Kintsugi: Gold Repair of Ceramic Faults

I came across Kintsugi a few years ago, and my latest art journaling page reminded me of it, and how it applies to healing the cracks we gather throughout life in ourselves too…

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In 1999 I traveled to Japan to participate in several exhibitions hosted by my dear friend Mr. Shiho Kanzaki.  I arrived with gifts for all the many people that were required to make this amazing opportunity a reality for me.

 

After I arrived and was unpacking, I discovered that 4 of the side-fired cups that I’d brought as gifts had been broken by the baggage-handling process.  Without a thought I dumped them into the waste basket in my room.  Sometime later that week, someone came to my room and took out the trash.  

 

After a remarkable 6 weeks in Shigaraki, two exhibitions, travel,  fine food, new friends…my visit came to an end.

 

As often happens there were some “parting gifts” given by me to my hosts; and some gifts were given to me by my hosts.  Among the parting gifts I received, I discovered…

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Art Journal Page

Today, I followed my instincts/intuition and spent time creating an art journal page. It’s not often I share my art journal pages it has to be said, but this one is something different for me in terms of my art journal.

The tree looks like it’s made out of Tiffany-style glass and shimmers slightly with a golden opalescence. The words are very appropriate for this point in my life. I really am standing at the threshold of a door that is opening into newness for me and it is both exciting and scary, but I’m taking the decisions to step through that door as fearlessly as I can.

My art journal is proving very useful for my personal progress and insights into myself and what is happening within me when I don’t have words to describe it. It is also a way for me to explore different ways of artistic expression, including me getting very mucky fingers and hands today, which is most unlike the usual me!

What it did allow me to do was to find a sense of contentment, inner peace and the ability to have a gentle smile on my face throughout the day, even now. That truly is a good thing!

That happens when I create art of all kinds, but even more surprisingly it does when I’m working out what is going on with those pesky ‘inner demons and black dogs’ – the negative thought patterns that are so wrong. It’s easier to dispel them when I’m creating, a lot easier.

A article entitled “Is colouring as a hobby beneficial or harmful?” was shared on my Facebook account today, and re-shared by myself.

My answer to the headline question would be that it is whatever each person gains from the experience.  For some it is creative as they utilise all their creative skills in the use of colour, for others it is developing and exploring how they can use pattern, for others it is just a pleasurable break from the hurly-burly of everyday life, for some it becomes an almost meditative practice where they lose themselves in the flow of the process, for some it may be a return to the innocence and lack of responsibility of childhood.

What is wrong with these things?  Nothing!  Are they harmful?  I doubt it.

Yes, it’s something that seems to be ‘all the rage’ now, the colouring ‘fad’; but is it a fad?

Adults have always coloured in and enjoyed doing so, just not quite as openly as now.  Colouring books for the more mature market have been available for many years for those who saught them out.

What was once a hobby, an interest, a pastime that was done almost in secret is now coming out into the light, and that can only be a good thing.

Here’s the art journal page I created today, and though it isn’t my best drawing work, it’s not meant to be.  and I enjoyed the colouring of the tree and so on as much as I did the drawing and everything else!  And I feel calm, peaceful and content even now, some hours after I finished the work.

And that is no bad thing at all.

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Color Me Calm – #25 on a bestsellers list!

It’s true!  Color Me Calm is at #25 in a bestsellers wish with Publishers Weekly!

Color Me Calm, #25 in bestsellers list!
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In the Pink on page 13

I’m honestly and truthfully amazed by this.  It’s way beyond what I ever expected for my art and for a coloring book aimed at adults with the idea of using the images for a break from the everyday hustle and bustle of life.

Thank you to all who have purchased the book and made it such a success.

Thank you to all who believed in me to get me started on this journey – Jeannine Dillon at Race Point Publishing (part of Quartos Publishing Group), Jason Schneider at Creative Haven by Dover Publishing, Claire Cater at Michael O’Mara Books, and all the friends who have been so supportive (you know who you are!)

A little colouring break

I’ve been busy with black and white line art over the past few days.  Seeing so many people colouring artwork in with gay abandon had me hankering for my Polychromos coloured pencils, paper stumps and blending fluid for a while this evening.  I drew some designs just for my own personal fun over the weekend and decided to add colour to one of them.  Below is the result, the work in progress.

It could take a while to get finished as I have so much line art to do, which is great for me.  It is therapeutic, soothing, healing for me and that is just what I need at this point in life.

AngelaPorter_Artwyrd_Otherworldy_0001One thing I could do with an answer to is why do scanners always wash out the colours I have used?  I have a Brother A3 printer/scanner, which is great as I’m tending towards using larger paper these days, but try as I might I can’t seem to stop the color washout.

If anyone can give me any advice, help or instructions then that would be grand!

Are there rules to colouring in?

AngelaPorter_Color Me Stress Free_teaser1I have read many times on various facebook groups how people worry that they aren’t colouring in colouring sheets or books correctly, or they are worried that their work won’t be up to scratch compared to what they see as the amazing work done by others in the groups.

I think I may be qualified to comment on this and to offer some advice, especially as I have now created hundreds of colouring templates for Color Me Calm, Color Me Happy, Color Me Stress-free, Entangled, The Can’t Sleep Colouring Book, Japanese Patterns, Scandinavian Folk Patterns, and 60’s Patterns, with more to come!

Firstly, I’d like to ask you why do you want to spend time colouring in?  Is it for relaxation?  Is it for fun?  Is it to combat boredom?  Is it to while away the time while you are poorly?  Is it for some other reason? Is it for enjoyment?  Is it to lift your mood? Is it because you love colour?  Are there other reasons?

Notice, I ask what your reasons are for colouring, not telling you what mine are.  Your reasons can be as private or as public as you wish.

The colouring templates I have created (and continue to create) have been done with relaxation, joy, enjoyment, lifting moods, taking a break from the crazy pace of modern, technology filled life.  They offer an opportunity to take an almost meditative break from every day life, space for some ‘me time’, some self-caring time.  That was, and is, the aim behind the Color Me books.

In none of the books are there a list of explicit do’s and don’ts for the use of the book (apart from the copyright stuff).  And why should there be?  They are there for you to make your own, for you to have pleasure with, for you to find ways of expressing yourself, to go back to a time of childhood innocence where there were few rules and responsibilities.  They are there for an opportunity for you to become as carefree as you wish. Rules, do’s and don’ts, am I doing it right?, and all these other judgmental thoughts or questions have no place in these books, or similar books.

You can do no wrong!  Trust me.  You really can do no wrong! Really, you are invited to do as you wish to with the colouring templates.

Want to use coloured pencils, wax crayons, chalk pastels, oil pastels, acrylic paints, marker pens, watercolours, collage, glitter, sparkly gel pens, scented pens, stickers?  Want to use many different mediums? Go for it!  Enjoy it! Do whatever you feel inspired to do, whatever you’d like to try out.

Want to split larger sections into smaller ones?  Want to join small sections into big ones?  Great!  Do what you feel you’d like to do!  Trust your instincts, trust how the image is speaking to you.

Want to fill sections in with patterns?  Want to add words or phrases?  Want to add little drawings of your own?  By all means do so!

Worried you’re breaking some rules of art, or colour theory?  Don’t worry!  There are no rules here – if it pleases you that is all that matters!  If you’re using the colouring to get some insight into your emotions or inner thoughts, then don’t worry about all that colour theory stuff, express yourself!

Worried that you’re using the media wrongly?  Don’t worry!  If it works for you, it works for you!  If you’re happy with the result and enjoyed the process, does it really matter what one person or another says?  No, it doesn’t!  If it’s not quite working for you, don’t give up, experiment, and enjoy the process of exploration, of discovery.  You do not have to be an instant expert!  It’s ok to be a learner; in fact we all learn for the whole of our lives and what is so bad about that?  Nothing!  Do you think Leonardo da Vinci just painted the Mona Lisa one day, without years of practice and experimentation, of finding out how to express himself artistically?  Of course he didn’t!

I give you permission to play, to use different media, to shade or not shade, to blend or not blend, to simplify, to make more intricate, to break the rules.

Talking of rules, where did you learn all these shoulds/should nots of colouring?  Why do you still think they are so important? Why do you think that plants can only be green, the sky blue, rocks grey, the Sun yellow, the Moon white.

Let me give you permission to make all these things, and more, any colour you want!  I give you permission to break the rules! You want pink trees with bright purple trunks – absolutely!  You want a lilac Moon – not a problem!  You want to put fuchsia pink and lime green next to each other – what a wonderful idea!

I give you permission to express yourself with colours as a child would, with no rules, but with sheer pleasure and enjoyment!

I believe that inside each and every person there is a creative soul seeking an outlet, and colouring is one way of access things, and who knows where it will lead, what new talents you will discover hiding inside yourself, who knows how it will help you heal, to find new solutions to old problems, new insights to what is going on, as you take a break from worrying and all kinds of thoughts whirling around your head.

Now, what’s the worst that can happen?  You end up disliking something, wasting a little bit of felt tip pen, using up one piece of paper with a printed image on it.  Is that a bad thing?  Ask yourself why you dislike it, what is it trying to tell you, what lessons you can learn from it.  Write notes on the image or the reverse of it, use it to explore yourself, use it in a positive way.

Remember, no one ever has to see what you have done, not unless you wish to show them.

Worried that people will be critical of what you have done?  Don’t show them!  This isn’t for other people.  It’s not a competition.  It’s not to see who can colour the smoothest or stay inside the lines (it’s quite all right to go outside the lines or not go right up to the lines too, you do what you think is right).  It’s something that is entirely for you.  If you’re pleased and proud of what you’ve done and want to share it, then please do, but don’t feel you have to.

Remember, the whole point of this is for you to enjoy yourself, to get messy, to play with different media and images and colours the way you feel you want to at any particular time.

Remember, in art there are no mistakes, only happy accidents!  Sometimes the things we think are mistakes are actually something beautiful and wondrous in their own right, something we learn from and incorporate into our future creativity.

The only ‘rules’ there are in this are the ones you impose upon yourself.  There are no colouring-in police.  There are no international laws about how to colour in.

A last note, I would love to see what you do create and the story behind it and yourself, especially if the process is helping you heal or overcome various difficulties in your life.  That is one of the dreams I have for how my art can be used.

Mediocre Failures

disidealist's avatarDisappointed Idealist

My children are adopted. They were adopted at the ages of three, four and six. As with nearly all children adopted in this country over the last couple of decades, this means that their early life experiences were pretty terrible. As each was born, their collective experience of life became more damaging, as their circumstances worsened. So the eldest is least affected as her first years were perhaps less difficult experiences, while the youngest is most affected, as her entire first two years of life were appalling. I’m not going to go into detail here about their specific early life experiences, but if you want to read up on the sort of effects which can result from serious neglect or abuse, then you could read this .

Why am I writing this ? Especially now after midnight in the middle of the Easter holidays ? It’s because I’m so angry I…

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THE TORIES DARE YOU TO FAIL

Thinking Outloud's avatarThinking Outloud

FOR TEACHERS, HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS AND NOW PRIMARY CHILDREN

I have just read an open letter to the PM written by an NQT who covered many of the key issues facing teachers today. However what struck me most was the emotion that this NQT brought to the letter. Emotion that is, for most teachers, far too easily recognisable. Yet it is not the alarming money/time problem facing teachers and schools that causes this emotion.

Ultimately teachers want to be challenged and feel fulfilled – feel like they have made a difference. This is the big problem!

As someone who, before beginning the journey into teaching, worked in the private sector and spent over ten years working to SMART targets and deadlines I do honestly believe that the criteria by which a teacher is judged is way above challenging and actually geared towards failure rather than success.

Many teachers live with the…

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Busy, busy, busy!

Pens, pencils, rulers, protractors and compasses all busy, busy, busy here!  Over half way through Color Me Stress-free’s black and white lineart (artwork for four out of the seven chapters done!).  I’m keeping the coloring of the colored samples until all the black and white is done as my big treat – I don’t often get to color in my own artwork these days!