Thursday, 5 June 2014

Introducing: Super-Power Creative Girl

Girls.
I have three of my own,
and one brave boy.
They are all awesome and I love them like crazy.
There is absolutely nothing that compares to having a family
{And I mean nothing}.

Girls.
I also really like creating them in my art journal,
and on canvases,
and in my sketchbook...
{you get the point}.

I have been creating them for the past few years
and they are scattered throughout my studio.

This is one of my creations,
based on a recent {wonderful!} class I took
by the super-talented Danielle Donaldson.

Her work makes me swoon.
It just grabs at something 
deep inside of me.
It's magic,
It's playful.
It's like looking at a rainbow
all the time.
I love, love, love it.

Assignment #4: Here is my creative, super-power girl
from the Creative Girl class:


 Yup, I really like her.  
with her rainbow hair, 
super-hero designer cape
 and crooked little mouth.

Here are her humble beginnings, with a few possible friends:



You can see a few other girls I have created here, and here, and some quick, abstract ones here.

Silvia



a trip to Narnia

Like most of you, my life is super busy. 
It feels crazy sometimes, 
trying to fit so many things in each week,
while longing for a slower pace.

But there are a few things that I wouldn't trade in
our morning times with God
sweet moments of connection with family
time for art and creativity
time spent in nature.

I try to carve out time for this regularly,
when life is calling me to
do more
I know heaven is calling me to 
be more.

I haven't blogged much
{I didn't blog all of May}

I have made time lately
for some of the things I love
{we need to make time for the things we love}

I'll try to show them here in the next few posts.

Recently I spent a few hours with youngest two kids
{while my older two were away for the day}
at one of our favourite, magical spots.
{a friend called it Narnia}

So they did their math, and read their chapters books
{they both happen to be reading the Chronicles of Narnia}
while in Narnia


Inevitably when we are out,
we start collecting.  
{Rocks, sticks, dandelions, anything goes}


There is something wonderful about collecting treasures from natures.
We took most of our treasures home 
and we are in the midst of using them in some fun and useful projects.  
{I'll post more about that another day.}

Lastly, here is a little beauty that stopped long enough for me to snap a few pictures of it:


It was a wonderfully peaceful, happy time,
like water to a thirsty soul.
In our little bit of Narnia.

Silvia


Monday, 28 April 2014

paint, butterflies & magical moments

any art, when you love it, can be magical
painting with watercolour is like that for me
here is a whimsical scene I've been playing with 
I could endlessly add little details
{it is one of the funnest parts}

{I hope you can get magically lost in something you love}
Silvia


Tuesday, 22 April 2014

tiny landscapes

One of my all-time favourite words is
'serendipity'
It's fun to say,
it makes me feel happy,
and I love that is speaks of unpredictability.

I love to go on serendipitous vacations with my family
{where we don't have every detail planned out.}
I love to discover new things together,
especially when it was unexpected,
unplanned.

Here is my connection to art:
I love watercolours.
I love how they move across the page,
I love their unpredictability
I love that they can take me on a 
serendipitous journey.

This week, I saw an artist post about how she used watercolour paintings
that didn't work out very well
to make new artwork.
{check out: Elvie Studio}
So, I gave it a try with my own twist...
I masked a few little areas for fun. 
{Masking fluid shields the paper from the paint until it is removed}.
And then I just played with streaks and blobs of colour:


After that, I cut out a 1" square, 
a 1 1/2" square and a 1"x2" rectangle 
from another sheet of paper
and I used them as frames
to see what I could find in my painting:


My mind is often on nature a lot these days
and I couldn't help but see it through that filter. 
Do you see as many landscapes as I did?
{I loved elvis studio's frames, 
so borrowed them for my mini pics}



This was fun little serendipitous project.
It forced me to look beyond the streaks and blobs
to find art.

Silvia


Tuesday, 1 April 2014

you cannot keep spring from coming

Around here we haven't seen too many signs of spring.  This is pretty much how things look in eastern Ontario:


Piles of dirty, brown-grey snow. We even had 6" of snowfall this past  Sunday. 
{Nooooo!}
This is not the scene we all expect 
{and desire} 
to see when April finally enters the scene!

I'm going to share a funny little bit about myself:
I have a daily reminder on my iPhone to "Notice Nature."
Yup. I remind myself each day to look up, look out, to see. 
I remind myself each day to 
notice 
the glory of creation.
It is a soul-soothing discipline/habit/love.

However, I have to admit that lately it has felt like there isn't too much to notice.

Today, with the weather above freezing, I took my two youngest kids out, 
and we out to look for
spring.

Amidst all that grey-brown, dirty snow, this is what we found:

  
 
 
 

Budding trees, dirty puddles of melting dirty snow, gooey, squishy mud, bits of grass trying to awaken, flowers pushing their way up through the snow 
... beautiful, hopeful signs of spring.


{Welcome Spring. We have all been waiting for you}


 Pablo Neruda once said, "You can cut the flowers, but you cannot keep spring from coming."

After last Sunday's six inches of snow, 
I used my sketchbook to remind myself that spring was indeed 
still coming...


Happy Spring to you!

Silvia
follow me on instagram at silviaklassen 




Thursday, 6 March 2014

Studying under the Masters - a shoutout to Jeanne Oliver

All I can say is, "Wow, wow, wow!"  

I have been taking Jeanne Oliver's course, 
for the past 8 weeks and it has been wonderfully challenging!  
There has been a lot of course content, 
and I really haven't been able to keep up, 
but I am plugging along, 
working through the lessons and projects. 

{Read: why I haven't blogged very often lately!}

The course is 9 weeks long, 
but I have access to it for 2 years. 
For each week, Jeanne invited an modern day artist to study a master of their choice, 
and teach on that master, 
creating several projects for the students to complete. 
The basic idea, is that we can learn SO much by copying the works of the Masters. 
They have so much to teach us, 
and we have a wonderful opportunity to make ourselves their students!

Oh my goodness!!!!
The projects have been so engaging and interesting! 
The teachers have been fabulous, openly sharing their wealth of knowledge and the Facebook group a huge source of encouragement and inspiration!  

I can't recommend this course enough!
Beginner or experienced artist, 
this course will benefit you, 
and you can still register!  
Jump in on this week, or start at the beginning ... 
just do it! 
You won't regret it!

Here are a few examples of my projects 
~ they are not meant to be exact replications.
but my take on them, 
{with much influence from the class teachers}

Cezanne's Mountains in Provence, followed by my acrylic paint version...

A white flower, followed by my white flower in water colour, Georgia O'Keeffe-ish style...

Francoise De Felice's The Tail of Elodie, followed by my unfinished, acrylic paint version
{we are going away on vacation tomorrow and I have to stop for now to finish packing!!!}

Thank you, thank you Jeanne! I am so loving this course!!

Silvia


Thursday, 13 February 2014

Many reasons to Love

Valentine's Day ... sigh.  I have so much love in my life. 
Today's post is dedicated to the man I love,
The one who has been with me through thick and thin. 
The one who is my best friend.
The one who loves me for who I am.

I take no credit for this idea, 
It was fully brought to me by Pinterest. 
But I made it my own, 
for the one I love. 


(find it and a few other Valentine ideas here)

There are many reasons to love 
the special people in your life.
Look for those reasons today. 

And may the love of God,
Which will truly never fail you,
Overwhelm you 
Today. 


Happy Valentines Day!

Silvia

Tuesday, 28 January 2014

I never thought I'd steal, but I do...

I admit it, I cry easily. Just ask my kids - they will tell you the truth:
I leak from my eyes ~ often. 
I am moved by love, compassion, joy, suffering, 
you name the tear-jerking emotion and I likely beat you to it, 
tissue in hand, wiping off my make-up 
once again.

So, to tell you that a book brought me to tears might not impress you, 
or cause you to run out and and buy it.
But if I tell you the book is called 
"Steal like an Artist" {by Austin Kleon}
you may be a little bit perplexed. 

As an artist 
{and sometimes I struggle calling myself that
I battle with the blank canvas demon... 
"What if I ruin that beautiful white canvas with something ugly?" 
"What if I have nothing to say?"
 "What if there is no inspiration when I sit down to my journal?" 
"Do I have any original ideas?"  

I look at my work and often remember 
the painting, the Pin, the photo or the artist that inspired it, 
and I sometimes feel shame:
Did I copy? 
Am I unique? 
Am I a fake?  

I think of the inspiration I felt when I saw the initial work ... 
how my heart lept
how I wanted to run to my studio and do something like it, 
how I wanted to feel about my work what I felt in that moment.

This book is for anyone who battles the battle of 
"finding your own voice" in your creative work.  
It has released me to steal:
 to grab what I see and love 
and bring it into my personal storehouse of creativity. 
Unashamedly

This book reminds us of the age-old tradition of learning an art:
 Steal an idea here, borrow another there. 
Mesh all those all together and you get you. 
We used to call that being an apprentice. 
All artists do it. 
It is how we learn.
And somehow through that process,
we find our own artistic, unique voice.

I've had the question asked of me: 
"Is this your idea, or did you see it somewhere and copy it?" 
What is the correct answer to that question?  
It's," Yes!  I copied it, and it was my idea."
 I'm learning, I'm drawing out the things I like 
and I'm adding them to my library of inspiring ideas
And in that process
I'm finding my voice, my signature, me

So yes, "Steal Like an Artist" made me cry. 
It showed me that I am on the same journey that 
artist after artist 
has taken throughout time. 
It released me, 
and gave me wings 
to keep learning from others. 

{please note: this is not talking about plagiarism which is copying something that belongs to another and claiming it as yours ... it's about copying to learn, grow and add your bit of you into it. 
Kleon explains that part well.}

Incidentally, I heard of this book through 
an on-line course I'm taking called, 
hosted by Jeanne Oliver 
{check her amazing blog and classes out here}. 

Thank you to both Austin and Jeanne 
for knowing that we all want to be original 
and reminding us that well worn path the originality 
is to learn from those who know what they are doing!  

Here it is: Steal Like an Artist, by Austin Kleon
{you can find out more about him out here}.



Go on now, in this case, it's okay to steal.

Silvia

Tuesday, 14 January 2014

inspired by passion

Hi Friends,

I'll start with the aside...

I'm working on a new look for my blog, 
but it is still in process, 
so stay tuned for {hopefully} a few more changes!
After a year of blogging
{my 1 year anniversary  is Jan 21st}
I am still very much a learner
in the blogging world!

Onto the good stuff now ...

Lately I have been doing a lot of my reading 
from a new translation of the Bible called, 
"The Passion Translation".  
The whole translation isn't complete yet; 
it is a work in progress. 
I have "The Psalms: Poetry on Fire" 
and nearly everytime I read it, 
I am undone.

The "Passion Translation" is 
a very good title for it.

I thought I'd share with you 
a few pages out of my sketch book, 
inspired by Poetry on Fire:

 

What is inspiring you these days? I'd love to hear!

Silvia