Showing posts with label Kindle books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kindle books. Show all posts

Fresh Paint: Discover Your Unique Creative Style Through 100 Small Mixed-Media Paintings by Flora S. Bowley & Lynzee Lynx (2021)

, 7 Sept 2023

This book is an online rendition of an online workshop that the two authors hold regularly. It's great for people, like me, that don't have a budget for online courses, but want to have the teachings in them accessible. This is the case here and, therefore, a great value for money.
 
THE CORE
" In a time when information and imagery from other people’s art is so readily available at our fingertips, we believe mindfully sourcing inspiration from within our own hearts and authentic lived experience is a crucial part of finding a unique voice" (p. 42).
 The authors depart from this premise. Having skills or knowing techniques isn't enough to have an authentic voice. There are artists reproducing the Monalisa to perfection who have no artistic voice whatsoever. 
 
The authors believe that there are eight key ingredients needed to discover and develop a personal creative style: 1/ Desire, 2/ Self-Inquiry to bring your life experience, cultural background, and passions into your art. 3/ Trust your intuition. 4/ Awareness of your surrounding world and of the present moment. 5/ Expansion through learning new things, exploring new materials and learning from new teachers. 6/ Exploration via giving you the time to learn by making 100 studies. 7/ Gentleness, by disregarding negative self-talk. 8/ Dedication and persistence in a life-long art journey. The book is then structured following all of these elements and philosophy with three major sections,:
> Internal Exploration,where we’ll also explore our cultural roots, families of origin, and our chosen families as a way to deepen our connection to our personal history.
> External Exploration, where we explore how the external world inspires us. There are exercises to learn to tune our senses to the world and actively engage with it for artistic purposes.
> and hands-On Art-Making Practice. Each chapter is organised in subsections that require a hands-on approach: the writing enquiries, the creative exercises, which are complemented with jumping-off points (prompts).
 
THINGS I LIKED
  • Most of their philosophy and the emphasis on sourcing our inspiration from the internal, the external and other people, the three of them, to create our unique voice. 
  • There is a good deal of painting and mixed-media techniques offered in the book. Most exercises are presented as suggestions to contribute to our art skills and inspiration toolkit.
  • The insistence on experimentation and playfulness. 
  • The use of Eastern-religions practices to calm our mind, anchor intuition, and source imagery and ideas from it. So it's a kind of artistic meditation. 
  • The beautiful playful photos from the authors and their students' artwork.
  • The book structure and the fact that is not a directional book, but it gives us freedom to explore what they propose, still giving us some structure.
  • The project of 100 paintings, and approaching them as studies so that we don't feel the pressure of producing a masterpiece every time we paint.
  • The importance of organisation in your work area. Often, I expend tons of time looking for things that I haven't stored and organised properly, which is a waste of time and energy. 
  • The writing inquiries are great as self-knowledge tools whether we are artists or not. It force us to dig into our personal stories, experiences and surroundings and then use this information for creative purposes. 
  • The jumping off point (prompts).
  • Chapter seven is especially good. We live in a mega-visual era, constantly bombarded and/or immersed on imagery. I particularly like Pinterest and Instagram and the number of art images I process a day is embarrassing. It's difficult not to get threatened and inspired by these images, and not copy them either. The issue is how to incorporate the inspiration into our work without copying someone's style or being overly derivative. The tools suggested to help us do that are great. 
  • Some of the exercises and ideas recommended are great. For example, mark making with veggies (which reminded me of my primary school days crafts), carving rubber stamps and making stencils, the use of textiles and jewellery elements in artwork, the colour pairing exercise, using our family memorabilia and ephemera in our art, the intuitive wandering, the scavenger hunts, and many more. 
  • Great hyperlinked index. 
     
SO-SO
 > Some of the exercises aren't original or new. I've found them on books that were published before, way before this. Exercises like blind contour drawing, shadow drawing, drawing with the non-dominant hand, mark making with different brushes and materials, transferring images with graphite or carbon paper.
> Although the book aim is to have you do 100 small paintings, the focus wasn't perhaps on the creation of them, on the practical making of them, but in giving ideas and encourage us to do them.  
 
I DIDN'T LIKE
> Description of a meditation or a breathing exercise. It would be great having a link to an audio-recording (on the authors' website for example, or YouTube, Vimeo, etc.). I cannot meditate when reading a written instruction. I could record it myself, but it doesn't  work as well as when someone else recites the meditation for me.That's just me. It might be different for you.

> The preaching about cultural appropriation. It's well intentioned, but the authors seem to be lost in their own boho babble, and end mixing apples with bananas. Then, they say that they borrow the word (and not just that) mandalas... If we follow what they say about appropriation, what they do is also cultural appropriation. Somebody could tell the authors that they're appropriating Eastern Philosophy with their Buddhist practices, or that they're appropriating the Brit's language. Most cultures, except for indigenous ones, and not all of them, are the result of culture creole. Western Civilization is just a mash of cultures, that also are varied within each country and each region in the same country. Let me put it in plain language, if you plagiarize, you appropriate. If you are overly derivative you appropriate. But, if you borrow from here and there and create something yours, you're just creating. That's what creation is. 
 
Copying dot Aboriginal style and selling it as an Aboriginal painting is not only illegal but also appropriation. Yet, I could use Aboriginal paintings as a source of inspiration, and make a dotty painting because nobody on this planet owns dots.
 
Let's use another analogy. If you aren't Spaniard and cook a Spanish paella, are you appropriating the dish? No!, unless you do something that is not Spanish and sell it as such, or make a paella and then tell the world that this is a new dish that you've created. The same goes for painting.

> Some of the recommended artists' insta have uninspired art to me.

KINDLE EDITION TYPOS AND FAILED LINKS
The Kindle edition is very good overall. The only issue is, perhaps, the way the students' art is displayed, the photos grouped together within a page without breathing space. I can easy double tap and zoom-in on them, but this isn't the most user friendly way of displaying images. 
 
I only noticed a typo (Now, let’s talk about the vibe in "yourart") in page 33 and some of the links of the recommended artists' Instagram profiles aren't public or existent.  

 

 

Show Your Work!: 10 Ways to Share Your Creativity and Get Discovered by Austin Kleon (2014)

, 29 Apr 2023

  "It sounds a little extreme, but in this day and age, if your work isn’t online, it doesn’t exist. We all have the opportunity to use our voices, to have our say, but so many of us are wasting it. If you want people to know about what you do and the things you care about, you have to share." (Page 25). 

This is the last of Kleon's trilogy and the most personal of the three. It feels so to me at least, as it's the one in which I hear Kleon's voice louder and clearer. What I mean is that his personal life, thinking and experiences are as important as what other people say; therefore, the book has less quotes and paraphrasing than the other two and feels more personal.
 
The aim of the book is to teach us how to think about creative work as a never-ending process, how to share our process to attract people who might be interested in our art, and how to deal with the ups and downs of sharing our work. 
THE GOODIES
> Kleon has a very engaging style that connects us to him as a person immediately.
> I really like his approach to life, the artistic life especially, and the fact that he sounds like a decent human being that happens to be a famous writer by now. All of that is commendable.
 > Once more, Kleon debunks the myth of the lone genius, the bohemian starving artist that lives in the collective unconscious. Kleon shows that most great ideas are birthed in a collaborative way with other creative people or from other people's minds or ideas 
> Kleon also debunks the myth that success happens overnight.
> His advise on online sharing is excellent. Kleon gives sound advice on when, how often, and what sort of stuff we should be sharing.
> The author's advice on how to give credit to artists whose work we share or quote.
> Kleon's reflections on how the value of any given work is affected by the story attached to it. That's why it's important to be a good storyteller.
> The information on the psychology of forgery is fascinating.
> Sound advice on how to deal with criticism.
 > Kleon's diaries snapshots at the end of the book give insight into his work process.
 
THE SO-SOS
For the rest, the book suffers from some of the sins as his previous books:
 > The content is still lean, and this feels, again, another diary/booklet/blog turned into a book, what I call a blook. Kleon himself confirms "a lot of the ideas in this book started out as tweets, which then became blog posts, which then became book chapters." (Page 57). 
> There are too many quotes, no matter how good they are. Also, I miss the quotes being properly referenced, not just the name but also occupation and source (book, TV interview, podcast, newspaper, etc.). In this way, he'd be following his own advice about giving due credit, but he does not.
> Most of what Kleon says in this book is directed to people who show/want to show their work online and the book revolves about that not about showing your work in any other sort of way, like ezines, small art galleries, etc. 
> Although I like most of what Kleon says, the chapters are sometimes a bit off point.
> Repetitive at times. 
> Section 1 seems fitter for Kleon's "Keep Going" book.
> Section  3 is very nice if you already have a name, but what about plagiarism? Not 'stealing' but totally using someone else's work? How do we counteract  the online exposure with this very real every-day-happening fact?  
> Section 4 on Tell stories is great, a first good approach to what good stories are made of. I found that this is great if you're a writer but not so much if you're a painter. For sure, there are paints, ours or others', who go attached to personal or collective stores, but others are not. So in which way can we share and make stories about artwork that has no story? I can make a story about a problem with a painting, how I tackled the problem and how it ended, but not all my paintings are a struggle, and some others have no happy ending and, to be honest, I don't think this might interest other artists or the people I share with.  
> Section 5 about sharing what you know is full of platitudes and statements that can be true for some online teachers. It is true that we gravitate towards artists whose art we like and can teach us, but not all of them are good teachers or know how to teach. Also, there are too many online (mostly bad/mediocre) teachers whose art is also mediocre. I'm all about teaching your work if you have something good to teach. Being great at what you do doesn't equal being a great teacher. 
> Section 9 mentions the famous model of 'free' giveaways to get people's emails and then promote work or sell products or services. It definitely work. I guess it worked great when first came along. It works now? Not for me at least. What I do is this. I get interested in something being offered for free. I use a secondary barely personal email address, I get the freebie, when I start to get marketing or promotional emails, I unsubscribe. Did it work?

SUMMARY OF THE BOOK
1. YOU DON'T HAVE TO BE A GENIUS.
> It is not about having talent about the way we contribute to the world.
> It's very important to have and keep a beginner's mind, have a passion for what we do and keep going as our work will improve the longer we stick around. Amateurs get less stuck than professionals. 
> Before sharing your work, think about what you want to learn, and do so in front of other people. Pay attention to what others are NOT sharing and fill in the void with your online presence.
> The only way to find your voice is to use it
> Reading obituaries or biographies of people who made great things is a way to connect with the present, give direction to our lives and not waste our time.
2. THINK PROCESS, NOT PRODUCT. 
By sharing with others our process online every day we can create an audience and bond with them. Many people are interested not in the final piece of art, but in how we get, the messiness to get them, how we deal with the messiness, etc.
3. SHARE SOMETHING SMALL EVERY DAY.
> If in the very early stages, share your influences or what inspire you. If in the middle of it, write about your methods or share works in progress. If the project is finished, show it.
> Share something every day (blog post, twit, video, etc.).
> Pick the online platform that best suits your kind of artwork.
> Stick to the question " What you are working on/" and you’ll be good.
> Don’t show your personal life; show your work.
> Don't worry about being perfect, most of what we do is crap, but sharing our work opens up to how people react.
> If you're too busy or your life is hectic, devote just 30 minutes to online sharing a day.
> Don’t post work online that you’re not ready for everyone in the world to see.
> Don't overshare.
> When you share regularly, you'll notice patterns, themes and trends emerging from/in your work.
> Create your online space and build a good domain name. Stick to it forever. Keep it simple and professional. 

4. OPEN UP YOUR CABINET OF CURIOSITIES.
> Before we’re ready to share our work with the world, we can share our tastes, things that drive us, artists we love, our artistic interest and influences, and what drive us to work.
> Show who you are, what you like, and don't let anyone pressure you on to saying the contrary or feeling bad about yourself for that. 
> Being open and honest will bring around those people who are in the same frequency.    
>  Don’t share things you can’t properly credit. Find the right credit, or don’t share.
5. TELL GOOD STORIES.
> If you want to share effectively, you need to be a good storyteller, therefore, know what a good story is and how to tell one. 
> A good story has a set structure that works most of the time, from the old fairy tales to the modern novels.There’s the initial problem, the work done to solve the problem, and the solution. The first act is the past, the second act is the present, and the third act is the future.
> Keep your audience in mind.
> Used proper language, good spelling and punctuation. Write clearly and in a way that is understandable. 
> Speak about yourself and what you do. You should be able to explain your work to anyone and everyone but keep it honest, matter of fact, short  and sweet.
6. TEACH WHAT YOU KNOW.  Teach your craft, or techniques or how-to as this will generate more interest in your work. When you share your knowledge/work with others, you receive an education in return.
7. DON'T TURN INTO HUMAN SPAM. Don't turn into that sort of people who show no interest on anything or anyone but themselves. The sort of  people who cave attention, notoriety and followers but show no appreciation or interest for those very people who follow them. If you want to get, you have to give.
> If you want to be accepted by a community, you have to first be a good citizen of that community. 
> Forward-thinking artists aren’t just looking for passive-consumer fans, they’re looking for potential collaborators.
> Notice and you'll be notice. Give and you'll be given. If you want to be interesting, you have to be interested first. 
> Make stuff you love and talk about stuff you love and you’ll attract people who love that kind of stuff.
> "Don’t be creepy. Don’t be a jerk. Don’t waste people’s time. Don’t ask too much. And don’t ever ever ask people to follow you. “Follow me back?” is the saddest question on the Internet." (Page 107).  
> Don't do what drains you. Don't give air to people who drains you. 
> Keep close those people who support and encourage you. Those you share your passions and view of the world. Praise them. Honor them. Be grateful for them. Collaborate with them.  They're your inner circle.
> Meet your online peers in person. 
8. LEARN TO TAKE A PUNCH. 
> Relax and breeth. Criticism is not the end of the world.
> The more criticism you take, the less it can hurt you.
> You can only control how you react to criticism .
> Being hated by certain people is sometimes a badge of honor.
> You can always hide work that is too close to you to prevent it from being criticized, but avoiding vulnerability won't allow you truly to connect to other people.
> Your work is something you do, not what you are.
> Care only about what the right people think of you.
> Don't feed the trolls.  Block people. Turn comments off if necessary.
9. SELL OUT.
> Turn fans into patrons.
> Ask for support when necessary.
> Keep a e-mailing list. Free giveaways are great to collect emails and have a group of people to connect, share or sell.
> Paid it forward.  Praise those people, platforms or organizations that support/ed you before you were well-known.
10 STICK AROUND.  
> Getting there takes time. If you keep going,you'll get there. Don't quit too early.
> Success is never guaranteed, and nothing guarantees that after a success there will be another one. 
> Persevere no matter you're successful or not. 
> Use the end of one project to light up the next one. Ask yourself what you missed, what you could’ve done better, or what you couldn’t get to, and jump right into the next project.
> Take long breaks or sabbaticals if necessary.  Otherwise, take advantage of your idle time (commuting, exercising, enjoying nature or going to a park). 
> When you feel like you’ve learned whatever there is to learn from what you’re doing, change course and find something new to learn; move forward.

MIND
> This book is not a how-to and doesn't have an in-built method.  
> The book focuses mostly on our presence online, how to show our work online .

Explore Mixed Media Collage: Innovative Layering Techniques by Kristen Robinson & Ruth Rae (2014)

, 28 Apr 2023

This is a very handy book for both beginners and intermediate crafters and mixed-media painters. It contains plenty of techniques, tips, creative ideas and projects to try on and get inspired by.

The book is divided in three parts. The first one contains all the techniques that the authors will use in the following mixed-media projects but isolated and photographed step by step with simple clear effective descriptions. The second part contains tutorials for 12 different projects by both authors, which are photographed and described step by step in the same effective manner as before. The third part contains 10 new projects, but they aren't photographed step-by-step, just the steps described.

     

THE GOODIES
> I  got plenty of inspiration and some ideas despite having worked on mixed-media for a while.
> The book is unpretentious and goes to the point.
> The tutorials are photographed and short-described wonderfully, so you can follow them quickly and effectively.
> Some of the tips spread throughout the book are extremely helpful.
> I love the fact that the authors use stitching, fabrics as well as sealing wax and wax in general as the results are very tactile and visually rich. 
> The variety of styles and complexity in the projects included. It goes from the very simple to the challenging. I especially loved the projects Bounty of secrets, Our House, Devotion Shrine, Sweet Heart, Birds Nest, Kindness to Ruth, Flight, and My Secret Heart Hopes. 
> Good quality photographs.
> No typos in view and good edition overall. 
> The book having a index of subjects at the end, something that I always love. 
> A quick read, but it can be used as a reference guide, as well. 

      

DOWNSIDES
> The book feels a bit aged in some parts, but some of the techniques and results must have been groundbreaking when the book first came out 9 years ago 
 > Some of the techniques are very basic and won't be helpful to people who already work on mixed-media like me.
> I miss the second batch of projects being photographed step-by-step like the first. I don't know why they did it this way, to be honest.  
> Ain't a fan of rhinestones on artwork unless they're vintage, small and delicate.  
> Text isn't justified. 



Keep Going: 10 Ways to Stay Creative in Good Times and Bad (2019)

, 22 Apr 2023

This is the second Kleon's book I read and the second from the trilogy directed to artists and creators. Like the first book, Steal like an Artist, it's a very enjoyable read, full of common sense and very down-to-earth advice. 
 
Kleon departs from the premise that creative work is hard and it doesn't get easier even if you make a living out of it or are a famous artist. He debunks the stereotypical image of an artist as a chaotic flamboyant individual who's genius is boundless and has a semi-hippy life, that is, the image in the collective imagination. 
 
There is more personal insights into Kleon's life in this book than in the previous one, I'd say, and I appreciate that as I want to hear Kleon's voice, which might be the sum of his influences, but it's still personal; after all, he's not the many people he quotes from. I really like when Kleon gives us an insight into his own experience and life and not into someone's else.
 
This book is also more philosophical than the first one, and I really enjoy that. 
 
Keep Going is written in a simple way that has no pretense or jargon and is easy to understand. 
 
I love the illustrated vignettes and highlight boxes summarizing points discussed, the author's personal views on things, or relevant quotes. 
 
Regarding the digital edition, I haven't found any typo or grammatical error. The structure, style and font use tell me immediately that this is a Kleon's book. The book includes a short bibliography, which is great.  
 
 
THE SO-SOS
This book sins are similar to those I pinpointed in his previous book.
> The content is still lean, and this feels, again, another diary/booklet/blog turned into a book, what I call a blook, by adding generous margins, large illustrations, frame boxes, humongous headings and plenty of blank pages.  
> Like the first time around, there are too many quotes for my taste. Not that I don't like most of them,but there are too many, so Kleon's voice is always muffled by someone's else with his own consent. 
> I also think that some of the chapters could have been meshed together, like chapter 2 and part of chapter 8, and chapters 5 and part of 9, and chapter 6 and part of 9.
> Kleon says "If we do not get outside, if we do not take a walk out in the fresh air, we do not see our everyday world for what it really is, and we have no vision of our own with which to combat disinformation." (Page 129).  I think this is a bit of empty talk, having a walk around the park won't battle disinformation, having a critical mind will. 
> I miss the book having the quotes he includes in properly quoted, like the name of the person, occupation (painter, philosopher, writer, etc.) and the source from it comes from (like a book, or TV interview for ex.).

THE TEN WAYS
1/ EVERYDAY IS GROUNDHOG DAY. Take a day at a time as you never arrive at destination when you're are an artist. Life is full of ebbs and flows, so setting up a daily routine forces you to do something even when you don't know what. Even if you are inspired, it will help you not to waste your time. To set up your routine pay attention to the time you're usually more creative, or the times you can spare from work or family duties. Routine gives your direction and movement. When the day is over, be kind to yourself and remember and be grateful for all the good things that happened to you during the day.  Do to-do lists, they will help you on track.
2/ BUILD A BLISS STATION. Having some disconnected time from our overly-connected overly/shared world and having some silence and solitude will favor your work and creativity as you'll be able to connect to yourself.  
> Set up your work station in the way it works for you personally, something that varies from person to person. Condo's advice is not really relevant for creative spaces.   
> Don't wake up to the news or the Internet. 
> Say no to social interactions that are not relevant to you and say yes to yourself instead. 
3/ FORGET THE NOUN, DO THE VERB. Keep doing what you meant to be doing, writing, painting, sculpting, etc. Don't focus on the thing that you're trying to be or do, but on the work. Don't take it too seriously; work with a sense of playfulness, like children do.
4/ MAKE GIFTS. Forget the art market, put making money at the back of your mind even if this is your way of living. Do what you love for yourself or others. Gift friends and family some of your art.  When we try to monetize, there is pressure, there is adaptation and sometimes we lose our North or genuine self.  If you put your artwork online, ignore the metrics, the likes, dislikes, views, ratings and so on. Don't get obsessed with analytics.
5/ THE ORDINARY + EXTRA ATTENTION = THE EXTRAORDINARY. Pay extra attention to the ordinary, the every day, so you can notice what's special or extraordinary. Find magic in the mundane and translate this into art.  
> Slow down, get outside and draw/sketch anything.
>  Notice what you pay attention to or you usually do. If you want to change your life, change what you pay attention to.
6/ SLAY THE ART MONSTERS. We all have our our monsters and art monsters inside. If making art is ruining your life or somebody else's, it is not worth going on. The world needs more good people not more artists. 
7/ YOU ARE ALLOWED TO CHANGE YOUR MIND. Changing once's mind is perfectly OK. Art thrives on uncertainty. We don't know what we'll end up with when we start each work. We don't know everything. We should be open to change.
>  We need of other people to think us think so that we can think ourselves. Only in an environment that has diversity of opinions we can learn and grow. 
> Like-minded people keep you just where you are. Seek people who are like-hearted, who might not agree with your opinions but do this kindly and help you get a different point of view. 
> Also, revisit the past to get new ideas (as the adage goes, everything has already been said) but put your spin on them, resurrect them, reinvent them, turn them around.
8/ WHEN IN DOUBT, TIDY UP. You’re often most creative when you’re the least productive. There’s a balance in a workspace between chaos and order. Keep your tools organized and your materials messy. Tidying up a studio is a way of procrastination, of deflecting your attention from what you want to do, yet it allows you to clear your mind, or come across stuff that you didn't know you had or where it was.
> Another way of de-cluttering your mind is also having a nap.
> Tide-up your external world. Go an collect rubbish from your local beach for example,
9/ DEMONS HATE FRESH AIR. Exercising is one of the best tools to fight your demons. Walking is good for your physical, mental and spiritual health, great for problem solving and to help you with your artistic endeavors. Art requires awakening your senses and walking/exercising is a perfect way to do that. 
10/ PLANT YOUR GARDEN. Creativity, like the weather, has  its seasons and we need to know which one we're in and be patient in the off-seasons. Our lives have seasons but some people blossom at a young age and others at an old age. Every day is a potential seed that we can grow into something beautiful.
     
PEARLS OF WISDOM
> Nothing makes play more fun than some new toys. Seek out unfamiliar tools and materials. Find something new to fiddle with. Another trick: When nothing’s fun anymore, try to make the worst thing you can. The ugliest drawing. The crummiest poem. The most obnoxious song. Making intentionally bad art is a ton of fun. Finally, try hanging out with young kids. (Page 56-57). 
"When you start making a living from your work, resist the urge to monetize every single bit of your creative practice. Be sure there’s at least a tiny part of you that’s off-limits to the marketplace. (...) draw the line between what you will and won’t do for money." (Page 64). 
 >"When you ignore quantitative measurements for a bit, you can get back to qualitative measurements. Is it good? Really good? Do you like it? You can also focus more on what the work does that can’t be measured. What it does to your soul" (Page 68). 
> "When you have a system for going back through your work, you can better see the bigger picture of what you’ve been up to, and what you should do next." (Page 86). 
> "Thinking requires an environment in which you can try out all sorts of ideas and not be judged for them. To change your mind, you need a good place to have some bad ideas." (Page 102).  
> "When you’re only interacting with like-minded people all the time, there’s less and less opportunity to be changed. Everybody knows that feeling you get when you’re hanging out with people who love the same art, listen to the same music, and watch the same movies: It’s comforting at first, but it can also become incredibly boring and ultimately stifling."  (Page 105). 
> "Art is not only made from things that “spark joy.” Art is also made out of what is ugly or repulsive to us. Part of the artist’s job is to help tidy up the place, to make order out of chaos, to turn trash into treasure, to show us beauty where we can’t see it."  (Page 125). 
> "I don’t want to know how a thirty-year-old became rich and famous; I want to hear how an eighty-year-old spent her life in obscurity, kept making art, and lived a happy life." (Page 139).
 
IN SHORT
A very enjoyable reading, full of wisdom, sound advice and food for thought. But it reads more like a blog than anything else, it has too many quotes, and everything he says it has already been said.  

Steal Like an Artist. 10 Things Nobody Told You About Being Creative by Austin Kleon (2012)

, 17 Feb 2023

I have very mixed feelings about this book.

I LOVED
> The author's colloquial language and lack of pretense.
> Good edition without typos or language oddities in view. The digital edition is acceptable and can be bookmarked. 
> The illustrations and note-cards spread throughout the book. The illustrations and note-cards spread throughout the book. I thought that some of the discarded task cards were excellent!. 
> The very down-to-earth approach to art and artistic creation. 
> A few good ideas. My favs are:
--- Find your own creative/artistic genealogical tree and position yourself in one of the branches where you stand alone as a result of what has influenced you. The way this is explained is really simple, effective and inspiring.
--- "The reason to copy your heroes and their style is so that you might somehow get a glimpse into their minds." (Page 38). 
--- He  puts the idea of the rebel artist in the bin. "I’m a boring guy with a nine-to-five job who lives in a quiet neighborhood with his wife and his dog. That whole romantic image of the creative genius doing drugs and running around and sleeping with everyone is played out. It’s for the superhuman and the people who want to die young. The thing is: It takes a lot of energy to be creative. You don’t have that energy if you waste it on other stuff." (Page 98).
--- "The art of holding on to money is all about saying no to consumer culture. Saying no to takeout, $4 lattes, and that shiny new computer when the old one still works fine." (Page 99).
--- The Logbook idea and focusing just on the good things that happened, which are often overlooked due to something negative taking all of our energy and thoughts.
NOT SURE
> > Kleon sometimes struggles making clear that you have to stay home and work, but at the same time go out and do nothing, procrastinate to allow the creative spark to spark. Like I get that there is a balance, you cannot be consumed by your art because it will consume you and you'll get an artistic block, that ideas and inspiration sometimes come from your siesta, your walk or your music/movie streaming. Yet, the way it 's put in the book feels like he's saying something and then the contrary..
> "Draw the art you want to see, start the business you want to run, play the music you want to hear, write the books you want to"  (Page 46). I agree and disagree with this. My fav art is abstract and surrealism, but what I hand paint is mostly abstracts. I sometimes paint surreal-hinted imagery and I do mostly surreal when playing digitally. So, in short I don't always want to do the art I love the most. Also, the fact that I love surreal paintings (not only digital collage) doesn't mean that I can draw well and realistically. You know what I'm saying'?
> "Don’t worry about unity—what unifies your work is the fact that you made it. One day, you’ll look back and it will all make sense." (Page 63). I also agree and disagree. The cohesiveness of your artwork will come from things that give them unity, like your colour palette, mark making, textures, composition and energy. Yet, if there is not cohesiveness, there is no unity and it's not crystal clear that paint 1 and paint 2 belong to me. So, I worry about unity and cohesiveness.
> "So get comfortable with being misunderstood, disparaged, or ignored—the trick is to be too busy doing your work to care." (Page 93). Sometimes we don't understand some art and consider it 'bad'. I have heard tons of people saying this of Picasso's works because they don't get it neither viscerally or intellectually. But, it's also true that sometimes we dislike something because it's bad art, mediocre writing or not good enough. I can see my own flaws and struggles when I look at my artwork, and in all honesty I can tell when it is good or bad, even if somebody tells me, oh it's really nice. 
> "The trick is to find a day job that pays decently, doesn’t make you want to vomit, and leaves you with enough energy to make things in your spare time." (Page 102). That's the ideal, I agree wit this. However, employability decreases with age and area where you live, and whether the job that feeds you actually gives you enough money to survive. 
I DIDN'T LIKE
> The very lean content. More a booklet than a book due to the small number of pages and the fact that these have wide margins, some of them have just the section or the chapter title, and the font is on the large size overall plus the illustrations.
> The overwhelming presence of somebody's else quotes. I love quotes, mind you. The ones Kleon provides are of my liking. However, I consider constant quoting unnecessary because I guess the author has his own voice and can speak from there. Like, when there are so many quotes, I wonder why the author didn't gather all together and put them cozily packed under the heading, as this would have sufficed to give sound advice. Yet, I think that Kleon has plenty of stuff to say, it's just that he doesn't take the plunge. The quotes are like crutches he leans on when, in fact, he can walk on his two legs perfectly. 
> Some lack of cohesion throughout the book.
> It feels like a published blog. If this was a blog, I'd like it. As a book, I think it lacks depth and tools to really inspire or support emerging artists and writers.
Many of the ideas and sentences I liked could be put in a single blog entry. 
> The book is full of platitudes, especially evident those about the Internet and traveling the world.
> Lack of conclusions or summing up of the main points in the book.
IN SHORT 
An enjoyable light reading with some good ideas for emerging artists and creative people. Bloggish and lacking depth, full of platitudes. Nice illustrations. 
 


Small Space Style: Because You Don't Need to Live Large to Live Beautifully by Whitney Leigh Morris (2018)

, 30 Jan 2023

This book is a mixed of I'm showing you my tiny home, get ideas for a tiny minimalist home from me and my pals, and let's do some pretty DIY.
 
WHAT I LIKED
> The edition of the book is awesome. Wonderful photos and illustrations, DIY tips and ideas.
> The book is clearly and simply written and well structured.
> This is a good startup guide if you want to live in a tiny house or just have a tiny home and want to take advantage of any space available. There are many ideas and tips that I can see adopting in my place, even though my home is average, not tiny. 
> I think this book can be really useful to renters, like me, who sometimes struggle to use a small apartment to its potential.
> I love the overall Boho decor, the mix of neutral tones and white, the airiness and lightness of the spaces, the basketry and pot plants and very much everything.
> This is a good repository of ideas that I can use to update a small property. Many of the ideas are simply cute and very practical and can be implemented in tiny or not tiny spaces.  
WHAT I DIDN'T LIKE
> If you watch tiny-home videos & blogs on the Internet, you'll have the tips and ideas in this book ready available. In other words, nothing new on the horizon. 
> This book seems targeted to a young crowd, some things like loft upstairs would be a problem for some people with disabilities, knee problems or if you have a broken leg. 
> The space is great for singles or young families; if your children are in their teens, not sure whether this tiny place ideas would need of an overhaul.
> The Boho style might not resonate with everyone.
> The studio and home office section is really underdeveloped. 
-- Yes, for sure we can do most things from our laptops nowadays we can have a hole library on Kindle or digital format, but many of the things the author says apply to her and her life and I don't think represent many people who actually work from home and need way more stuff than a laptop in their tiny home. 
-- Taken, we all, me especially, have a thing for pretty stationery and have too many pencils, pens, markers, or whatever, so we can all reduce the junk. 
-- Now, what about if your work from home involve doing some craft or photographing things you make, or painting on paper? Just to name some obvious things.
-- Ditching the office chair is just a bad idea if you spend 8 hrs working at home, because I've been there and that killed my back. 
-- Re ditching the printer, that's another not so good idea. It's great aiming to something that is small and that can be concealed. However, if you need to print A4 paper, there is a limit to the smallness. Also, why would I ditch my printer to go and print some pages to the local library, when, if, I did that, I wouldn't have the freedom to print many pages at my own time without having to take the car or public transport to go to a local library to get 2 sheets of paper printed; like it takes 5 minutes to switch the printer on and print 2 pages; how long would take me to go to my local library? Way more. What about if I need to print something on a Sunday. Like a basic good quality printer is actually super cheap and you can store it anywhere. 
-- Some professions require of reference materials or specialized books that aren't always available on digital format. I can borrow them from my local library or purchase them, but those are going to be on my studio and are often a few.
> The author says in the Introduction that she's not minimalist or part of any movement, but her home and tips all lean towards minimalism and her home is definitely tiny. 
POOR DIGITAL EDITION
> The lettering contrast is deficient in some parts of the book, too faint to be comfortably read on on my 15"-screen laptop at 100% resolution. It's only possible to read it without squinting when I use 150% or full-screen mode.
> The font size is overall too small to be comfortably read without magnifying to 150% or full-screen mode. 
> The table of contents don't display on the side bar. 
> The Index of Contents is not linked to the content area. 
> No bookmarks possible in this edition, which certainly defeats the purpose of having so many tips on each page that I would like to bookmark for future reference.
> Due to the previous  issues, the book is not practical or much usable on Kindle, so I'd rather have it on hard copy. 


IN SHORT
OK book. Nothing new on the horizon of tiny homes. Pretty photos and cool ideas. One of those few books that I'd like to have on hard copy.  


True Vision: Authentic Art Journaling by L.K. Ludwig (2008, 2011)

, 8 Jan 2023

Despite the years elapsed since this book was first published, True Vision is still the book I'd recommend to people to start with if they're new to mixed media, art journaling or both. This work was first published in 2008 and the Kindle edition I used to read is from 2011; yet, it's the most compressive work I've found for art journaling while being authentic to who you are, without copycatting anyone.  I find the book both inspiring and helpful. 

THE STRUCTURE
 The book is structured in chapters evolving about different journaling themes, which Ludwig analyzes extensively: The written word, relationships, currents events, places and spaces, self-explorations, spirituality and dreams. Each chapter contains information about how to explore the theme as well as sections devoted to techniques, visual and journaling prompts, as well as intermezzos with interviews with different art journalists.
>> The Visual Toolbox sections make you learn new techniques and/or increase your proficiency level in art journaling. Some of them were borrowed years later by other more popular art journal artists, like Dina Wakley. These techniques are: Making a stencil portrait. -- Text onto metal mesh. -- Writing with fluid acrylics. -- Adding Structured Texture to an Art Journal Page. -- Silhouette figure study. -- Altering a child's board book. -- Faux landscape painting. -- Photographic self-portrait. -- More than the sum of our parts. -- Ink-jet transfer. -- Patina on paper. -- Blind contour drawing. -- Carving a self-portrait into a printing block. -- Altering scrapbook papers.
>> The Insight Activity sections describe some techniques to journaling and filling a journal page: Unblanking the blank page. -- Using your best stash items. -- Automatic writing. -- Creating and using a vision deck. -- Creating an imaginary musical alphabet. -- Using old notebooks as a substrate or collage element for your artwork. --Using poems. -- Creating versions of the same item (circumstance, day, happenstance). -- Creating a page that summarizes your week. -- Creating abstracts. -- Being a tourist in your own town and using using the experience to journal. -- Building our sense of home. -- Using dream characters to create pages.
>> Take a Closer Look is where Ludwig interviews other artists whose journals fit the theme under examination: Bee Shay, Nina Bagley, Traci Bunkers,  L. K. Ludwig (herself), Juliana Coles and Loretta Marvel. Many more artists are mentioned throughout the book, and their art showcased, to exemplify what's being taught.
>> The appendix contains the Vision Deck for printing, a list of contributors (names, websites and/or email addresses), and a list of resources (art supplies, books and magazines as well as artists to look up).

  
THE GOOD
>> Despite the many years elapsed since first written, the book has aged well and is still relevant and my first recommendation for anyone wanting to start journaling or improve their journaling.
>> Beautifully designed book, from the color palette (which changes from chapter to chapter) to the flourishes, the font type and sizing, as well as the overall layout. It is a very stylish book. Everything is just well thought and visually rendered.
>> Excellent photo quality and sizing. The images almost feel 3D. 
>> Ludwig not only tells you how to journal and about what subjects, but also  gives you tools and techniques that allow you to journal and to grow as an artist.
>> I find some of queries at the bottom of each section not only good for journaling but also to know thyself.  
>> I love all the attention devoted to dreams as source of inspiration for journaling, especially because Ludwig has a clear Jungian and Gestal approach. 
>> Most of the small tip boxes are really helpful and great. Like, they aren't obvious things.
THE SO-SO
>> The Interviews with other artists whose artwork isn't appealing to me. Yet, they also provide with invaluable feedback on different people's creative process. 
>> I don't see the need of constant quoting. If you have to say anything, just be brave to own your own opinions. I confess that some of the ones chosen here supplement the idea under discussion well and  they aren't the usual quotes repeated everywhere either, so that's OK. Yet, I don't like constant quoting.
>>The Photographic self-portrait visual toolbox is good but seems redundant in this Selfies Era. 
>> In this overwhelmingly age of the image, I miss a photo-by photo tutorial of the Visual Toolbox section. Ludwig describes the steps clearly and concisely, but I'd rather have a photo tutorial.
>> The prompts vertically written on the right hand side of some pages are very difficult to read if you're using a digital copy unless you totally twist your head. They're great, so I've copied them at the bottom end of this review.
>> Some of the prompts asking about things that happened when we were in second grade or very long time ago. Unless you have a savant memory, it's difficult to remember what happened unless you're picking up the book, say, in High School. 
>> The book ends abruptly without conclusion or final words.
  
 VERTICAL PROMPTS, FYI
  1. >> Usurp an ordinary object for artistic purposes—a fork, perhaps. Bend the outside tines into a loop until they touch the fork, then spread the two middle tines apart. Is this a fork or a flower? Anything can be used. Think beyond the ordinary.
  2. >> Use serendipity. When something you read or experience dovetails with important things in your life, use it as topic about which to create. Messages from the universe should not be overlooked!
  3. >> Start out on one subject and wend your way around to another completely unrelated topic using a series of images copied to the same size. Start somewhere and end somewhere else.
  4. >> Map your path to work, the coffee shop, or the grocery store. Create an actual map, by drawing doodles of buildings, landmarks, squiggly trees... Make the scale how long it feels to get to a place, not the actual distance
  5. >> Place 4” (10 cm) squares of white, cream, and gray paper in a well-lit room. Notice how the light affects the colors as it changes over the course of the day. Try replicating these effects in your journal using watercolors.
  6. >> Empty an anxious heart onto your pages. Clip, paint, snip, scribble, splatter, write. Don’t consider the appearance of your page, just release your burden onto the paper. If this isn’t a page you want to commit to having in your journal, do it on scrap or deli paper.
  7. >> Take an old book from your hoard to use as a new journal. Instead of using it the way it opens, turn it 90 degrees and use it from that direction
  8. >> Turn up the volume: go for brighter versions of the colors you were going to use. Whatever you were going to do, do it bigger. Spill it off the page. Make it so big as to be unrecognizable. Make it so loud in color that anything else is hard to see, or so black that it could be a cave. Bigger, bolder, more volume!
  9. >> New journals can be daunting. Break in pages by dipping the book into a bowl of coffee, tea, or watered down ink. Hold the book by the cover boards to dip. Fan open to dry.
  10. >> Glue an envelope to a journal page. Write a love letter to someone, perhaps yourself, tuck it inside and seal it shut.
  11. >> When using text on a page, give it visual punch by creating words that jump off the page through their arrangement, color, or style.
  12. >> Find one image or object that is the quintessential distillation of someone or some place you cherish and create a page that supports the image or object.
  13. >> Make a photocopy of your palm. Head to the library and look up palmistry. Give yourself a palm reading and Create a page about what your palm has to say. Are secrets there?
  14. >> In second grade, what did you want to be when you grew up? What other things did you want to be when you grew up? Have you done any of those things? Do you still want to do any of those things?
  15. >> Try on different handwriting styles.
  16. >> Construct a page that interacts with the viewer. Try pull tabs, flaps, and small doors.
  17. >> Prove you exist.
  18. >> Collect doorways, or rather, images of doorways. Thinking about the nature of doorways can lead into some interesting journal work.
  19. >> Tear a piece of newspaper or tissue into rectangles and strips. Adhere these pieces to your page with acrylic medium. For additional texture, crumple the pieces before attaching them.
  20. >> Coat a page in wax and scratch marks or text into the surface. Rub graphite or charcoal into the scratches.
  21. >> Folding pages adds new perspectives. Fold before starting, to create separate spaces. Fold after, to create texture and dimension.
  22. >> Save your doodles. You can enlarge and copy them to create interesting backgrounds.
  23. >> Vagary. Despite its naughty sound, a vagary is a whim, an odd or eccentric idea. For one week, collect all your odd ideas, not just those that are art-related. Now choose one, two, or more and make pages about them
  24. >> Gravity. Use it. Spill coffee or paint onto a page, even one in progress.
  25. >> Create a visual joke, something that makes you smile each time you see it.