? What if we talk about producer culture, and read Producer Reports? What if we use production quality and numbers as a measure of abundance in our lives? What if we identify ourselves as producers, as much as we identify ourselves as consumers?


 African Christmas beads and charms
jewelry by Rosa Phoenix


A few years ago I decided that I want to produce more than I consume. I realized that being a consumer is time-consuming, and also money-consuming.

I opted out of a lot of things I used to consume regularly: movies, TV, books, magazines, a lot of entertainment and pop culture. After taking in so many images, stories, ideas that had been produced by others for my consumption, I grew full. I needed to go on a fast for awhile.

I want to be a producer of ideas and art. So instead of using my time to consume, I use that time to produce.

Of course we are all consumers and producers. I want to find a healthy balance between producing and consuming. I want to create as much as I consume.

I recently went to MakerFaire for the first time. I was happy to find an event that was more about producing, than consuming. It wasn't so much about buying things. The things for sale were materials, kits and how-to books. Lots more people were making things, than buying things. Ideas are free.


How do you feel about being a consumer? How about being a producer?

Sunday, May 23, 2010

20 Tips for Dealing with Your Inner Critic


photo by Jenny Erickson


This is the face of the inner critic. Most artists have an inner critic that interferes with the creative process. Often this happens when the artist is just starting out, but it can also haunt the artist throughout his or her life.

The inner critic is very predictable and repetitive. The inner critic is likely to say mean, unhelpful –well, critical things to the would-be artist. My own inner critic says things like:
Why do you bother? You’re no artist.
Why even try? You’ll never be good enough.
There’s nothing original you could do.
You’re just wasting your time.
This hasn’t turned out the way you expected, so you’ve failed.
You didn’t do that very well.
That’s too difficult for you.
    Unfortunately I let my own inner critic rule my life for a long time, and it kept me from enjoying a creative life for many years. Finally I decided that art is what I really want to do, and I won't let this inner critic keep me from doing it anymore.



    marker drawing by Rosa Phoenix
    (a page from my sketchbook)


    Here are my 20 tips on how to deal with the inner critic, so you can get to work doing what you were born to do: expressing yourself!

    1. Write down your fears about creating. Once you have them down on paper, look at what you’ve written. Are any of those reasons enough to keep you from making some marks on paper, writing a few words, stringing beads, or molding some Sculpey? I thought not. Now that you’ve gotten your fears out, get on with being creative!

    2. Invite your creative spirit to join you/guide you in your journey of self-discovery. While working, honor that spirit.

    3. Don’t allow negative self-talk to interfere with your creative process. Be aware of negativity when it comes up, and dismiss those thoughts that are unconstructive.

    4. Remind yourself that you are doing a therapeutic activity. It isn’t “frivolous” or “meaningless” or “a waste of time.”

    5. Avoid serious attempts. Create “just for fun” in a private journal or sketchbook that no one else sees. You won’t have to worry about anyone else judging what you  create.

    6. Imagine that you are creating art with a child. Your creative spirit sees the world with fresh eyes like a child, explores without rules like a child, and enjoys the process with sensual delight like a child. So work with your creative spirit just as you would with your own child. Would you not encourage, support and praise your child throughout the process of discovery? So nurture your own “inner child”/creative spirit the same way.

    7. Remember to K.I.S.S. (Keep It Simple, Sweetie!) Especially if you are a beginner, keep your ideas and compositions simple. If you are new to drawing, don’t try to draw a complex, ornate design or a scene that is dense with activity or objects. Start with simple shapes at first, then work up to more difficult subjects.

    8. Use cheap materials like construction paper and Crayola crayons, chalks or color pencils. Sometimes, buying expensive new art kits and Strathmore paper at the art supply store can actually inspire fear rather than creative freedom. Sometimes people worry about messing up or “wasting” their new art supplies, or they feel pressured to create a masterpiece worthy of their professional artist materials.  Instead, use cardboard from a box destined for the recycling bin, and buy Crayola crayons and construction paper in the school supply section of the drugstore. Save your premium art supplies for when you are feeling more confident.

    9. Give yourself permission to fail. Tell yourself that if you don’t like what you make, you will tear it up in little pieces for collage (or whatever is appropriate for the material you’re using).  It can still be used to create something you like after all! Or just toss it if you never want to look at it again!

    10. Let go of your pre-conceptions or expectations of what you want your artwork to look like. Let it be what it wants to be, let it grow organically, don’t restrict it. Enjoy discovering and observing the process of an artwork taking shape. You are helping it to emerge and be born into the world. It has a life of its own.

    11. Let go of perfection. When working with paints don’t be upset when the paint runs, drips, puddles and gets out of your control. This is what makes a work “painterly” and charming. It isn’t supposed to be perfectly smooth and perfect. Sometimes I add imperfections like this to my art to make it look more artistic, loose and free. The beauty is in the material, as well as in the idea.

    12. Welcome “happy accidents” where you spilled paint, put down the wrong color or made some other “mistake”. You could invent something to create out of that. See it as an opportunity, an artistic challenge.

    13. Don’t be rigid, go with the flow. If something isn’t working out, don’t force it. Feel free to start over fresh. Take a deep breath and let out any disappointment or frustration before starting something new.

    14. Don’t compare yourself to other artists. Don’t compete. Celebrate your uniqueness. Don’t attempt to copy the works of Michaelangelo or Rembrandt, then get upset that it doesn’t look like the original. Learn from the masters, but don’t expect to become a master overnight. Don’t forget, when copying other works, to inject some of your own personality or vision into it.

    15. Remind yourself that you will improve over time. All artists get better with practice, and develop their own style.

    16. Try creating art with a friend. Make sure it’s a supportive, non-competitive friend who is fun to be around. Make it a social activity where you can talk, share, even collaborate on each other’s art. Give each other encouraging and appreciative feedback. If you like creating art this way, consider getting a group together for regular creative sessions.

    17. Check out the Museum of Bad Art. This site is hysterical! If nothing else, bad art makes us laugh, and that isn’t bad at all!

    18. Write about the process of creating the piece, and how you felt making it. The process is as important as the finished product. Keep this note with the art piece so when you go back to look at your art later, you’ll know what your state of mind was when you created it.

    19. Reward yourself with a few words of gratitude. You overcame your resistance. Thank yourself for doing this healing activity and for giving yourself the opportunity to be creative.

    20. Relax.

      What are your experiences with your inner critic? Do you have tips for dealing with the inner critic?