Maybe paintings are prayers
I don’t always know why a collector has chosen a particular artwork when they buy it, but when they do share, it’s always such a delight and wonder to see the resonance between my intentions for the artwork (which they often didn’t know about when they first felt drawn to the artwork) and where they’re at in their life…
When your artist statement feels like a vulnerable thing to share
Each time I review my bio and artist statement for a submission or exhibition, I have a little to and fro with myself about how much I want to share about myself. My art practice is a container for my own exploration, expression, meaning-making, and healing. It’s inseparably linked to who I am and how I experience the world, including my experiences with – and responses to – loss, chronic illness, and disabilities. So every time I share my story, it feels like an incredibly vulnerable thing to share…
Aerial inspiration!
In my research process for the commission I’m working on (an abstract landscape inspired by rural Dubbo in Australia), I used a tool that we used when we were preparing to immigrate to the Netherlands and choosing a neighbourhood to live in… Google maps will give you a wonderful bird’s eye view of the landscape.
Feeding my intuition
Working without a plan, feeling your way forward, and making it up as you go – what some people call working “intuitively” – sounds like it would be easy and have you creating your paintings really quickly.
How do I express how a landscape feels if I’ve never been there?
When I paint landscapes, I really want to show people how the landscape FEELS – both as a sensory experience and as an emotional experience…
A magical misty evening walk
Between my blurry vision and the mist diffusing the light, today’s walk was magical! So much inspiration for painting!
How I do my annual creative review + planning
Since committing to my art full-time in 2020, at the end of each year I’ve taken time to look back on the art I’ve made over that past year. I use that to learn more about my creative development, decide the focus for the art I want to be creating next, and get clear on all the ways I want to learn and deepen my art practice in the coming year. Several people have asked me about how I do this, so I thought it worth sharing with you all. So here we go…
Annual review: my favourites out of all the art I made in 2024
Art is so subjective. I love that about art. And I appreciate a wide variety of kinds of art.
And also, as an artist, creating involves constantly practicing discernment. Each next creative move means saying yes to one choice and saying no to everything else I could do.
Annual review: all of the art I completed in 2025
At the end of each year it’s become my practice to print out pages with thumbnails of all of the art I made that year so I can look back on it, and reflect on my practice, my growth, and where I want to go next.
These are all the paintings I completed in 2024. One hundred and five paintings!