art
Artistic, musical, creative, and entertaining topics in Journal's workplace sphere.
Dare to drape differently?
There were moments when I was younger where I'd open my mother's suitcases to find her old *sarees, I loved wrapping myself in the silky, earthen streams of nine yards of fabric. My mother would travel regularly in the Asia-Pacific region, so I found fabrics from India, Japan and Vietnam. My favourite was always the Tanchoi* saree made in Varanasi and Gujurat.
By Priyanka Kaul5 years ago in Journal
The Right Tool Makes All The Difference
My name is Pam Wagoner and I am an emerging mixed-media, creative reuse artist. I love taking items and materials that are often discarded or seen as trash and turning them into something new, useful and worthy of admiration. My goal is to inspire people to waste less, while being creative about it. I hope that the beauty and uniqueness of the art will draw attention to the fact that we all need to be more aware of the waste we generate, how we dispose of it and the impact those decisions make on our environment.
By Pam Wagoner5 years ago in Journal
Stitching Stories
When I first discovered embroidery at fifteen, I stitched on thin cotton with the friendship bracelet thread and safety scissors from my childhood. Then, as I grew in my abilities, my craft aged with me. When I picked up an embroidery hoop and clamped the thick, new, special fabric inside, my fingers began to push and pull the needle. I followed the threads, sometimes without looking or thinking, and created imagery with meaning. I never followed a pattern; the creations were of my own making. Embroidery is an act of repetition and precision, and sometimes, with the right intentions, it is elevated through symbolism. I soon realized that to engage in a traditionally domestic craft in a creative way is subversive to patriarchal norms and expectations of femininity and yet also honors the work of our foremothers. I thought about the ways craft is passed down through generations, and through hoops and scissors, too.
By Anastasia Kranz5 years ago in Journal
For the Love of Fiber Art
Like so many of us during the Spring of 2020, I had a lot of time on my hands during lock-down. I have always had a passion for creating, and because I was now working remotely, I decided to put my free time to good use. I had just created a new painting and it was by far my best one yet. However, creating my best painting required me to cut off canvas from other frames to use.
By Gabriela Navejas5 years ago in Journal
LoopiLasso
All my life, I have loved to design characters. Since I was a child, I have always been very artistically inclined. The first style of art I mastered, is paper cut art, which I began at seven years old. I am the oldest of four kids and I often held mini art classes for my younger siblings, teaching them my paper cut art style.
By Nicole Hiebert5 years ago in Journal
Paint It Black
“Sometimes, you have to get angry to get things done” - Ang Lee It started with anger. I was a blocked writer working at a day job that didn’t pay a lot but still paid more than anything I’d ever done. I had spent my life doing the bare minimum to please outer expectations while trying to pursue my own inner dreams. But somewhere along the line, those dreams got quieter and I got more tired. The only thing consistent was the guilt, screaming at me the whole time: you will be a total failure if you give up on art. Otherwise, what’s all this been for?
By Raistlin Allen5 years ago in Journal
Alaskan native art
At the mere age of 6, my first day of native arts class was spent learning the basic rules of tool safety, and being taught the pledge of allegiance in my native tongue, Tlingit. Since we were just kids with little hands, we started out carefully beading simple necklaces. After weeks of practicing with needle and thread, eventually we were given a pair of fiskars and felt fabric, to cut out the shapes that would become our first beading projects.
By Madison Dawn Nickerson5 years ago in Journal
Landscape and Portrait Female Artist, Elaine de Kooning
Elaine de Kooning wouldn't spend her profession under the shadow of her better-known spouse, Willem de Kooning. A craftsman in her own right, she took an interest in Abstract Expressionism and large numbers of the developments that followed. Her commitments to workmanship history incorporate a charged picture of President John F. Kennedy, a re-arrangement of customary likeness, and an immediate test to creative sexual orientation jobs.
By Jacob Walker5 years ago in Journal












