Wednesday, April 20, 2016

Awakening Spring

'Fields of Gold' by Allard One


I just planted some purple vinca ground cover around my new Purple Ghost Japanese Maple. The tree is only two years old and very tiny still.  I buried the ashes from my last Golden Retriever, Buffy, at the bottom of the tree hole and sat down for a moment remembering her.  

I also thought about the rope swing hanging from my 75-year-old maple.  I love to swing and do so whenever I have the chance.  I repeated to myself the poem I learned as a child; ‘The Swing’ from Robert Louis Stevenson’s ‘A Child’s Garden of Verses’.  I read those poems to my children and grandchildren.  Since April is Poetry Month, I want to share this poem with you.


The Swing

How do you like to go up in a swing,
Up in the air so blue?
Oh, I do think it the pleasantest thing
Ever a child can do!

Up in the air and over the wall,
Till I can see so wide,
River and trees and cattle and all
Over the countryside—

Till I look down on the garden green,
Down on the roof so brown—
Up in the air I go flying again,
Up in the air and down!


Beats of a Different Drum

Pink Martini is an orchestra that has appeared several times in Omaha and their focus is jazz, pop, classical, and world music.  They started in the 90s in San Francisco and have made an international name for themselves.  They started playing together because they wanted fun and interesting music to play at fundraisers.  Since Arts for All is a non-profit and we do fundraisers too, I thought it was appropriate.  Here is their song, 'Hang On, Little Tomato'.  Check them out! 


Here’s a poem that goes along with this season as well as Poetry Month.  It is called ‘The Spring Wind’ and can be found with other seasonal poems in the poetry book ‘Changes’ by Charlotte Zolotow.

The summer wind
Is soft and sweet
The winter wind is strong
The autumn wind is mischievous
And sweeps the leaves along.

The wind I love the best
Comes gently after rain
Smelling of spring and growing things
Brushing the world with feathery wings
While everything glistens, and everything sings
In the spring wind
After the rain.


Now here's some "eye candy" for you.  I’m curious if you would consider this art.  There is a woman named Kristen Cummings who uses Jelly Belly’s Jelly Beans as the ‘paint’ for her art.  She uses many different shades to create depth and realism, much like working with mosaics.  She has sold her sweet works for thousands and has many of them displayed at the Jelly Belly corporate gallery.  It takes her a week to turn 12,000 jelly beans into a work of art!  There are 50 different flavors of jelly beans, so that’s how many colors she can work with.  In this interview with CBS, Cummings says ‘I like making things out of weird stuff’.


Come to Your Senses

The colors of Spring are subtle at first…fresh greens poking out of the ground and budding from trees.  Then the whites, pinks, reds, purples, and yellows of the flowering trees and springtime blooms begin to greet the warming weather.  In my yard, I sit close to an early flowering lilac, red and yellow tulips, and a crab apple tree now in bloom.  I love color and I can’t imagine a world without it.  However, my eyes are getting worse every day.  Because of birth defects with my eyes, glaucoma, cancer medicines, and age…my eyes don’t see as clearly as they once did.  Losing my sight would be worse than cancer, for me, because I love the world I see.  For these reasons, we will be focusing on color this month…as well as circles. 

Try making a color wheel.  Colormatters has some useful information on color theory, you may want to check out their site.  Start with the primary colors:  red, yellow, and blue.  Then add the secondary colors and follow that with the tertiary colors.  These colors, and so many more, impact our lives in ways we don’t often think about.  They can change your mood and energy, give you a sense of peace or joy…even the lighting in a room or shadows over colors can have subtle effects on our emotions.  Think about how you decorate your home, yard, and environment.  Does it feel good to you, fight you, displease you, or calm you?  Are there color combinations you gravitate toward?  I like warm colors, perhaps because they seem to energize me.  I am a passionate person and the warm colors suit me well.

Following along with the color wheel, the shape for the month is the circle.  Circles are never-ending, enclosing and inclusive, and all can see each other when in a circle.  Notice the circles around you this month. How do you feel about circles?  Where do you see them?  The photo at the bottom of this page is of a building in China that is in the shape of a circle and was inspired by I Ching coins.


Movement of the Muse

Last month, we called on our inner muse to find new avenues to create solutions.  If you tried the nine dot puzzle, what kind of solutions came to mind?  Did you allow yourself to step out of the box and see a different path?  My favorite solution is to cut out 3 rows of dots and put them side-by-side in a straight line…then draw the line right through all nine of them.  Here’s a link about this puzzle which is meant to expand our pathways and inspire us to ‘think outside the box’. 

Now that we’ve opened up more pathways for our muse to spread more seeds of creativity, things can start to blossom.  Color is bursting out everywhere and the springtime of creative expression begins.  Go back to the color wheel.  Start with your favorite color.  Look for and think about all of the things in your environment that are that color.  I chose yellow and Felina Kavi, who helps edit this blog, chose the color opposite mine on the color wheel:  purple.  Do you wear your favorite color often?  Does it make you feel a certain way while wearing it, or when you see it on others or in your environment?  What does the color opposite your favorite color on the color wheel make you feel like? 

Try this for the coming weeks:  choose a ‘color of the day’ for a few weeks.  Wear something that is that color, but also notice how many times you recognize it wherever you go.  Allow colors to guide you along a pathway each day that brings a new awareness to your mind.  Suddenly choices become clearer as the color seems to pop up in unexpected ways to answer whatever questions may arise. 

Now take those paints, colored pencils, or whatever you used to make your own color wheel and get a blank canvas/piece of white paper.  White can represent an absence of color, but you can also look at the potential of the void that is there.  Now let’s put some music to it.  While listening to this song, ‘How the Garden Grows’ by Michael Franks, allow the colors to be informed and guided by the music.  Do away with the thought that often comes when faced with a fresh start, ‘What should I do?’  Allow the muse to travel along with the song through your ears, into your mind, and through your fingers.  See what you come up with. 

“You can’t use up creativity.  The more you use it, the more you have.” -Maya Angelou
 
Guangzhou Circle in China

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

New Beginnings


‘Spring Time’ by Krzysztof Browko


Every Spring morning, I rush outside to appreciate all the new growth this season brings.  The tiny bits of green pushing up through the dirt, the opening of buds on my Japanese Maples and Cherokee Chief Red Dogwood…these signs of Spring are dear to me.  I love trees, flowers, shrubs, and growing beautiful and interesting plants.  I love growing Arts For All.  It is time to be getting the garden ready and we are doing the same thing with AFA starting with the new blog by a somewhat seasoned gardener.

New growth needs good prepared soil, lots of sun and rain, and tender loving care.  Essentially, it not only needs the time and attention of the gardener, but also support from its environment.  It is my hope that these seeds of creativity I am planting in words, images, sounds, and feelings will inspire our readers to grow creative gardens of their own.
 
There is a reason we are starting this new endeavor in March. Spring is stirring under the surface, ready to burst forth the beauty of new beginnings.  My intention with this blog is to provide you with something new and beautiful to see, to hear, to think about…we all need beautiful, joyful moments.  Creative inspiration is everywhere around us, and it has the capacity to not only make the world a more beautiful and interesting place but also to change lives in extraordinary ways.  I, and the Arts for All instructors, have seen this happen year after year with the students in our classes.  Learning to expand upon your creative abilities from other creative people encourages growth in many areas of life.  We at Arts for All love to see the blossoming of new ideas.

I would like to share with you how to be the creator of your own garden of inspiration.  Start with something simple.  This month, try a random act of kindness without any concern about being identified as the kindness giver…it could change your life or someone else’s.  I believe the arts change lives too.  May this blog inspire you to go plant good seeds.


Beats of a Different Drum
Photography is an art form that goes beyond ‘selfies’ and recording vacations.  Joel Sartore, a neighbor of ours from Lincoln, uses photography as part of his mission to save lives.  This project of photographing animals that are about to become extinct began for Sartore at the Lincoln Childrens’ Zoo.  His Photo Ark now includes up to 5400 species.  His photos are exhibited through this month in the NG Museum in Washington D.C.  He will also be projecting some of the images on buildings such as the Empire State Builiding and the Vatican.  Check out his Photo Ark for National Geographic to see some unique portraits of endangered animals.
The combination of beautiful music with natural settings is what piqued my interest in The Piano Guys. These musicians play on top of mountains, in forests, on beaches, and give their own spin on many different styles of music.  Check out some of their videos and experience a multi-sensory performance. 

‘The Waters of March’ is one of my favorite songs by Antonio Carlos Jobim, and is fitting for this time of year.  I love this version of the song sung by Susannah McCorkle.  Some of it is in English while some of it is in Portugese.  This springtime song encompasses the idea that there is beauty and wonder in the small things around us.  The choppiness of the lyrics brings to mind all of the slices of life that make up our lives, while the rhythm ties them together joyfully.  Please listen to this song, and hopefully it brings as much joy to your heart as it does to mine.


Come to Your Senses
I have been accused of being an addict.  I am, but not like you think….I am addicted to beauty….the beauty of just about everything I see, hear and feel.  I appreciate the beauty in all things…the beauty of people, the clouds, mountains, the sound of a fire crackling outdoors while camping or indoors on a cold and cloudy winter afternoon.  And, I am.  By coming to your senses, develop a sense of wonder and experience the WOW factor.  In doing so, more and more each day, you’ll learn to really see  Remembering the elements of art will make this happen if you focus on them….this is not hard and can become a habit….a good habit.

Color, shape, line, texture, pattern…look how one thing interacts with the other.  For this month, pay attention to patterns of all kinds, and things that repeat. In my room, where I am typing, I have a lot of geometrics…..wallpaper with squares, picture frames that are square or rectangle, books, the doors, the squares in the pictures, squares in the rugs, squares in the book cover, squares in the clock face.  Everything in the room where you are reading this has been designed, created, and made using these art elements.  Pick one pattern and look for it everywhere.  Find the words to describe these shapes and patterns.  Do you notice that you have an affinity for certain shapes over others?


Movement of the Muse
Would you say that you are creative?  When I used to ask students this, most would say NO.
I beg to differ.  My belief is that everyone is creative and the definition I use may be very different from most so that is why I say…..you are creative.  You may not be or want to be a painter, writer, composer, designer, inventor…however, I still say you are creative.  Thinking creatively is a common experience.  It is who you are as a human being.  Ideas can pop into your head.  Pictures come to mind.  It is life.  It is creative.
Novelty, passion, energy, willingness to try, to dream, to take a risk in anything…..even a new way to make chili.  Solve a problem, find a new way to work. 

Try this nine dot puzzle.  This is a classic problem for developing creative thinking.  Below are nine dots arranged in a set of three rows.  Your challenge is to draw four straight lines which go through the middle of all of the dots without taking the pencil off the paper.
 




Even if you have done this puzzle before, you may not remember how to solve it.  When finished you will see that you may be limiting your thinking by staying with a certain paradigm and not thinking out of the box.  We tend to limit ourselves and so many times there are many solutions to problems or creative ways of doing things.  Paying attention to your senses, thinking more expansively, and not restricting yourself to so many limitations all relate to working in the arts and creativity.  Look for more puzzles next month.

Albert Einstein says, and I agree along with many others, that imagination is most important.  “Imagination is more important than knowledge, for knowledge is limited to all we know and understand, while imagination embraces the entire world and all there ever will be to know and understand.”  You can go anywhere you want with imagination.



Sumet Jumasi's 'Elephant Building', Bangkok (Photo by Alamy)