Saturday, May 30, 2020

Courageous Creativity Day 6

Even though they were both amazing and thought provoking, I'm skipping Days 4 and 5 because I don't have any art to show for it yet..  Amanda Mauck interviewed Jenny Ynnej (formerly known as JP Kim) for Day 6. Jenny led us through another guided meditation and used a process she called CITE. C stands for Center in which she encouraged us to embody this moment. I stood for Inquire/Intention. For this step we were supposed to ask our source a question and to guide us in some way. I asked how to hear and trust my inner voice and to guide me into opening my heart. We wrote this intention down in pencil on the page. The next step was to Trust-- open up and allow the process. Here she told us to take a pen or sharpie and scribble all over the page. I ended up closing my eyes so that I couldn't force this process too much. Next we looked at the scribbles, turning the page if necessary until an image stood out to us. We colored in the images. The last step was to Exclaim-- asking what the message was. She suggested we visualize offering the pen to the image and letting the image write to us.  I didn't do that, but I did write down some first impressions of my image.  She also suggested that we take photos of each step of the process, but I didn't have my phone with me and didn't want to take time to go get it, so the end piece is what you get to see.

What came up for me: 
  • Me holding me, supportive and loving
  • Small me is mischievous and happy
  • Large me is quiet but strong, watchful and observing
  • Small me has a mouth and the large me doesn't-- is it there and just covered by small me's arm?
  • The green background could represent growth, creativity
I also love that Jenny is a word lover and discovered that another definition of CITE is to "praise for a courageous act."

Friday, May 29, 2020

Courageous Creativity Day 3

Day Three was an interview with Devorah Spilman who did a guided meditation using her Instoryway process. After connecting with our ground, she invited us to think about our gifts and what we were grateful for. After that she asked what was an image or metaphor for who we were or what we do in the world. We were supposed to trust in the first image that came to mind. My first image was of an eye followed quickly by a boulder in a river with water flowing over it.We were then supposed to explain or interpret how the image is like ourselves or how we are like it. I went with the boulder and did some journaling for it. The words "solid," "stable," "ground," "big" and "full" came to mind.  Last night I decided to try drawing the boulder in the river. I had no idea how to do this and not much time to do it in. I was compelled to use colored pencils although that probably wasn't the best medium to depict water. As I was trying to draw the boulder, an eye emerged. Now I have to figure out what the eye means!

Tuesday, May 26, 2020

Lunar New Year

Looking back, it looks like I haven't shared any of the carvings I did for the last Four lunar new years! This is the one thing I consistently do every year because I participate in a lunar new year swap from the Carving Consortium. The last one I posted was year of the monkey in 2016.
So here was my print for 2017, year of the rooster.

2018: Year of the Dog


2019: Year of the Pig


2020: Year of the Rat




Sunday, May 24, 2020

Courageous Creativity Day 2

I'm a day behind so this is yesterday's interview with Shelley Klammer. I've been following Shelley for several years and was excited to see her interview. The exercise was using abstract collage and doodling. I did this one twice. The first one was very different than what she guided us to do and also from what I expected since I'm not a huge fan of the water. But this morning in meditation, I did feel like I was floating in the waves, so maybe that's where it came from. Also my daughter had a phase where she made jellyfish that looked a lot like this.
Here was my second go:

Beginning again...Courageously

It's been over 3 years since I've added anything to this site, but I feel like I'm ready to start sharing again. Since February of 2017, I've closed Eyes Open Now but in future posts I will share many of the things I created during that time. I definitely learned a lot from that business and may have kept it going if it didn't meet in my home. As it is, I've appreciated being able to do art just to do art and not as part of a business. I will be continuing to offer classes periodically through the Bozeman Dharma Center's Mindful Creativity Group once that becomes an option again in a COVID-19 world.

Right now I'm enjoying Courageous Creativity offered by Amanda Mauck. Each day we receive an interview with Amanda and another artist with a creative exercise to work through. Each artist is also doing a freebie, but I haven't had a chance to check those out yet.  Amanda suggested making a Smash Book which I had a great time doing using one of my son's old Composition Notebooks from grade school (because I don't throw anything out).
The intention for this book is Mapping the Journey to My Heart. It's what I'm working on personally and so I know it will come out in anything I create.

The first exercise was with Tracy Verdugo who is just incredible. It entailed ripping magazines/book pages randomly into hand-sized pieces and then looking through the pieces for what captures your eye and writing down a line about it. At the end you have a poem. So cool how it works out. I pasted my pieces into my smash book, but Tracy keeps them tied in a bundle and can reuse them in different configurations.
The poem reads:
Because I was a girl
Fear was a weapon
Holding me down
When I get out
Lines will converge
Manufacturing Renaissance
A new way forward
I will hold the little girl of my heart