Your cart is currently empty!
Tag: reflections
An Artist’s Letter to Her Child
My Dearest,
From the beginning, you were meant to be mine. As you grew, my heart started opening to you. Slowly, some days, and steadily you made a home in my soul as your body grew in my body. And now, as I wait to see your face, I think of the things I want for you.
I want you to explore. Be curious, run free, immerse yourself in this vast world.
I want you to get messy. Touch the earth, be barefoot, make mistakes.
I want you to be fearless. Follow through on your ideas, create something new, add to the world.
I want you to love. Find passion for a dream, find beauty in others, feel love.
We will meet soon.
Love always, Mom
Reflections on an Artist’s Studio
Part I: The studio as a path to legitimacy.
My first studio was in high school, as an advanced placement art student I was given an easel and storage drawers that were for my individual use. I chose a space near a corner where two walls quickly filled with my sketches and paintings. I was eager to make my mark on the space.
After high school, my art practice waned and I did not keep a studio. I struggled to identify as an artist. I kept creating here and there, mostly on the side of my bedroom with the window open and fans on high.
In 2010 I made the conscious decision to pursue art with a focused practice. I made changes to my goals, my schedule and my finances and I rented an art studio. With one action, I shifted my identity from amateur to artist.
When my husband and I bought our home in 2013 my priority was a home with dedicated studio space. The detached garage is now my favorite part of the house. I am also fond of the kitchen.
Part II: The studio as a reflection of the artist.
The artist’s studio has always held a mystique and fascination for me. Even my first childhood observations of group studio rooms during after-school art lessons left me daydreaming of the individuals who worked in that space. There is no place more representative of the inhabitant and their inner being than a working artist’s studio.
During the time I rented a studio I loved the open studio days because of the opportunity to visit other artists’ studios. They were quirky, messy and still full of mystery. Each object a question to be asked. Each question a pathway toward understanding the artist.
Although I had dreamed of my own studio, the reality of my long-time dream left me insecure. My studio was clean. My studio was neat. Cluttering my studio just for show felt disingenuous. Was I mysterious? Was I an artist?
Slowly I adjusted to the idea of my studio as a place to work. In my studio I am productive and curious and brave. I work better in an environment with less clutter.
When friends visit the house they want to see my garage studio. I show them, nervously, and am met with pleasant questions about most of the things within. I am mysterious to them.
The artist’s studio is a retreat into the artist’s mind. Whether the space is filled with inspiration, tidiness, chaos, relaxation, seriousness or play; the space is possessed solely by the artist. There will never be another like it.