Art making ideasi
Ideas. Inspiration. A little creative mischief.
If you’re drawn to abstract and semi-abstract art, sketchbooks, colour and a little creative mischief, this is your corner of the internet.
Here you’ll find stories, videos, inspiration, art making advice and gentle nudges to help you create art that feels exciting to you.
Art materials: felt tip pens
Some of my favourite felt-tip pens
In this video I share some thoughts about using markers and felt tip pens in my sketchbook and share some of my favourites.
I really enjoy using this type of pen in my sketchbook practice, they are quick, portable and accessible. There is something playful, easeful and joyful about them. The brilliantly bright colours seem cheerful, optimistic and exuberant to me.
ART MATERIALS
Here are some of the felt tip pens I like to use, these are just my personal preferences, I tend to mix and match brands to find the colours I like. You may like to explore adding multiple layers of colour on top of each other to build up intensity and get a more unusual colour palette or experiment with combining felt tips pens, with other art materials such as collage and paint…
I mostly use water-based or indian ink based pens in my sketchbook, I find that alcohol based markers always seem to seep through to the page beneath no-matter the paper quality and I find their smell a little overpowering, so I mostly used water based….
These are the brands I use most often:
Pentel Pocket Brush Pen ( this is the black brush pen I use the most which is refillable)
Ecoline Brush Pens ( these pens can be refilled with Ecoline liquid watercolour which comes in bottles)
Faber Castell PITT Artist Pens (indian ink based so waterproof)
Stabilo Pen 68 BRUSH
Staedtler 3001 double ended watercolour brush pen
TomBow ABT Dual Brush Pens
The Faber Castell and Tombow’s are the more expensive high-end ones, they are not cheap, but as a professional artist I do invest in materials. The Staedtler ones I find to be really good quality and excellent value. The Ecoline pens can be refilled. Please don’t feel you need to start with expensive pens, the best felt tip pens to use are always the ones you already own…(or perhaps the ones your kids or grandchildren own!)
Mixing art supplies
Mixing art supplies in a sketchbook
Today I’m chatting about mixing media and combining art supplies…
CONNECTION WITH THE MATERIALS
There is something about the physicality of creating art which I love, the connection to the art materials is part of the joy. I try and choose my art materials with intention, they influence and inform what I make. I relish the sensory and tactile nature of mixing the paint, touching the materials, how the paper feels, the physical connection to what is on the page. I enjoy leaving my mark on the page, the evidence of the physical act of art making is an integral part of my art…
UNEXPECTED DELIGHTS
There is real delight to be found in mixing different types of media and art supplies on one page, the visual variety, the different sensibilities of different art materials combing to create something surprising, interesting or unexpected.
INSPIRED BY THE PROCESS
When making art in a sketchbook, the outcome is not so important, this allows a certain amount of freedom to explore different processes, materials and combinations of materials. The magical element is often what is discovered about the way materials can be manipulated, how they play together...
Abstract art and art books…
A few fascinations and interests…
In this video I share a little of what I am up to in my art practice at the moment, painting on paper, the art books I’m currently reading and loving and a few recent adventures within my sketchbook…
ART BOOKS: John Walker, The Blue Series, Messums Art Gallery, Catalogue, published in 2023
David Mankin, Remembering in Paint by Kate Reeve Edwards, published by Samson & Company 2021
MUSIC CREDIT: If I wrote you a song, by Melanie Bell vie Epidemic Sound
Abstract art: progression and process
The stages of an abstract painting and a few thoughts on process…
Today I wanted to share a little insight about how my paintings progress and develop. I thought I’d show you some abstract paintings I’m currently working on at different stages of un-dress and un-doneness.
ALIGN THE PROCESS WITH THE INTENTION
Every artist has a different process and it’s important that the process you choose to use or develop reflects the things you are interested in. Our processes are a vital part of the mix, they are part of our art decision making, part of how we want our art to feel and be.
There is no one way to paint a painting. I try and ensure that the way I paint a painting emphasises and aligns with my sensibilities and reflects how I want my art to feel…
So for example I love delightful details, layers of complexity, rich maximalist combinations, I want my art to be bright and playful but also have a depth and complexity. I enjoy exuberance AND control. I like a sense of seeking and finding. I enjoy my paintings when they feel like they have a history, like they are interesting objects with a past. I want to celebrate beauty in the mundane. And because I have really thought about all this, I am better able to develop art making processes which give me these results.
TWO QUESTIONS
So in a nutshell it is useful to think “what are my paintings about?” and “how can my processes support and align with this?”
Art inspired by objects
Art inspired by the objects and things in our lives
In this post and video I want to talk about how the objects in my life inspire my art.
CONNECTING TO THINGS
I’ve always been super inspired by nature and being outside, trees, organic forms, foliage and flowers. In the last few years though, I have also been fascinated with objects and items in a domestic setting. Art making helps me to connect to myself and the world around me. It is a way to understand who I am and what I am interested in. It is an ongoing conversation with myself which unfurls, develops and evolves.
INSPIRATION IS ALL AROUND
And in recent years a lot of my art has been an exploration of my connection to home and the items that accompany my everyday. The objects and things that I travel through life with.
Why am I so inspired by the domestic?
I’ve been thinking about my relationship to home and the things in it a lot recently.
EMOTIONAL CONNECTION
Over the last couple of years we’ve all spent far more time inside our homes, haven’t we?
When our house flooded and we had to live in hotels for several months, I missed the familiar objects of my day-to-day. The importance of home has perhaps also taken on a different meaning for me since both my parents died. My home now represents a feeling of security and grounded-ness, of roots becoming established.
My home brings together objects and items that I love, which mean something to me, but also just random things I like and enjoy. I like the fact my home contains a layering of things, some with meaning attached, some picked up in a junk shop just because they are interesting or unique.
I came across this quote from Matisse:
“I have worked all my life before the same objects… The object is an actor. A good actor can have a part in ten different plays; an object can play a role in ten different pictures.” Henri Matisse, 1951
The objects we surround ourselves with play a part in our lives, they are actors on our stage. They may reflect who we are, what we love, our taste, our preferences and our experiences. Our things can be a wonderful source of inspiration for our art making because in some way they are a reflection of us…
If you’re looking for an art process to help you create beautiful abstract and semi abstract acrylic paintings from objects in your life, you may like to check out my class Objects to Abstracts:
My story
My journey to becoming an artist…
I became an artist a little later in life, in my late thirties. I didn’t go to art collage and gave up studying art when I was just seventeen. My route to becoming a full time artist has been a rather circuitous one. I didn’t create anything at all in my twenties, then spent my thirties obsessed with art, but only ever as a hobby. It wasn’t until my forties that art slowly evolved to become my full time career.
As a child, I was always drawing. I dreamed of being a textile designer. I loved spending hours creating elaborate and intricate patterns from my imagination. I used to get through so much paper that my father started to buy me large rolls of wallpaper lining-paper to keep up with my insatiable demand for something to draw on.
Recent artwork
Recent art work
Drawing from 40 years ago
My Mum was studying contemporary textiles when I was little, so she was always sewing or taking me to the haberdashery. Thread, fabric, colour, pattern were the back-drop to my childhood. I have always been fascinated by pattern and colour
But then at seventeen when a school time-tabling clash wouldn’t allow me to study art with my other subjects, I gave up studying art and I gave up creating art and I allowed it to just slip out of my life.
A little bit of heartbreak brought me back to art making. A relationship breakup when I was 28 or 29 left me moping around with no summer holiday plans. I decided to book myself onto a two week painting summer school at a London art college. It was there that I started a much more fulfilling love affair… I fell completely and utterly in love with drawing and painting.
For nearly all of my thirties art was a hobby, I tried to go to art collage and was rejected after a terrible interview, so I just thought that creating art would remain a life enhancing, life enriching hobby.
In my late thirties as I climbed the career ladder at the charity I had worked at for for nearly a decade, I began to feel that perhaps I had laid my ladder against the wrong wall.
I had a clear epiphany out of the blue one day, that I really did want to make art a more significant part of my life… so I set about trying to make art my career.
I took tiny steps in the right direction. I started to try and sell my art online. I entered competitions and group shows and slowly and surely things started to happen. I won a Winsor & Newton watercolour competition which meant my art was displayed at The Saatchi Gallery in London. Eight of my paintings were displayed at one of Gordon Ramsay’s restaurants… I build my confidence, learnt new skills and made art my part time career and then eventually my full time career.
Recent sketchbook pages
Recent sketchbook pages
I’ve now patch-worked an art career together through trial and error, finding out what works and what I enjoy. I love the career I have built. I license my work for wall art, branding and products. I sell my original paintings and complete commissions for original art projects such as for hospitals. I have written a book about mixed media sketchbooks and I teach online classes.