Susie Monday

Artist, maker, teacher, author, head cook and bottlewasher.

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The art I make is the result of a life-long love of pattern, texture and color. How I teach is a skill honed by experience (I started teaching creative arts to younger kids when I was 12). After earning a B.A. in Studio Arts from Trinity University, I helped lead an internationally recognized educational foundation, designed curriculum exhibits for schools and other institutions, wrote and edited for a major daily newspaper, opened the San Antonio Children's Museum and then, a dozen years ago, took the scary but essential (for me) leap to become a fulltime artist and art teacher.

About This Blog

This weblog is about the maker's life. The teacher's path. The stitching and dyeing and printing of the craft of art cloth and art quilt. The stumbling around and the soaring, the way the words and the pictures come together. Poetry on the page and in the piecing of bright scraps together. The inner work and the outer journeys to and from. Practicalities and flights of fancy and fearful grandeur, trivial pursuits and tactile amusements. Expect new postings two or three times a week, unless you hear otherwise. 

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    « Pay It Forward | Main | Inspirations All Around »
    Friday
    Dec142007

    Finding your Voice, part 1

     

    pebbles.jpg

    Mixing metaphors I know, but its a convention convenient.

    How does one find that unique quality of work and process that lead to a personal voice or style?  Today I worked with my friend Susan Marcus on a longstanding book project that has grown out of our mutual history as arts educators and graphic designers, and strengthened as separately we explored personal creative paths in different  arts media.  Now back together we are hoping to bring the content to a new shape in a book for parents and educators called  New World Kids.

    At its most basic level, the question posed by these parents is "How do we find out who are children are as creative beings?" And that's the same question I hear adult artists and would-be artists ask, as well.



    I believe – and my belief is supported by more than 30 years of work with children in creative learning environments – that each of us is born with an innate preference/leaning toward a particular way of perceiving and giving form that is directly connected to what I (and my colleagues in this work) call the Sensory Alphabet. This vocabulary of non-verbal qualities – line, color, shape, space, light, texture, movement, sound and rhythm  -- is a way of thinking about and organizing one’s individual strengths of perception and invention. Looking at one’s preferences and natural tendencies through this lens serves as both a way to self discovery and as a bridge to understand other creative work. This vocabulary is not just an artistic one – it can hold as true to creative work in business as in design, in science as in art.

    Think about which  of these constructs is easiest for you to notice, to manipulate, to play with –is it pattern (rhythm) or texture or color? What did you love as a young child?  Which of these elements are most important to you in your home, your environment? What artists do you resonate to? Design exercises and experiences for yourself that feed your mind’s natural interests, or find teachers that share your sensibilities (look at their work and see what they say about it) who can provide classes that feed your perceptual strengths.

    An understanding of your own creative style in terms of this vocabulary can be the starting place for finding your voice – and even help you find the best and strongest medium for work.  For example, if color is my strong suite, I might take time to do dye and discharge samples, study Albers and other colorist’s work, take photos exploring color themes, investigate watercolor and glazing, look at color as understood by chemists and physicists, etc. If movement is a strong suite, I might see how to incorporate moving elements in my textile work, take up techniques that use my body in strenuous and challenging fashion, look at how movement blurs an image and how to capture that sense with dyeing or printing, I might even want to dye fabrics and construct garments for dance performances or architectural installations with moving components. Texture, color, line and shape ARE design "terms," but what if we think more broadly about these? Consider these consepts as  the equivalent of the written alphabet for a non-verbal syntax.

    Most of us have three or four of these strong suites that interact in interesting ways and can pose intriguing puzzles for our work. Tracking down your strongest perceptual elements is usually just a matter of paying attention to preference, to what you notice in a space, to the materials that call your name. Journaling about childhood preferences and doing detective work in your closet, your home, your memory bank can help you name your sensory strengths. What do you fill your personal world with? How do you doodle? What do you wear and why? Is it about color or culture, ease or movement, tactile quality or interpersonal message? There's no wrong or right answer to any of this. What is, what is. It's just that as adults we may have so many "non-individual reasons"  -- for protective coloring, for cultural or tribal survival, to fit in or stand out or for keeping the peace -- lots of  "outside" reasons for our likes and dislikes, our playtime and routines, that we may have forgotten to pay attention to what it is we really love. Look there. Love what you love. Its the first step to finding your style as as artist, to singing your own song.




     

     

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    Reader Comments (2)

    Susie,

    Congratulations! I have no doubt that your book will be a gift to the world. I have so enjoyed reading your blog. You have a gift with words-and images-reading your words has been like the sound of water running gently over a smooth stone.

    I look forward to seeing where this new endeavor leads you.

    Best of luck and thank you for sharing your gifts and talents.

    ~Sheri
    December 15, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterSheri
    This post touched my heart. I have been on a journey myself as an artist. I have been a needleworker for 40 something years but I have only found the artist inside during the last few years. I belonged to an artist's coop and discovered that hand embroidery is my medium. I love to knit and crochet but hand embroidery is the best way to express myself and bring me to my center.

    Bless you for your wonderful post which will allow others to figure out their medium.
    December 23, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterDebraAnn

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