2018 | The ART of IMPROV | Zak Foster


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Zak Foster

The ART of IMPROV

Let’s welcome Zak Foster to The Art of Improv! Zak is a textile artist living in New York City, who learned to quilt from his partner’s grandma, and as she promised, he has been having a blast with it ever since, and it shows! Zak’s work has been published and exhibited in many magazines, blogs and galleries around the country and across the world. His aesthetic is influenced by the work of the Gee’s Bend quilters, bauhaus textiles, the weavings of Anni Albers and Gunta Stolzl, the paintings of Jacob Lawrence and the cities of Brooklyn and New York. His commitment to using found and repurposed fabrics is inspiring and commendable, as are his politically charged pieces that have drawn added attention to social issues deserving of protest. Let’s learn more about Zak and how improv finds it way into his work and process.

Young Miss Augusta 1963 Zak Foster

Young Miss Augusta 1963 Zak Foster

What does working improvisationally mean to you?  How would you define the ‘Art of Improv’?

Working improvisationally for me means starting without a plan. Usually I start with the fabric, letting the colors or patterns dictate what happens next. I make several blocks and observe what I see happening in front of me. Sometimes I like some detail that happens in a piece-- some spark of a greater idea-- and I try to replicate that idea in other blocks. Sometimes I just let the pieces be as they are and let the quilt come together as it wants to.

The art part of improv comes in those moments where something unintentional becomes the crux of the piece. There have been times when I trying to force a design to gel, and I make a funny little sew and it opens up new possibilities that I couldn’t have come up with on my own. That’s the art for me.

Have you always worked improvisationally?

Pretty much since the beginning, yes.  I wish I had a picture of my first quilt. It was a pinwheel pattern made out of half-square triangles, but the fabric was all remnants left over from a fabric warehouse (R.I.P. Gem Fabrics NYC!) and the pinwheels didn’t quite line up, so I guess we can call that improv? My second quilt got a little looser, and by my third quilt, I was off and running. I’ve only made one non-improv quilt in my career, and it was a traditional patterned quilt for a dear friend. Turned out beautiful, but getting those points all lined up almost drove me crazy!

Bedford Armory Zak Foster

Bedford Armory Zak Foster

Please share a bit about your process.  Do you have methods to getting started?  Do you have tricks to getting unstuck?  Do you have motivators to finishing up?

I try not to stress the process. Stress blocks any creative impulse I might have. If things aren’t working out, I have a couple tricks I try.

1) I try stepping back twenty feet or so from the quilt to see if I can figure out what’s not working. An alternative to this is taking a picture of it and looking at the mini digital version on your phone. Either approach helps play down details (that you may be fond of or are driving you crazy!) and help you focus on the overall composition.

2) Another trick I find helpful is to look at the quilt upside-down. I either rotate the quilt or stand on my head, depending on what’s easier. Viewing a composition upside-down has a way of pointing out what’s off. But if I still can’t put my finger on it, I just pack up the whole thing and put it in the closet for a while. Sometimes I come back to it with renewed inspiration. Sometimes I cut it up for another project a year later.

When I’m feeling stalled on a project and need to just get it done, I try to devote a large chunk of time to make some serious progress, if it feels tedious. I find if I can just plow through the tedium, there’s inspiration on the other side. Sometimes working incrementally feels like doggie-paddling, all this work and you’re not really getting anywhere. But it’s nothing a good Saturday afternoon can’t fix (or a sick-day from work!)

Where do you find inspiration?  How do you use it?

Living in a place like New York City, inspiration is everywhere. This is a place where steel-and-glass skyscraper coexists in the same habitat as 18th-century brick-and-mortar taverns. I find the juxtaposition of the two creates a lot of room for response. If precise perpendiculars and organic approximations are both aesthetics in a designer’s toolkit, it opens up a lot of possibilities. I look at some of my quilts, the Brooklyn Armory quilt is a great example, and see two faces of this city side-by-side. .

What advice would you give to someone interested in trying to work improvisationally.  Can you share some good advice that you received that helped you become more comfortable this way?

The way I started, and the way I always suggest to folks who’d like to give improv a shot, is to start with fabrics you like but don’t love. I found, especially when I was just beginning, that when I was working with fabrics that I liked too much, it was almost a hindrance to the creative process. I was so concerned with not making a wrong cut, that I would err on conservative side and overthink each cut. I think improv is all about the moment, what catches your eye as you’re cutting and sewing, and working with that. Also, I remember being liberated by the idea that with improv there is no wasted fabric. You can’t make a wrong cut. If something’s too short, you add a little piece, and voila, you have a great new detail that adds complexity to your work. If a piece is too long, you lop it off, and use the excess in your next bit. I love that improv embraces all of our efforts.

One of the quickest and enjoyable ways I improv is to put away the rotary cutter and use only scissors. Then making long sweeping cuts going wherever the scissors and fabric decide they feel like going, I cut long strips and start piecing them together. The effect is soft and fluid, almost painterly. I’ve made three that way and they’re so much fun.  (See Scissor quilts).

 

Scissor quilts Zak Foster

Scissor quilts Zak Foster

Scissor quilt Zak Foster

Scissor quilt Zak Foster

I read your The Creativity Project interview with Kim Soper (Leland Ave Studios) and found your description of your Oracle Quilts and their process very interesting and relative to improv, can you share with us here about these quilts and their process?

As a quilter who’s also a linguist, I love it when words can be traced back to the hypothetical grandmother of English, Spanish, Bengali, and so many other languages: (unimaginatively dubbed) the Proto-Indo-European language. Art is one of those words with long roots in history. We can see the root ar in several modern languages and they all have one idea in common, the idea of things fitting together.  In English, the spelling didn’t always get passed down, but the idea sure did: we see it words like arm, articulate, adorn, coordinate, ornate, and order. And for me, that is such a beautifully pure definition of what art is, especially improv art: making things fit together.

When I first realized a few years ago that working with fabric was the principle way I made sense of the world, I finally became confident to call myself an artist. By this definition, I am one who makes things fit together. And in doing so, I better understand my world around me, and it’s my hope, that I am able to help others see the world from a different angle as well.

I’ve made three quilts in the last few years that I call oracle quilts. They are based on some unsettling question or some nagging doubt that I can’t easily resolve. I frame my question carefully, often I’ll write it on a piece of paper and pin it to my design wall, and I take it to the quilt. I try my best to let intuition take over and not think too much about the aesthetics. Throughout the creation of the piece, answers often emerge.

The first time that happened was when I was growing concerned for the refugees entering Europe in 2015.

The idea came to me though that maybe I should consult the wisdom of fabric. I went to my stash and started pulling out various shades of white fabrics and began sewing without any definite plan, but a clearly defined question: “How are we to live in a world like this?” I sewed and sewed, piecing together long columns of white squares─ one family on the move after another. I connected one column to a second column, and made the necessary adjustments so they’d fit. Then I added a third column, adjusting, tweaking until they laid just right. I carried on like that until I had finished the quilt. I stood back and looked at it from across the room. I could see clearly how the position of one square affected the position of another, and there was my answer: “We have to make room for each other.”

Oracle Quilt Zak Foster

Oracle Quilt Zak Foster

So I’ve been trying to make room for others ever since. On a personal level, that means allowing others to be exactly who they are and not trying to contort them to my ideals. On a broader political level, I support anyone who is working to make a home for others by providing charity and social support networks like healthcare, and doesn’t meddle unnecessarily in the affairs of others. I cannot support anyone who seeks to exclude others for personal gain.

That first oracle quilt is a fine quilt, maybe not the most visually interesting one that I’ve ever made, but it set me on a new course. With this quilt, I began using fabric in a more introspective way, and let the process of sewing bring forth meaning for me. I call this particular the Shekinah quilt, a reference to the illuminating presence of God for the Hebrews when they were wandering in the wilderness. Looking at the quilt give me understanding, a sense of peace, and a mission.

I’ve made two other oracle quilts since then that given me a sense of direction in uncertain moments. The second one I made in the last few months as I worked through some feelings of stuckness that I’m having. I’ve been working the same job ever since I graduated college sixteen years ago, and I think a lot about what other options are out there. After months of not making a single quilt, I decided once again to go ask the fabrics. I started pulling a few meaningful pieces: an old silk skirt a good friend had given me, some material from my partner’s great-aunt Patsy, and some super bright orange fabric that I’d never found a use for. I began making a simple square-in-a-square quilt, the square in the middle being the bright orange fabric. When I put them up on the design wall together, I had a totally surreal and dreamlike moment: what I saw before me was a grid floating in space like a fence or a filter, and behind that, a radiant day-glo world. Each orange block revealed a window, and all I had to do to make it to this brighter place was to crawl through one. It was incredibly affirming (and a little trippy).

Oracle Quilt Zak Foster

Oracle Quilt Zak Foster

How would you finish the sentence, ‘What if, . . .?’

What if I could cover a building with quilt? The entire thing, from top to bottom. I imagine a quilt-top made of beautifully translucent fabrics draped over the entire facade, and then being able to walk from room to room, looking out windows that once looked out onto the city now turned into prisms of stained-glass fabric windows.

What are reading, listening to, watching, or any other inspirational obsessions you would like to share?  

Hands down, the best collections of essays about quilting that I’ve read is Gee’s Bend: the Architecture of the Quilt by Tinwood Books. My favorite essays were the reflections written by many of the quilters themselves: Loretta P. Bennett, Mary Lee Bendolph, and Louisiana P. Bendolph. The large-format pictures are gorgeous. Going West! Quilts and Community is another favorite I flip through often. More so than any other book I’ve read, this collections focuses on how people create communities and connect to one another through quilts throughout the 19th and 20th centuries.

On a different but related note, Overdressed: the Shockingly High Cost of Cheap Fashion by Elizabeth L. Cline was a  game-changer for me. It paints a stark picture of how we are over-producing fabric and the devastating effects of the textile industry on our one and only planet. I read the book over a year ago, and I don’t think I’ve bought a new item of clothing since. (Except for maybe underwear.)

I also love the poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke. He wrote most of his major work in the first decade of the 1900s, but sometimes when I read some of his poems, it feels kindred. Like this excerpt from his Ninth Duino Elegy, where he’s asked the question about what outlives us-- our loves, our sufferings, our heaviness, our art of looking-- what he calls the unsayable. It is this lifetime, he insists, that we ought to dedicate ourselves to the sayable, the objects of daily life:

For when the traveler returns from the mountain-slopes into the valley,

he brings, not a handful of earth, unsayable to others, but instead

some word he has gained, some pure word, the yellow and blue

gentian. Perhaps we are here in order to say: house,

bridge, fountain, gate, pitcher, fruit-tree, window –

at most: column, tower… But to say them, you must understand,

oh, to say them more intensely than the Things themselves

ever dreamed of existing.

I wonder where quilt would fit into Rilke’s list. Between window and column, I hope. Quilts take the pieces of fabric, often pieces that we have loved in the form of garments and linens, and elevates them into something that gives us even more warmth and even more comfort. I love the idea of fabric sitting around in my studio, dreaming itself into a quilt.

As I sew, I often prefer to work in silence, but when I do want music, more often than not, it’s WDVX, East Tennessee’s own listener-support radio. Sometimes when living in New York feels a little too far from home, it warms my heart to hear voices like the ones I grew up hearing on the radio. And I love the story-telling that forms the heart of country and bluegrass music. I can sit and sew, all the while listening to one story after another, and be carted five hundred miles away without leaving my living room.

Many thanks to Zak for sharing his one of a kind quilts and his processes of improvisation, for all of your inspiring ideas about improv and quilted art.  Thank you for sharing the poem of Rainer Maria Rilke too.  I have been reading some poetry lately myself and even attempting to write some a little, which is totally new for me.  I love the poems that draw attention to the beauty of the ordinary, the everyday, that beauty is everywhere.  I hold this belief and think poetry brings attention to it in a very powerful way.  I also can not get the image of a quilt draped building out of my head, what a wonderful ‘what if. . .’ to ponder.  In the present climate of the world and its politics, I love your idea of making room for each other and asking your art to guide you in its creation, this is how I believe improv can help artists find real authenticity, like a fingerprint, this is how we can leave our own unique mark.  I believe the uniqueness of each of us is a powerful strength of our humanity that is sadly being overlooked and squandered with fear, we need to celebrate and make room for these uniquenesses, because that is where the real art/beauty lies.  I thank you for sharing this idea, and making room for me to ponder it. 

To learn more about Zak visit his website, and check out his Instagram feed for inspiration everyday.


If you would like to be featured on The Art of Improv please contact me!  I would love to hear how improvisation impacts your art making process.


2018 | The ART of IMPROV | Cindy Grisdela


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Cindy Grisdela

The ART of IMPROV

Cindy Grisdela is our guest this week. She is an award winning textile artist from Reston Virginia, whose abstract art quilts are exhibited and sold all over the country. Cindy draws inspiration from nature and her exploration of color is where she starts, and then it is texture that she explores. She is a teacher and an author, she lectures and runs creative workshops to encourages creativity with cloth. Her book ‘Artful Improv’ is a beautiful book that has inspired me and so many others to jump outside the box. Here she shares a little bit about her improv process.

Aquarius Cindy Grisdela

Aquarius Cindy Grisdela

What does working improvisationally mean to you?  How would you define the ‘Art of Improv’?

Working improvisationally means working without a pattern and not knowing what the final piece is going to look like when I start. I enjoy how each decision about color, line, and shape influences the next as I’m creating. Being open to the process is the most important thing about improv to me. There are many times when "happy accidents" of line or shape occur that I couldn't have planned if I was working more deliberately. 

Have you always worked improvisationally?

No—I started out over 30 years ago as a traditional quilter following patterns. But I usually wanted to tweak the patterns to make them more my own. 

Do you work improvisationally, consciously, intentionally?  If so, how do you begin?  If not, how do you find yourself getting there?

Yes—it’s a very deliberate choice. I begin with an idea—a new color combination or a set of shapes and lines. Generally I also have an idea of what size I want the piece to be and I block that size out on my design wall. Then I fill it with color and shape. It's not a quick process--often I have to leave the piece up on the wall to "marinate" while I work on something else. Coming back to it with fresh eyes, I'm often able to see what needs to happen next. 

One thing I emphasize to my students is the fact that just because we are working improvisationally, that doesn't let us off the hook to create good art. I use a simple set of design principles to help me evaluate my compositions--things like balance, focus, repetition, variety, and unity in the design.

Partly Sunny Cindy Grisdela

Partly Sunny Cindy Grisdela

How often do you work with improvisation?

Always 

Please share a bit about your process.  Do you have methods to getting started?  Do you have tricks to getting unstuck?  Do you have motivators to finishing up?

I work improvisationally in two ways. One way is to start with a color idea and create a number of units or blocks--maybe improv log cabin blocks or improv curves. Then I arrange and rearrange them on my design wall until I have a composition that sings--paying attention to the creative tension between the lines and shapes as I go. Another way is to use my rotary cutter as a drawing tool and cut freehand shapes directly into the fabrics. In this method, no sewing is done until the entire composition is up on the wall. The shapes are roughed in and then recut to fit as each section is sewn. Many times the composition changes again during the sewing process. 

If I'm stuck, I take a break and work on something else. It sometimes helps to take a photo of the piece on my smartphone and look at it on the screen, both in color and in black and white. I'll often see a problem on the screen that wasn't obvious looking at the piece on the wall. Looking at it in black and white helps to see the values more clearly--if there's a section that reads too dark or too light it will show on the screen. 

I don't usually have trouble finishing. I want to know what the piece is going to look like! Plus I'm almost always motivated to finish a piece by some sort of deadline--a show to enter or the need for a new class sample. But if I do have trouble with a piece, I go to the studio and set a timer for a set period of time--maybe only 20 or 30 minutes. When the timer goes off, I've often found a new groove and I'm able to move forward. 

Where do you find inspiration?  How do you use it?

Although my work is very abstract, I find inspiration everywhere I go. I'm always looking for interesting color combinations, shapes, and textures--sometimes in nature, sometimes in buildings and architecture, sometimes in other types of art. I take a lot of pictures of things that interest me and use them as inspiration later. 

Balloon Fiesta Cindy Grisdela

Balloon Fiesta Cindy Grisdela

What advice would you give to someone interested in trying to work improvisationally.  Can you share some good advice that you received that helped you become more comfortable this way?

First, become comfortable with the idea that the process is just as important as the finished project. Dump out a basket of scraps, or cut scraps from yardage. Start out just sewing two pieces of fabric together, maybe because you like the colors or the shapes. Keep adding another scrap until you have a block. Then put that aside and do it again. Don't overthink it, just keep adding scraps that are a different color or a different value of the same color. Let go of any rules and let the piece evolve. Once you have a handful of blocks, put them up on your design wall and arrange and rearrange them until you like the result. Add some negative space, or maybe some energetic stripes. If you listen to your inner voice, you'll know when it's right. 

Remember that there are no mistakes in improv, just design opportunities. If something doesn't turn out the way you thought it would, put it in your leftover basket and let it sit for a while. There have been a number of times that blocks or units that didn't work out in one project were just the right thing to start something new. 

How would you finish the sentence, ‘What if, . . .?’

"What if" is my favorite sentence in improv design! What if I turn the piece upside down? What if I add some lime green? What if I try something completely new and unexpected? That's where the magic happens. 

What are reading, listening to, watching, or any other inspirational obsessions you would like to share?

One of my favorite books about being an artist is Julia Cameron's The Artist's Way--I reread it every so often because I believe that you get something new every time given your experiences in the interim. I also have enjoyed Elizabeth Gilbert's Big Magic about living creatively. And the new issue of Curated Quilts magazine is all about Improv and has some great articles and images. 

I love to read lots of different things--science fiction, history, art, mysteries. I'm in the middle of Doris Kearns Goodwin's new book, Leadership in Turbulent Times and I'm learning a lot. Twyla Tharp’s “The Creative Habit” has been hugely helpful to me. I love her quote; "Ultimately there is no such thing as failure. There are lessons learned in different ways." I think this applies well to the idea of creating improvisationally--you must keep learning and growing as an artist by doing the work--assessing and evaluating as you go.

Thank you to Cindy for sharing with us, her work and her expertise on improvisational quilting.  I love her book, it has helped me realize that following your creative gut is not always easy but well worth the while.  I too love Cameron’s ‘The Artist’s Way’ and probably should reread it.  I can also recommend ‘Vein of Gold’ by Cameron that is an extension of ‘The Artist’s Way’ and one of my favorites, both are hugely inspirational and motivational and the type of book I am loving to read right now, and FYI @fortheloveofyourart will be reading ‘The Creative Habit’ in the coming months.  I thank you for the reminder to keep your eyes wide open to the world and all its beauty. 

To learn more about Cindy visit her website and be sure to check out her beautiful book ‘Artful Improv’, and Instagram for day to day inspiration of line, shape, and color.


If you would like to be featured on The Art of Improv please contact me!  I would love to hear how improvisation impacts your art making process.


2018 |The ART of IMPROV | Gary Hirsch


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Gary Hirsch

The ART of IMPROV

Our guest this week is artist and illustrator Gary Hirsch. Gary is co founder of On Your Feet, a creative group that uses theatrical improvisation to help businesses relate, create, and collaborate. Gary is also responsible for BotJoy an art sharing project that is best described here. He has also created interactive murals in various cities across the country, in which the walls have a series of hand-painted Bot figures, each with a simple question embedded into its design. Viewers interact with the art by using photography and hashtags #botjoy and #botpdx to answer the Bot questions, creating an on-line, city-wide gallery of reflections, ideas, and beliefs. Gary is on a mission to bring joy to world through his art and I applaud and high five him for that!

The BOTS Gary Hirsch

The BOTS Gary Hirsch

What does working improvisationally mean to you?  How would you define the ‘Art of Improv’?

My entire professional life as an artist and consultant is built on the belief that joy and great work come from behaving like an improviser.

Noticing More

Letting Go

Using Everything

I think of improv as: the art of dealing with what "Is" vs what was "suppose" to be.

Have you always worked improvisationally?

Yes, see my TED talk about making improvised art from my nightmares with my father when I was a child.  

Do you work improvisationally, consciously, intentionally?  If so, how do you begin?  If not, how do you find yourself getting there?

I have a plan and then when I start my work I let the moment not the plan guide me.  I start with a mark, or an image, but what is the wall surfacing telling me? What comes into my mind as the mark is going down on the surface? I listen to these and respond.

BotJoy mural Gary Hirsch

BotJoy mural Gary Hirsch

How often do you work with improvisation?

Everyday, either as a performer, consultant, but mostly as a human, since every conversation is improvised, and I have a lot of those! 

Please share a bit about your process.  Do you have methods to getting started?  Do you have tricks to getting unstuck?  Do you have motivators to finishing up?

I listen to my environment, I notice what is going on around me, I let the first mark on the surface inform the next. here are some articles about my process:

https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/every-wall-offer-gary-hirsch

https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/making-art-without-script-gary-hirsch

Where do you find inspiration?  How do you use it?

I want to make art that is playful and helpful. I am inspired by these ideas alive in the world. 

 

BotJoy mural Gary Hirsch

BotJoy mural Gary Hirsch

What advice would you give to someone interested in trying to work improvisationally.  Can you share some good advice that you received that helped you become more comfortable this way?

Have a plan and then be comfortable letting it all go in the moment.

How would you finish the sentence, ‘What if, . . .?’

 What if everyone had a giant invisible robot that followed them around all day and gave them outrageous compliments!

What are reading, listening to, watching, or any other inspirational obsessions you would like to share?

I’m reading Through Two Doors at Once by Anil Ananthaswamy, Changing Your Mind by Michael Pollen and love the JJ Redick podcast about the NBA

Thank you Gary! I love that you pointed out that all of our conversations are basically improvised. This is one of the things that I loved about the book, Improv Wisdom, the inspiration for this blog. It highlights all the ways in which we use improv in our everyday lives, and as much as I love thinking about it from an creative perspective, it really is in everything we do. Your TED talk is so inspiring and your Bots, they bring me so much joy! Thank you for sharing with us all here, and thank you for sharing your art and joy with the world. I’ve loved following #botjoy and #botstories.

To learn more about Gary and his bots check out his website, On Your Feet, Instagram @ghirschbotjoy, and do yourself a favor and check out his very inspiring TED talk about creativity, collaboration, noticing, asking, sharing, letting go and making a connection.


If you would like to be featured on The Art of Improv please contact me!  I would love to hear how improvisation impacts your art making process.


2018 | The ART of IMPROV | Tricia Royal


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Tricia Royal

The ART of IMPROV

Our guest this week is artist, Tricia Royal. Tricia is a textile artist, print maker and surface designer living and working in the San Francisco Bay area. She is a graduate of the University of North Florida and Parsons the New School for Design, where she studied Art History and Fashion Design. Her work has been exhibited nationally and she was the Textiles Artist in residence at Lillstreet Art Center in Chicago 2016-2017. Her work explores the themes of past and present, chaos and control, trash to treasure, and the value of textiles in our throw it away society. She believes, as I do, that ‘Quilts = Art’ and explores the medium with highly saturated and often repurposed fabrics, to create stunning patterns and compositions, in unique and unexpected ways.

Piece #1 Title Tricia Royal

Piece #1 Title Tricia Royal

What does working improvisationally mean to you?  How would you define the ‘Art of Improv’?

I see improv as mostly a state of mind, a looseness and liberality and tolerance of experimentation and failure.  It’s about reacting in the moment, and not planning every inch of a piece to the extreme.  It’s about surprise, discovery, novelty, relationships, reactions, conversations.

For me, it is about deciding on some parameters (like, color, shape, a specific collection of fabrics, a technique or techniques or some combination of those aspects, and so one), and then experimenting within those parameters.  And being willing to go down divergent paths if something exciting happens during the experience and experiments.

Have you always worked improvisationally?

I’d say yes.  I’ve always had some fascination with the idea of improvisation, though I didn’t always associate the term with the concept. 

I learned to crochet in the early 2000s, probably around 2004, and somewhere along the way I discovered the idea of scrumble crochet, a loose technique where you just add stitches and new sections and shapes in a really loose, reactive, organic way.  In retrospect, that technique has a lot of parallels with improv quilting.  No wonder I really liked it/vibed with it.  When I discovered the Saori weaving technique a few years ago…same thing.

As I stated above, the concept of improv can be applied to any art form, as a philosophical framework, and that’s exactly how I apply it.

Improv is, at this point, more innate, more intuitive, ingrained, woven into my whole practice, and I’m not always conscious that I’m implementing it, it just happens.  It reveals myself in my print work, my weaving, my knitting, crocheting, painting, whatever.    I like lots of color and texture and play and things to look a little “crazy”...but the crazy is always tempered by some sort of structure.

My first few quilts were scrap quilts, like log cabins and a foundation pieced strip quilt.  While these quilts were precision pieced, the choice of what color to place next in any given block was a decision made in the moment and not pre-planned.  I still tend to work this way, it’s sort of my comfort zone. 

I tend to make simple blocks and experimentally goof around with color more often than not, making pairings that make sense in the moment.  I’m always looking for unusual, sometimes clashing pairings that make my heart beat faster.  It’s very visceral, even haptic in an internal way for me.

Do you work improvisationally, consciously, intentionally?  If so how do you begin?  If not, how do you find yourself getting there?

It depends on the project, what I have in mind as my end goal.  Sometimes a project requires more planning and is more precise in nature.  Some pieces end up being more precise, planned, and others are more wild and organic.  Usually my work has elements of both in one piece.  There’s always a balance, a foundation, choices made at the outset that underpin and set the stage for play.

Piece #2 Title Tricia Royal

Piece #2 Title Tricia Royal

Please share a bit about your process.  Do you have methods of getting started?  Do you have tricks for getting unstuck?  Do you have motivators for finishing up?

I try to just dive in as much as possible, and not get in my own way with too much.  If I’m feeling it, I keep going, if not, I stop and try again later that day, or another day.  I work on a lot of projects at once...up to 10-15 pieces.  If something is stumping me, I switch to another project or idea.  In a macro way, even my whole process is improvisational in nature, as move around from project to project?  It may take me awhile to finish pieces with this kind of workload, sometimes even years, but I do eventually circle back and finish what I started.  My brain is, to reference that meme that’s gone around of late, like a browser with 1000 tabs open! My way of working may not work for everyone, but it works for me.  Linearity is not my strongest suit.

Where do you find inspiration?  How do you use it?

Sounds trite but the old adage is true: Inspiration is everywhere, it’s about keeping your eyes open, being a sponge.  I’m very visual, so I’m always taking pictures of things that catch my eye.  Instagram and Pinterest are great sources of inspiration; I utilize the latter quite a bit in image collection and information gathering and organization. 

I also actively collect a lot of art and craft books, with an emphasis on vintage and out of print books from the 60s, 70s, 80s; I have been collecting these for upwards of 20 years.  The colors and ideas from that era are endlessly inspirational to me.  Bold colors, irreverent, envelope pushing design. 

Urban spaces and their layers and colors inspire me.  Contemporary art, feminist art, post modern art.  The concept of remix culture and hip hop and graffiti/street art.

What advice would you give to someone interested in trying to work improvisationally?  Can you share some good advice that you received that helped you become more comfortable this way?

Get out of your own way.  Loosen up and enjoy the ride.  Be open...to experience, to being challenged, to the unusual.  Let go of preconceived notions and societal bias.  Go with the flow.  This is easier said than done, but I promise that it can be done by being conscious and by keeping at it until your brain just sort of snaps into it without effort.

The best way to get comfortable with this way of working is exposure.  Keep making yourself work this way, even if it feels weird at first.  Eventually it will become engrained.

Piece #3 Title Tricia Royal

Piece #3 Title Tricia Royal

How would you finish the sentence, ‘What if,...?’

What if...you just do it?  Do it!  I am always so eager to see what happens “if”...what happens when I just dive in and do it.  I’m hungry for the results.  What will happen?  LET’S FIND OUT.

What are you reading, listening to, watching or any other inspirational obsessions you would like to share?

I listen to podcasts constantly while I work in my studios, and I like listening to podcasts that have a scientific, political and/or historical bent in particular.  Not as many art or craft podcasts, funnily enough.    A recent favorite is Behind the Bastards, which looks at the history and horrible behavior of dictators, and other big time bastards throughout distant and recent history.  It’s well researched and funny, but also really prescient, critical and informative.  Recently they’ve covered Stalin, Alex Jones, Erik Prince (of Blackwater), Paul Manafort, and Charles Koch.  I catch up on the cultural/political news of the day listening to The Daily or Pod Save America.  When I want to laugh/get my true crime fix, I turn to My Favorite Murder or Last Podcast on the Left.  I have other favorites, but those come to mind first.

PBS’ American Masters recently released a biographical documentary about painter Elizabeth Murray that was beautifully done.

When I want to feel inspired visually and philosophically, I like to watch back episodes of the PBS series Craft in America.  The artists and media featured in the series are diverse, but I resonate with so much of what they say, about their work, why they make it, the context of art in craft in our society, in the world at large, and why craft is important and vital.

As for specific books or magazines:  I used to be a magazine junkie, but these days I’ve whittled it down to a handful:  Quiltfolk, Frankie (an Australian fashion/lifestyle mag with an artful, handwrought aesthetic), and Uppercase.  Thoughtful, art-filled, cultural kinds of magazines, all of them.

Of the books that have come out the last several years, Roderick Kirakofe’s Unconventional and Unexpected is one I continuously come back to, again and again.  Irreverent quilts made in the last half of the 20th century; it gives those quilts a reverence and relevance and context in the history of our recent aesthetic and material culture.

When it comes to books technique and improvisational quilts, Sherri Lynn Wood’s Improv Handbook for Modern Quilters, Maria Shell’s new book, and Gwen Marston’s 1990s era books are must-haves, nothing else really comes close (sorry!).  The emphasis they placed on technique and inspiration is what we need more of in the realm of craft books.  I’d love to see less of an emphasis on mechanical, rote copying and replication in books and other media, if we are to move the craft forward.

Thank you Tricia! I love this idea that your process of working is in and of itself improv, that by working on so many projects at one time you are literally picking and choosing not just what works for a piece, but what piece to work? I have a tendancy to work on several projects at once as well, as I like to have something in all phases of the process. Something to piece, something to quilt, something to hand stitch. I often feel the need to finish before I start something new, but why? Perhaps I will intentionally get more things going and see how that goes. I love starting new things so I thank you for this and can’t wait to try it!

I also always recommend and often rewatch Craft in America, I so wish they would keep making them! Thank you for all of your recommendations, I am excited to track many of them down! Thank you too for sharing your work and how it is impacted by improv.

Check out more of Tricia’s work on her website and on Instagram @bitsandbobbins!


If you would like to be featured on The Art of Improv please contact me!  I would love to hear how improvisation impacts your art making process.


2018 | The ART of IMPROV | Nancy Purvis


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Nancy Purvis

The ART of IMPROV

I am happy to welcome this week’s guest, artist and quilter, Nancy Purvis. Nancy is a self taught artist living in North Carolina. She is a published author, her book Quilting from Every Angle was released in 2015. Her aesthetic is clean, minimal, and of course improv. She has recently begun experimenting with different mediums including paint and printmaking, and I must say the results are awesome.

Fuck the Quilt Police Nancy Purvis

Fuck the Quilt Police Nancy Purvis

What does working improvisationally mean to you? How would you define the ‘Art of Improv’?

Improv means two things for me. One, it can be a fly by the seat of one's pants style of working without knowing how the end result will turn out. The second one is like when you follow a recipe and during the cooking you realize you do not have a certain ingredient. You have to improvise. What can you replace to still make the dish taste good but yield similar results or even make it better than the original recipe? I think both ways provide opportunity for play and can yield great results.

I think there is an art to improv because design doesn't come naturally for some people. You have to make sure the quilt is balanced and cohesive and the overall aesthetic is pleasing to the eye. Anyone can create improv style quilts, and that's the beauty of art. Anyone can do it. It just may be more challenging for some because they would prefer to have set rules and steps in order to achieve a final design. Or they want to know ahead of time what the final product will look like. Improv can be tricky at times, and you can encounter mistakes. I have my fair share of failed attempts at improv, and I am positive there will be more in the future. I think that is the art of improv. 

Have you always worked improvisationally?

No. I also love geometrics, clean lines, minimal designs, and precision.

Do you work improvisationally, consciously, intentionally? If so, how do you begin? If not, how do you find yourself getting there?

This really depends on my mood. Sometimes, I just want to sit and sew bits of fabric together with absolutely no plan in mind. I want to sew, rip, and cut and repeat the process all over again. Sometimes, I sit down knowing I want that random improv look, but I am more conscientious about my decision making and what pieces will go where. I pay close attention to the details that are happening within the quilt when I start sewing pieces together and placing them on the design wall. Sometimes, it is trial and error and lots of iterations of one design. A lot of adding, subtracting, and seam ripping. And sometimes, I get lucky and there is none of that. 

1981 Nancy Purvis

1981 Nancy Purvis

How often do you work with improvisation?

It definitely feels more often than not these days that I work improvisationally, but I have quite a few designs that are more structured waiting to be made. After writing my book, Quilting from Every Angle, in 2015, I felt like that child who was raised in a very strict home that once they turned 18 became a wild child. After making so many patterns in a small period of time, I was seeking freedom from rules. I just wanted to play, and that is when I really dove into improvisational piecing. I have gotten my wild itch out now, and I am ready to start incorporating more of my other designs that require math and following steps into my portfolio.

Please share a bit about your process. Do you have methods to getting started? Do you have tricks to getting unstuck? Do you have motivators to finishing up?

My process with improv usually starts with a theme––half square triangles, lines, log cabins, for example. From there, I choose my fabrics that I wish to work with. This will sometimes change mid-process. Sometimes, my process begins when I am working on a project, and I see something in that thing I am working on that sparks within me a new idea.  My favorite trick to improv is picture taking. Throughout the design process, I will take photos of layouts to refer back to before sewing my final pieces together. One trick to getting unstuck is to walk away. Seeing things with a clear mind and fresh eyes can help you get out of a rut. It's also nice when you can turn to friends that give you their perspectives. They can see things you cannot. But I am very selective about who I turn to for advice when I need it. I have to admire their work and aesthetic as an artist, as well as know they will give honest feedback.

Where do you find inspiration? How do you use it?

I find inspiration all around me in my day to day living, and I'm usually taking a lot of pictures to refer back to some day. One design can also lead to a new design and so on. I feel like I can go down a rabbit hole with just one design or inspirational piece. 

Inspiration usually comes to me in two ways. One way is through literal translation. I can be inspired by the thing I see whether that is a building's details or structures, a flat lay on Instagram, home furnishings, or by another artist. I can replicate said inspiration or use it as starting point for a new idea. If you plan to recreate a design without much deviation to the original design, it's always good to contact the designer, artist, or company first so you do not infringe on copyright.

Another way I find inspiration is through practice drawing. Creating a daily or weekly ritual of practice drawing allows my brain to stay charged. More times than not, the marks I make on a page do not go anywhere, but I can always refer back to these for inspiration. Practice drawing really forces you to expand your thoughts because there are only so many squares or hsts you're willing to draw. It strengthens my design muscle, and through a drawing ritual, I can gather inspiration.

I use the inspiration I gather as a reference point when I feel stuck or unmotivated to do anything creatively. I like how one person's ideas can generate new ideas for someone else because we all see and interpret things differently, which can be very refreshing.

 

Improv Quilt Nancy Purvis

Improv Quilt Nancy Purvis

What advice would you give to someone interested in trying to work improvisationally. Can you share some good advice that you received that helped you become more comfortable this way?

Just do it.

Mistakes happen, so embrace them. 

Start small.

How would you finish the sentence, ‘What if, . . .?’

I stopped creating? Would anyone notice or care?

What are reading, listening to, watching, or any other inspirational obsessions you would like to share?

I just finished up two audiobooks. Daring Greatly and Braving the Wilderness both by Brené Brown. I need a lot of help right now in different areas of my life. I suffer from depression coupled with still trying to figure out this life of mine and who I am as a mother, wife, artist, friend, and just in general, a human being. I need all the self-help books I can get! :)  As far as podcasts go, I'm always listening to Awesome with Alison. She's hilarious and inspiring. 

Nancy, thank you so much for sharing your improv story with us all! I know I am not the only one who would notice if you stopped making and creating. I too am a self help junkie and proud of it, Daring Greatly is on my list (I just loved The Gifts of Imperfection). I also love your Fuck the Quilt Police, the title alone is worth several high fives. As a quilter myself I struggle with the perfectionism of the craft, and as an artist embracing improv I say YES! Fuck em’ all!!! Thank you for showing us what following your creative heart can look like! Be sure to check out more of Nancy’s work please visit her website and check out her process and new work on Instagram.


If you would like to be featured on The Art of Improv please contact me!  I would love to hear how improvisation impacts your art making process.


2018 | The ART of IMPROV | with Heidi Parkes


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Heidi Parkes

The ART of IMPROV

This week our guest is Heidi Parkes. Heidi is an award winning artist, quilter and mender who specializes in hand work. Heidi is a graduate of the Art Institute of Chicago and now resides in Milwaukee Wisconsin. Her work has been exhibited nationally at QuiltCon, with The Piecework Collective and in numerous textile museums around the country. She works with textiles of our everyday lives often incorporating them with fabrics that she has enhanced by embroidering, staining, and or dyeing.  She pieces these together, collaging and layering, evoking memories of her past, times and places, beautifully reminding us all of our own.

But I Tried to Remember Heidi Parkes

But I Tried to Remember Heidi Parkes

What does working improvisationally mean to you?  How would you define the ‘Art of Improv’?

To me, working improvisationally means that I'm showing up curious.  It's art that evolves, and that I make to answer a question, to find out why, or to marinate on in hopes of digging deeper into a subject. 

I define improv art as an art that is responsive, evolving, and unexpected.

Have you always worked improvisationally?

Looking back, most of the art made in my childhood was not particularly improvisational.  I had a plan, and I executed that plan to the best of my ability, without a sense of wonder.  I was looking to match the picture in my head with my skills and materials.  It was only later, in my independent study classes in high school that I began to flirt with improv, and allowing things to happen.  My study of ceramics, and the aesthetic of wabi-sabi were first sparked at that time.  Once in college, at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC), I began making art about deeper ideas, and became curious about how I might visually represent something that wasn't 'visual.'  The desire to make art about emotions and experience gave birth to an improvisational working style for me.

Do you work improvisationally, consciously, intentionally?  If so, how do you begin?  If not, how do you find yourself getting there?

I do work improvisationally, and that manifests in me showing up curious.  It is also about the denial of the mistake.  In performative improv like dance, theater, and music, they must continue, invent, and move forward without fretting over their moment to moment choices.  I carry a slow version of this into my studio.  There is a performative element when I'm quilting, and I allow things to happen in my work.

Night Flight no. 2 Heidi Parkes

Night Flight no. 2 Heidi Parkes

How often do you work with improvisation?

I work with improvisation every day.  I've been asked to contribute here for my improvisational quilting, but I use improv in many aspects of my life.  I'm a yoga instructor, and all of my yoga classes are taught improvisationally.  I often cook improvisationally.  I was a high school art teacher for 9 years, and now I teach workshops on quilting, and when I teach, I show up curious about who my students are, and what they will make.  I'm responsive to their questions, and the limitations of our materials, space, time, and experience: that's improvisational teaching.  When quilting, I often begin with a plan, outline, questions, and a feeling, then I release these and think of myself as being 'in collaboration,' with my circumstances as I'm making.  If something unexpected happens, I work with that instead of fighting it.  I also mend clothing, and every day that I wear my clothes, I'm 'improvisationally,' creating areas of wear as I collaboratively bump up against the things in my world.

Please share a bit about your process.  Do you have methods to getting started?  Do you have tricks to getting unstuck?  Do you have motivators to finishing up?

I'm often inspired by books.  Authors like Marcel Proust, Antoine to Saint-Exupery, and Milan Kundera have sparked big questions in me, which have contributed to the themes in my art.  Working in a series is a helpful way of extending those themes, so that I never feel 'stuck,' or unsure of what to make.  A powerful tool that I learned at SAIC was to pay attention to my scraps.  This means noticing what I'm doing when I think it doesn't matter- when it's subconscious, or appears inconsequential.  This could be the wear in my clothing, my paint pallet, my thread trimmings and the way I store them, the shape of my discarded fabric after cutting out the things I want, or the clothing and fabric in my goodwill donation bag.  Looking at these items and habits is a powerful window into my process, and often helps me if I'm stuck, or need a place to start.

I love finishing up, I'm a mono-tasker and usually only make one quilt at a time.  I believe this is because I'm so curious about how the work will turn out.  Working improvisationally is therefore a main motivator for me to finish things.

Where do you find inspiration?  How do you use it?

The things I read.  My life struggles.  The shapes, textures, and actual objects around me.  Anything I’m curious about. 

I use that inspiration as a reason to make my quilts. I make one quilt at a time because I’m curious to see how it will turn out before starting the next. 

Winter 36 Times Heidi Parkes

Winter 36 Times Heidi Parkes

What advice would you give to someone interested in trying to work improvisationally.  Can you share some good advice that you received that helped you become more comfortable working this way?

Many forms of improvisation happen live, like Jazz and improv theater. Many improvisations also happen in under an hour. I usually take 50 hours, unobserved, to make an improvisational quilt. This is very different from the ‘improv stereotype’ that I was initially familiar with. I would encourage others to explore the breadth of options available to them. I personally love the immediacy and commitment of cutting fabric, and piercing a needle through cloth. I love spending huge expanses of time in exploration. I also love visual art for its static nature: that time condenses, and that in a second a viewer can see the whole work of art at once— and as they linger over a work of visual art, more is revealed to them without the work of art having changed. 

How would you finish the sentence, ‘What if, . . .?’

What if I edited out the parts of quilt making that I find unpleasant, and made a quilt with only techniques that I enjoy?

What are you reading, listening to, watching, or any other inspirational obsessions you would like to share?

Currently, I'm reading about (and watching on youtube) metaphysical meanings for physical ailments, and healing as written by Teal Swan.  I'm reading 'Emotions and Essential Oils,' and exploring essential oils for health and my own emotions.  I'm slowly reading "Meditations on Intention and Being," by my yoga instructor Rolf Gates.  I've been listening to the podcast Mythic Medicinals by Amber Magnolia Hill, and have been excited about her conversations on herbs, ancestry, and dream work.

I've read and loved, and still think about, "Hold Still," by Sally Mann.  "The Seven Laws of Spiritual Success," by Deepak Chopra.  "The Little Prince," by Antoine de Saint-Exupery.  "Remembrance of Things Past," by Marcel Proust.  "The Unbearable Lightness of Being," by Milan Kundera.  "The Highly Sensitive Person," by Elaine Aron.  

I'm watching the news a lot lately.  I watch PBS Art 21.  I'm very excited to watch Walking Dead season 8 now that it's out on Netflix- I'll be quilting or mending while watching it.  I watch Matthew Hussey on youtube every weekend, and appreciate his life and dating advice.  I recently watched 'All I See is You,' and really enjoyed that film.  I frequently rewatch "Beginners," by Mike Mills, and love that film.

I was just in New York where I saw some live Jazz, saw the Quilts of Gee's Bend at the MET, saw the Piecework Collective exhibition, and quilted and talked quilts with my friend Zak Foster.  I'm looking forward to attending EXPO Chicago and SOFA Chicago at Navy Pier this fall.  I always love looking at art from Mark Bradford, William Kentridge, Ghada Amer, Mark Rothko, Georgia O'Keeffe, and Cornelia Parker.

Thank you Heidi for sharing your insights and improv process.  I really love realizing the similarities and the differences we, as improvisors, all possess.  I love your ‘What if. . .’ response as I have altered my methods of creating to enhance my enjoyment as well.  It often takes me more time but I would rather spend more time doing the things I love.  I also like and affirm to your idea of accepting our mistakes in our making.  I feel quilters often have to adhere to very strict ‘rules’ of construction and craftsmanship that sometimes other arts do not. I say let’s embrace our mistakes and show our humanity by flaunting them and deeming them a part of the beauty of what we do.  Do our best, to be our best, but accept the little slips along the way.  Learn more about Heidi and her work and her workshops on her website, and follow her everyday process on Instagram.


If you would like to be featured on The Art of Improv please contact me!  I would love to hear how improvisation impacts your art making process.


2018 | The ART of IMPROV | Chris Vorhees


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Chris vorhees

The ART of IMPROV

Our guest this week is sculptor Chris Vorhees.  He is a master craftsman who has exhibited worldwide. His work is authentic and unique.   He works independently and has also collaborated on many large scale installations, often with SIMPARCH.  Here is one of my favorites.  Let’s learn more about his work and his take on improvisation, shall we?

Recreational Vehicle Chris VorheesLife size carving of 1970 Monte Carlo SS out of styrofoam. This piece was installed in many events, sites and locations across the U.S.​

Recreational Vehicle Chris Vorhees

Life size carving of 1970 Monte Carlo SS out of styrofoam. This piece was installed in many events, sites and locations across the U.S.​

What does the ‘Art of Improv’ mean to you?

Working improvisationally to me has applied mostly to making music and visual art. When sitting down with musician friends to play music, we typically begin by improvising ‘songs’ / patterns to get our minds loosened up. It’s a very freeing and liberating process that sometimes borders on meditation. I would define the ‘Art of Improv’ as something concerned with using improvisation as a technique to begin, restart, resolve and/or can even be the complete focus of a creative process. When working, it is a place of experimentation that doesn’t have much judgement attached to it. Usually it unfolds; a path to the goal or some new thing, or a dead end. All are informative.

Have you always worked improvisationally?

No, I sometimes have the idea of the finished piece imagined ahead of the “figuring out’ process, and just proceed to making the thing. But sometimes I will come up with an idea that I don’t know how to make and that is where the improvising comes in.

Do you work improvisationally, consciously, intentionally?  If so, how do you begin?  If not, how do you find yourself getting there?

I work improvisationally most in the problem solving realm. My visual art and my ‘dayjob’ (fabrication/custom builder) both demand a similar skillset of manipulating materials to create a desired outcome. I would describe my process as working intentionally, consciously and requires improvisation as a means to experiment with techniques to accomplish what I am trying to do.   I rarely experiment improvisationally with the end goal to be a final piece.  Instead I rely on improvisational skills in the process.

Modified Dresser Set Chris Vorhees

Modified Dresser Set Chris Vorhees

How often do you work with improvisation?

Daily

Please share a bit about your process.  Do you have methods to getting started?  Do you have tricks to getting unstuck?  Do you have motivators to finishing up?

My process varies from piece to piece. Whenever I have an idea for a piece, I try to jot down whatever I can about it in my sketchbook. I’ll return to it later to see if its possible or even worth developing. Next I’ll figure out what materials to use, and will experiment (improvise) on technical aspects. The best path for me to getting started on something is to go do it. I need to get into the studio or have some space to let the idea out of my brain. Usually when I get stuck I set the project aside for a while until I figure something out.  Other times I will abandon the idea/project completely. Other times I will grind it out until the end.  Motivation to see the finished piece is usually the main motivator.

Where do you find inspiration?  How do you use it?

Inspiration comes and goes. Mostly I find you have to be open to being inspired. When you’re ready then you can start to see the ideas come. Books and music are good for inspiration. Traveling is a great way to find inspiration. Mostly looking at things with the right kind of eye - looking for something that interests you. If I am too anxious, or tired, or stressed, it is difficult to be inspired. 

2 x 12 Chris Vorhees

2 x 12 Chris Vorhees

What advice would you give to someone interested in trying to work improvisationally.  Can you share some good advice that you received that helped you become more comfortable this way?

I think working improvisationally could be a great place to start for people who are looking for some liberation in their process. My advice would be to forget about whatever preconceived notions you have about ‘I can’t” or ‘I don’t know how’ or self depreciating thoughts and allow yourself to have a few moments to work on your craft. A true quote from a professor of mine in college: “Stick a chicken in your pants” - I took this to mean lighten up, have fun, experiment. 

How would you finish the sentence, ‘What if, . . .?’

What if Trump was never born?

What are reading, listening to, watching, or any other inspirational obsessions you would like to share?

Reading wise - just bought a few art books - ‘Fischli and Weiss’ - swiss artists, SITE by James Wines. “Who owns the Future” by Jaron Lanier, Highly recommend “The Circle” by Dave Eggers. Music: always changing. Lately I have been listening to a strange mix of things- Lee Scratch Perry, Killing Joke, Icelandic Electronica, Tim Hecker, Lighting Bolt. other inspirational obsessions - photo journey walks - keeping an eye out. 

Thank you Chris! ‘Stick a chicken in your pants’ is sure to stick with me, AND, my dreams would have come true if Trump had not been born. I loved this so much, but I also really appreciate your perspective on improv from a musical as well as a visual standpoint. I think it easy to understand the idea of improv when you look at the performing arts, because the music, the performance takes place in the moment. Art does this too, but only the artist experiences it. So it is harder to explain and visualize. When I reached out to you I was not sure you would say you used it. I believe all artist’s do, but know that not all artist would believe/agree that they do. SO, thank you too for believing it and saying yes, your quick response to my invitation, confirmed for me that this whole ART OF IMPROV thing is a good idea! Please be sure to check out Chris’ website and his day to day postings on Instagram.


If you would like to be featured on The Art of Improv please contact me!  I would love to hear how improvisation impacts your art making process.


2018 | The ART of IMPROV | Sheri Schumacher


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Sheri Schumacher

The ART of IMPROV

Our guest this week is Sheri Schumacher, a designer and award winning textile artist, and Associate Design Professor Emerita at Auburn University. Her recent work explores the narratives of our cultural landscapes, inspired by regional craft heritage, hand stitching traditions, and the relationships of making, materiality, tools and handmade production. Her creative history was influenced by the multi-cultural experiences of her childhood. Born in Munich, Germany her creativity was influenced early on by well crafted Scandinavian furniture of her childhood home, by the Marimekko fabrics of her mother’s wardrobe, and by the architecture of the European cities she lived in. I’ve long admired her work and am happy to be able to get her ideas on improvisation and the way it has shaped her craft.

Kagbeni Sheri Schumacher

Kagbeni Sheri Schumacher

What does working improvisationally mean to you?  How would you define the ‘Art of Improv’?

What working improvisationally means to me is having creative freedom with limited resources, being spontaneous without a plan, making intentional choices in the moment, uninhibited experimentation and passionate immersion in the making process. I’m reminded of an experience years ago, at the Banff Centre in Canada, when a group of jazz musicians visited the visual arts studio and spontaneously began making music using objects in the space as their instruments.  Working improvisationally they made a beautiful composition together that was unplanned, without conventional instruments, each musician acting with intention in the moment, using techniques gained from years of experience and practice.  It was a remarkable experience that perhaps identifies some key elements necessary for defining the ‘Art of Improv’.

Have you always worked improvisationally?

I learned how to piece fabric about 6 years ago in Gee’s Bend, Alabama and have been working improvisationally with textiles since.  The Gee’s Bend quilts have qualities of improvisation, innovative use of repurposed clothing and fabric remnants, remarkable compositions and use of color, and expressive hand quilting.  The quilts have not only inspired mid 20th century art in America but also have been a source of inspiration around the world.  The Gee’s Bend quilters continue to be an inspiration in my life and work.  Combining what I have learned from them over the years with my professional experience in the discipline of design has allowed me to slowly but surely find my voice in a creative practice with textiles.

Do you work improvisationally, consciously, intentionally?  If so, how do you begin?  If not, how do you find yourself getting there?

Yes, I work improvisationally, consciously and intentionally.  I begin with an idea and not a rigid plan of how to implement the idea when working with textiles, allowing the process of making to inform decisions along the way and elements of surprise to make their way into the work.  Prioritizing thinking with the process of making heightens the level of experimentation and engagement with the work.  As a professional and educator in the discipline of design I have experience with the principles of design and elements of art such as balance, proportion, form, unity, hierarchy, color and space.  I use my design experience to reflect, question and critique the work at different stages.

Homage to Malivich Sheri Schumacher

Homage to Malivich Sheri Schumacher

How often do you work with improvisation?

I work with improvisation almost every day.

Please share a bit about your process.  Do you have methods to getting started?  Do you have tricks to getting unstuck?  Do you have motivators to finishing up?

Curiosity is often my starting point, the desire to experience and learn more about a place in the natural or built environment.  Examples include places such as Nepal, traversing extreme terrain while learning about migration patterns or Bologna, Italy, where the rhythm of light and shadows is an integral part of the experience of walking on the portico lined streets.  Closer to home includes observing how a 70 year old masonry wall covered with different colors and textures of moss changes with the seasons. Using repurposed linens, clothing and textiles on hand, I select materials ranging in texture, weight and color, that best convey the character and experience of the particular place.  Photographs are used as a reference in combination with memory of the experience.  This process helps me limit the material resources and encourages moving beyond my taste when selecting textiles. If the work seems forced or the direction is at a stand still, I consider changing the scale or orientation of the work, working on a wall surface is helpful.  Sometimes I cut the pieced fabric into smaller pieces and combine it in a new way which makes it less precious and allows more experimentation.  The first cut is the hardest but this process is always liberating, a breath of fresh air from being stifled. Deadlines are good motivators to finish work. I tend to move quickly to the next idea without fully completing the work in progress. Also work on multiple projects at one time which allows me to combine long term slow, hand sewing projects that take months to complete with short term small works and experiments with new techniques that provide immediate gratification.

Margins Sheri Schumacher

Margins Sheri Schumacher

What advice would you give to someone interested in trying to work improvisationally.  Can you share some good advice that you received that helped you become more comfortable this way?

One suggestion to someone interested in trying to work improvisationally is to slightly vary what you are familiar with, whether it be a pattern or process.  An example is to vary the size or color combination of the fabric or cut the fabric as needed versus cutting the fabric before beginning the piece.   Mary Ann Pettway, a remarkable quilter and manager of the Gee’s Bend Quilters Collective, taught me how to use improvisation when piecing fabric with a variation of the house top quilting technique.  She encouraged me to begin with a square piece of fabric, select another fabric strip to sew on two opposite sides, and then sew another fabric strip to the other two sides. Cut or tear strips of fabric 1-2 inches in width, if the strip is too short add another piece of fabric to make it longer, cut the fabric after (not before) you sew it to a side to prevent waste and use light and dark contrasting fabrics to promote interest and dimension.  When working with Mary Ann I recall using a Scandinavian designed print fabric and a solid color repurposed linen tablecloth to make the quilt top.  Half way through making the quilt top I noticed that the work was somewhat mundane with little interest even though all the strip widths varied.  Mary Ann suggested using some fabric scraps with small multicolored flowers that I would otherwise not have selected as part of my palette.  When included, the work immediately came alive, the varied scale of the fabric print, color and weight resonated with interest, perhaps akin to an improvisational jazz music performance.     

How would you finish the sentence, ‘What if, . . .?’

What if I only use repurposed linens, garments and fabric in my work and collaborate with sustainable companies like @RedLandCotton to repurpose their textile remnants. 

What are reading, listening to, watching, or any other inspirational obsessions you would like to share?

Presently I’m reading The Textile Reader edited by Jessica Hemmings, Indigo by Catherine E. McKinley, Shop Class as Soulcraft by Matthew B. Crawford and You Are Here: Personal Geographies and Other Maps of the Imagination by Katharine Harmon.  One of my favorite books is The Creative Habit by Twyla Tharp, I learn something new with each reading.  Uppercase Magazine and improvisedlife.com are excellent sources of inspiration. Many designers and artists have inspired my textile work, a few that immediately come to mind include Natalie Chanin @alabamachanin, Anni Albers and Hella Jongerius.

Thank you Sheri! I am envious of your opportunity to work so closely with the quilter’s of Gee’s Bend, sounds like a wonderful experience. I agree that their inspirational impact is vast and far reaching. I admire your commitment to using repurposed cloth and I totally fell in love with your cast iron Kagbeni Vessel series and was inspired seeing a bit of that process on Instagram. To learn more about Sheri and her beautifully crafted works, check out here website and check in on her process on Instagram.


If you would like to be featured on The Art of Improv please contact me!  I would love to hear how improvisation impacts your art making process.


2018 | The ART of IMPROV | Martina Nehrling


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Martina Nehrling

The ART of IMPROV

Our guest this week is visual artist Martina Nehrling. Martina received a BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and an MFA from University of Chicago.  She has taught at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Lake Forest College, and for the Associated Colleges of the Midwest’s Chicago Arts Program.  Her work is exhibited and collected throughout America and abroad.  She is represented by Kathryn Markel Fine Arts, New York, and Melanee Cooper, Chicago. Her painted works are vibrant and full of complex color patterns created with bold distinctive brushstrokes, that speak to the now of her making, color is her language and she speaks it beautifully.

Synapse Martina Nehrling

Synapse Martina Nehrling

What does working improvisationally mean to you?  How would you define the ‘Art of Improv’

Often I am following a thread from one piece into the next, riffing on formal variations or exploring conceptual shifts.  Having said that the works I create most improvisationally are pieces I begin with little or no preconceived notions as to composition, orientation, palette, etc.  From the first mark it’s “game on,” and now I have a problem to solve which is to strike some balance of tension and unity.

For the most part I think the term improvisation is in my work synonymous with spontaneity.  I know in acting the idea is to respond with “Yes, and…” and maybe this is an insignificant distinction but the semantic shift to the painting empirical in my head tends be more like, “What if this…?  And what if that…?” And so on.  It is giving oneself permission.

Have you always worked improvisationally? How often do you work with improvisation?

Improvisation has always been part of my art making, even as a kid I preferred a blank page over a coloring book.  Nowadays I begin a piece on a slightly more informed impulse to observe, explore, document, examine, or question a feeling, a gesture, a quality, or disparity, both conceptually and formally.  I rarely work off of a specific sketch.  Discovery spurs my engagement.  When I do create a sketch in advance of beginning a piece it looks like a minimalist map indicating where I think I should change the orientation of my mark or perhaps it diagrams the pattern of ‘positive and negative’ space, but usually the initial plan is abandoned or altered for plan B, C, D, etc.

A Tuesday Morning in January Martina Nehrling

A Tuesday Morning in January Martina Nehrling

Do you work improvisationally, consciously, intentionally?  If so, how do you begin?  If not, how do you find yourself getting there? Please share a bit about your process.  Do you have methods to getting started?  Do you have tricks to getting unstuck?  Do you have motivators to finishing up?

Spontaneity is an important element in my process overall but I do sometimes intentionally begin more improvisationally as a way to generate ideas or allow for a sort of backfiring when my creative energy has been too tightly focused elsewhere.  I might start a piece with an impulsive gesture, sometimes purposely making a mark that is out of sync with recent work, questioning that which I don’t allow myself to do – for whatever reason.  Thinking of these pieces as a rant, a poem, a prayer, or something akin to a musical jam session where spontaneity is premium encourages my sense of freedom.

Resolving a piece is like an itch I really need to scratch so procrastination is not usually a problem for me.  If anything I sometimes have to counsel myself to pause and let the possible conclusions percolate in my mind.  This isn’t to say I don’t ever get stuck.  If I find myself at a point where I feel like I cannot see a piece objectively I try to be patient and turn the piece around, put it out of my mind for a time – hours, days, even months.  I find that feeling stuck is often a matter of needing to accept the necessity of getting rid of something I like in order to make the piece work, or needing to take a risk that could very well ruin the piece but without which the piece will only be mediocre. 

Where do you find inspiration?  How do you use it?

To expand on my artist statement pasted below this paragraph, and in addition to a formal or conceptual element that might propel the next piece, I can say that language inspires me—the visual and narrative imagery communicated but also the sound and mouth feel of words.  Many Post-it notes litter a wall in my studio on which are written words or phrases that I think of as image sparks.  They are things I’ve come across while reading or listening to the radio, or things I’ve heard from a friend or neighbor.  In my sketchbooks and on my computer there are pages of these notes as well as lists of words put together like stanzas of a poem.  Judging by the titles of my paintings over many years it is also apparent that the specificity of light and various measures of time are a preoccupation of mine.

Artist Statement: Seduced by the formal complexity of color, I revel in its emotive slipperiness and enjoy mining its controversial decorativeness.  The inextricability of these aspects unique to color continually spurs my engagement.  Tuned to the vivid and continuous absurd disparities of daily life, I weave visual rhythms—resonant, discordant, muscular, mellifluous—in patterns akin to currents and eddies, note taking, list making, pixelation and mapping.  I use multiple distinct brushstrokes for their staccato quality and graphic directness, and employ highly saturated chroma for its insistence, its unapologetic hysteria, its mirth and its madness.  With this tensile language I explore what it means to be here, musing or ranting in lush celebration, high-pitched lament, or raucous rebellion.

Blue Sketch No. 4 Martina Nehrling

Blue Sketch No. 4 Martina Nehrling

What advice would you give to someone interested in trying to work improvisationally.  Can you share some good advice that you received that helped you become more comfortable this way?

The advice I would give to someone interested in trying to work improvisationally is: begin.  If you need a prompt consider responding to a piece of instrumental music—no lyrics, they are too literal.  Or contrive some type of system or game, perhaps something that involves time limits, shifts in pace, scale, color, material, etc., or a roll of the dice.  And then break your own rules!  At another stage breaking the rules may mean confronting your comfort zone in big and small ways even if you have to tell yourself it’s just an exercise to see what it’ll yield.  Perhaps this means you give your work permission to be rude and see what that looks like.

How would you finish the sentence, ‘What if, . . .?’

What if… it all is allowed?

 What are you reading, listening to, watching, or any other inspirational obsessions you would like to share?

I don’t usually listen to music in the studio unless I specifically want its influence, and these days I frequently need a break from the enraging news on NPR which I otherwise adore, so lately I download audio books from the library.  Recently I’ve been bingeing on Henry James novels.  Funny, to my delight the pace and elaborate indirectness of the social decorum of the period seems analogous, albeit exceedingly politely so, to the more atmospheric images I am currently trying to create in order to describe the edgelessness of apprehension in our present collective fog of anxiety.  I also just started reading The Secret Lives of Color, by Kassia St. Clair, and I’m looking forward to hearing David Scott Kastan discuss his book, On Color, at the upcoming Chicago Humanities Festival.

Martina, thank you so much for sharing your work and your improv wisdom with us! To learn more about Martina check out her website and follow her on instagram. Take a special look at her Watershed Project which is her generous way of using her art to support organizations that are under attack in our unlaced political circumstance.


If you would like to be featured on The Art of Improv please contact me!  I would love to hear how improvisation impacts your art making process.


2018 | The ART of IMPROV | Carole Lyles Shaw


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Carole Lyles Shaw

The ART of IMPROV

Our guest this week is Carole Lyles Shaw. Carole is a quilt designer, educator, and author. Like many quilters Carole started quilting to make and give quilts to her family. She was lucky to find herself at home with the African American Quilters of Baltimore who shared the secrets and technique to allow Carole to express herself creatively through quiltmaking. Just as she has been taught and encouraged to follow her artistic vision, Carole now lectures and teaches to share and encourage others to find their own unique creative voices.

Grafic Collage Carole Lyles Shaw

Grafic Collage Carole Lyles Shaw

What does working improvisationally mean to you?  How would you define the ‘Art of Improv’?

Improvisation is creating variation that can happen planned/intentionally or accidentally or a combination of both.  It’s the process of asking “What if I….” and then just doing it without worry about the result.  It’s learning as you go. It’s curiosity in action. Mostly it’s about freedom and play. 

Have you always worked improvisationally?

Yes—even over 25 years ago when I was making more traditional quilts, I would improvise some aspect of it.  Initially, it meant using my scraps from making the  blocks and turning them in to an improvisational border around a traditional grid center. 

Do you work improvisationally, consciously, intentionally?  If so, how do you begin?  If not, how do you find yourself getting there?

Improvisation is simple to me. I start with a general idea for a design—it could be a shape or a color scheme or both.  Then, as I play with the cutting and piecing, I make changes on the original idea.  It’s intentional at times.  Remember, I’m always asking the question, “What if I….” at every single stage.  It might be “What if I cut this block in thirds and added negative space to each third?”  Or “What if I cut this block in half and added negative space in a 2nd color to one of the half blocks?” 

I have an intention for the next step in terms of process but NOT in terms of the outcome. In other words, I know the process (cut or add a color or add another piece of fabric).  However, I do not try to predict or totally control the result. 

Fibonacci Carole Lyles Shaw

Fibonacci Carole Lyles Shaw

How often do you work with improvisation?

Nearly every quilt I make has some improvisation.  Even when I’m writing a pieced block pattern, I am thinking about improvisational possibilities in the border or even in a block. 

Please share a bit about your process.  Do you have methods to getting started?  Do you have tricks to getting unstuck?  Do you have motivators to finishing up?

I usually start with a shape and a color scheme.  I work in series—well, I have two or three series going on at any point in time!  So, lately, I’ve been making various types of curved blocks—it’s freehand cutting Drunkard’s Path blocks.  You can see these blocks in the Parisian Curves quilts and now in the Mid Century Modern Curves quilts.  I know where I’m going next with the curves…..stay tuned!

If I feel stuck, I take photos.  I leave the pieces up on the design wall.  Or, I may take them down, and put them away for a few days or even weeks.   I am always willing to completely abandon a project if it doesn’t appeal to me.  Yes, it’s ‘wasting’ fabric but usually the blocks go in the scrap bin.  Occasionally, they get recycled into a scrappy baby quilt for a friend.  Or, I give them away at guild meeting or to others who sew scrappy. 

Where do you find inspiration?  How do you use it?

Nearly all of my inspiration comes from 20th and 21st century modern art.  I’ve blogged about some of the many artists whose work I look at.   I’m not trying to recreate or imitate.  I’m trying to learn from them as they explore design ideas or work with color.    

Urban Street Graffiti inspires me—although I couldn’t really tell you how it shows up in my work.  Maybe it’s the uninhibited use of bold flowing and jagged lines.

One sewing technique I’ve learned from the quilter Chawne Kimber—that’s sewing very, very tiny strips that can finish at 1/8th inch or even smaller. 

And, of course, traditional blocks are the basis for everything, aren’t they?

Marsala Improv Carole Lyles Shaw

Marsala Improv Carole Lyles Shaw

What advice would you give to someone interested in trying to work improvisationally.  Can you share some good advice that you received that helped you become more comfortable this way?

Stop over thinking and just play. 

How would you finish the sentence, ‘What if, . . .?’

 I laughed when I got to this question!  Because it is my core approach to all of my quilt design work. 

I have a million versions of the “What If…” and not nearly enough time to explore all the design ideas.

In the meantime…what if I had a full time housekeeper and chef because then I could spend 24/7/365 in my studio……..Oh, I’d also need a personal assistant to write my social media stuff and send my draft patterns  to my pattern testers and graphic designer…..LOL!!!

What are reading, listening to, watching, or any other inspirational obsessions you would like to share?

I listen to storytelling, science and culture podcasts all the time.  I love: The Moth; The Memory Palace; The Kitchen Sisters; What’s Up with Stretch and Bobbito; Code Switch; The Stoop [the one about Baltimore MD];  What’s Ray Saying; 99% Invisible; Science Friday and so many more.

I also listen to audiobooks from my local library—I listen to modern detective stories that have a bit of noir to them or the ones that are funny and clever and fast-paced. 

When I’m hand sewing a binding, I watch almost any British or Australian mystery series or sci fi like Marvel movies or the new version of Ghostbusters [so much better than the original!].  I also really like ‘let’s drive fast cars and blow stuff up” movies like Fast & Furious or Bourne.  I’m an action movie/sci-fi fangirl.  I also like the mystery TV shows like Sherlock, Elementary and so forth.

Thank you Carole! I really appreciate your approach to exploring and play, and share your desire to spend 24/7 in the studio! Thank you for sharing your thoughts and ideas about your process and we will be sure to stay tuned as to what you have up your sleeve with the curved piecing pattern. Learn more about Carole and her work here and here, and follow her process on Instagram here.


If you would like to be featured on The Art of Improv please contact me!  I would love to hear how improvisation impacts your art making process.


2018 | The ART of IMPROV | Laura Yurs


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Laura Yurs

The ART of IMPROV

Our guest this week is Laura Yurs an Indianapolis based photographer who’s love of wandering, witnessing and searching is evident in the beautifully poetic moments she captures as she photographs the environment of our everydays. Her works are a vision of the simple connections to be made with each other as the city streets are navigated.

Crosswalk Laura Yurs

Crosswalk Laura Yurs

What does working improvisationally mean to you?  How would you define the ‘Art of Improv’? 

Working improvisationally to me, means being fluid and adapting as you create.  Being able to adapt to the impulses you feel as you create...to the changes in your environment....to adapt to the thoughts and feelings that arise.

 Have you always worked improvisationally?  

I suppose so...I've never really considered it.  With street photography, it's almost entirely improvisational because it's entirely made up of what I see or what/who walks into the frame.  With portrait photography, I still feel it's improvisational.  You can have the perfect setup for portrait work, but the individual or family that your working with brings their own spirit, personality, etc into the frame.  It could be something that happened on the way to the shoot and/or it could be something that they reveal as you're in that vulnerable space together.  ...the light is always shifting and sometimes what you have planned changes entirely because the light is better elsewhere.

Do you work improvisationally, consciously, intentionally?  If so, how do you begin?  If not, how do you find yourself getting there? 

I work improvisationally, consciously, and intentionally!  With photography, I often begin intentionally.  I might travel to a certain location.  I might go at a specific time of day because I have an idea.  I'm conscious and observant in the space...maybe looking for someone with a cool hat...maybe looking for a couple...someone on a bike...etc.  Once I get to the location, I might find that the light is better a block away.  OR I might run into something more interesting on my way there.  I was once driving around downtown Indy when I came across of clown car.....with clowns piling out of it!!  BEST EVER.  I mostly try to be in the moment and look for the light.  I know that sounds so cheesy, but it's truly how it works for me.  Look for good light....look for good architecture....wait.  OR go into a crowd and really notice people.  I fall in love with humanity a little each time I'm out with my camera.  Bus stops are FABULOUS places to watch people.  Everyone is coming and going...stories everywhere.  And for more formal events, it's really still mostly the same.  You can be shooting a wedding and lose yourself in the crowd.  Or with a family photo shoot.... 

Muse Laura Yurs

Muse Laura Yurs

How often do you work with improvisation?  

I'd say I primarily work with improvisation.  The only time it doesn't feel improvisational is when I'm making head shots.  It's not something I do very often and it's mostly pretty clear cut and defined.  

Please share a bit about your process.  Do you have methods to getting started?  Do you have tricks to getting unstuck?  Do you have motivators to finishing up?

...hmmm....in terms of tricks for getting unstuck....I usually try one of a few things: switch up cameras, switch up lenses, try a new roll of film (switch to color from bw or vice versa), look at other photographer's work that I admire, maybe take a course.  OR put the camera down and walk away....  this used to scare me.  Now I see it as my head and heart needing something else....took me awhile to embrace it.  Maybe that something else is reading or music or oil pastels or sewing or ????  Go immerse yourself in whatever is calling your attention.  Sometimes you just need to refill your soul elsewhere.  I always, always come back to the camera.  Always.  

Where do you find inspiration?  How do you use it? 

Truthfully, everywhere.  I watch the light...again, I know that sounds cheesy, but I do.  And that inspires me to shoot all kinds of things.  Also, I'm really inspired by people in relation to spaces, particularly architecture.  I'm always struck by how a building can make you FEEL and if you wait patiently....a person will walk into that space and you just feel your heart skip.  So, a lot of times I go to a city...downtown....and I walk and watch.  I look for light and good lines...and I wait.  

Through the Looking Glass Laura Yurs

Through the Looking Glass Laura Yurs

What advice would you give to someone interested in trying to work improvisationally.  Can you share some good advice that you received that helped you become more comfortable this way?  

Well, mostly I just think it's really important to be aware.  Be observant and pay attention to what MOVES YOU...pay attention to what attracts your eye and your heart.  ...and then act on it before you stop to think.  I took a Masterclass with Joel Meyerowitz recently and it was one of the best experiences I've had!  Stop thinking...just shoot what thrills you!  ...you could say....Stop thinking just CREATE what thrills you!  Your portfolio will change over time...I think it's important to give ourselves that freedom.  

How would you finish the sentence, ‘What if, . . .?’  

What if we could silence the fear and the critical voice inside!

What are reading, listening to, watching, or any other inspirational obsessions you would like to share?  

I'm reading The Story of a New Name by Elena Ferrante.  I'm reading From the Mixed Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler by E.K. Konigsburg & A Fall for Friendship by Megan Atwood with my kids.  I'm back in a John Coltrane mood on Pandora after a hearty round of Taylor Swift with my daughter.  I'm in the middle of a personal growth, identity, & style class with Stasia's Style School.  Podcasts...you just turned me onto The Jealous Curator, but I also enjoy Making Light.  And I just bought a ton of film to take to NYC in a few weeks....  I've been away from the camera for a bit and I feel it calling me.  

Thank you Laura for sharing your work and your thoughts on improv, I am uplifted by these moments that inspire you and thankful to know more about where they come from.  You can learn more about Laura and her work on her website and here as a featured artist on Viewfinders and check out her out on Instagram.


If you would like to be featured on The Art of Improv please contact me!  I would love to hear how improvisation impacts your art making process.


2018 | The ART of IMPROV | Twyla Exner


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Twyla Exner

The ART of IMPROV

Our Second guest, Twyla Exner is a Canadian artist and educator inspired by the wonders of nature and the idea of electronic technologies gone awry.  She holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in sculpture from the University of Regina and a Master of Fine Arts degree in studio arts from Concordia University (Montreal).  Her artworks have been exhibited across Canada from Annapolis Royal, NS to Campbell River, BC to Dawson City, YT.  She is passionate about sharing in the creative process with individuals of all ages and backgrounds and has designed and facilitated lectures, workshops, lesson plans and interactive art making experiences for schools, community centers, post-secondary institutions, galleries and festivals across Canada.   She creates colorful organic wire sculptures, drawings, and is currently exploring molding and casting.  Her work exudes her love of nature and her fascination and conflicted feelings toward technology and its rapidly increasing role is our lives.  Here are her thoughts on improvisation and how it as a process impacts her art.

Things 2 & 3: Friends Twyla Exner

Things 2 & 3: Friends Twyla Exner

What does working improvisationally mean to you? How would you define the ‘Art of Improv’?

For me, working improvisationally means to begin making without a set plan or preconceived idea in place: starting to work, responding to what appears and continuing that process until a work is complete.    

Have you always worked improvisationally?

I have always doodled which follows the improvisational process for me.  But I have not always worked improvisationally within in my art practice.  As an art student, I was concerned with creating as “perfect” of works that I could, which for me meant planning, drafts, and gridding off drawings.  As I’ve become less concerned with making “perfect” representational works, I am more inclined to work improvisationally.   

Do you work improvisationally, consciously, intentionally? If so, how do you begin? If not, how do you find yourself getting there?

When I started working improvisationally, it was not a conscious or intentional process. I was just exploring mediums and learning about making.  I had a great Professor in ceramics who encouraged us to respond to whatever might be happening with the clay.  I will never forget the day I dropped a pot I was so proud of on the floor.  I was upset but he just came along and picked it up, and said “but look how it captured gravity”!  The process of making ceramics has so many points where something can go wrong.  You could make the perfect piece and then bump it while it’s still wet.  You could accidentally take off a little too much clay while altering it.  It could crack or warp in the drying or firing process.  Someone else’s glaze could splatter all over yours.  Especially in a group studio full of students, there are so many opportunities for hiccups along the way.  At the time that I took ceramics, I was a planner but I loved clay.  Accepting mistakes and responding to changes was a difficult process but I believe it made me a more resilient artist and gave me a different approach to making.  As an artist who now also works as an art instructor, the improvisational mind set is important and valuable in all my activities.

Thing 1 Twyla Exner

Thing 1 Twyla Exner

How often do you work with improvisation?

It depends on the project that I’m working on and the materials I’m working with.  I have the most fun while working improvisationally but the planner still lives inside of me.  I work improvisationally on my wire works.  I tend to plan and more carefully draft my drawings but the improvisation does creep in here and there.  Currently, I’m working on molding and casting barnacles that are then placed onto used television satellite dishes.  Molding and casting does not allow for much improvisation, but the placement of the barnacles gives a little more freedom.   

Please share a bit about your process. Do you have methods to getting started? Do you have tricks to getting unstuck? Do you have motivators to finishing up?

I almost always have some wire works on the go as all I need are my fingers and a pair of needle nose pliers.  They fit into my life at any time, I can work on them while I’m watching TV, visiting with friends or travelling by car, similar to how knitters or crocheters are always working on something. For example, I will work on making a lot of tubes or knobs when I am tired or distracted or if I feel stuck because I know I can use them and it is a productive use of that time.  That provides a stock pile of parts that are ready to go and I can begin to work improvisationally to combine the parts and build onto them to create a sculpture.  I don’t have any special method of starting: I just get to work and see where things go.  I usually start with one of my stock piled knobs and build around it, adding more knobs or tubes or decorative elements as I go.  Often, I will create 4 or 5 separate sections of a sculpture in the same colour scheme and then puzzle those sections together into a sculpture.  Sometimes the sections puzzle together perfectly and sometimes I must build a section of a specific size or shape to close the piece off.  Deadlines are my most powerful motivator, but if I am close to finishing a piece I am usually excited to complete it and start on a new one.

Where do you find inspiration? How do you use it?

I’m inspired by the wonders of nature and the idea of electronic technologies gone awry.  I gather inspiration from books and digital images that capture everything from micro photography of cells to images captured by satellites.  Images of ocean life, fungi, plants and seed pods are some of my favourites.  I am fortunate to live on the edge of a forest in Northern BC, so walks in the forest and incredible creatures such as moths and toads also form my inspirations.  I have a collection of digital images of space occupying and Earth-bound satellites.  I also have amassed e-waste technologies such as circuit boards, CDs, wires, telephones and other discarded treasures.  These inspirations arrive in my work as material or imaged based inspiration.  In some of my creations, the influences are obvious while many of the wire works reference natural forms, patterns, colour combinations, attachment and grow patterns while appearing to be abstract.  I also love science fiction books and TV shows and those narratives play easily into my works.  

Thing 5: Albino Twyla Exner

Thing 5: Albino Twyla Exner

What advice would you give to someone interested in trying to work improvisationally. Can you share some good advice that you received that helped you become more comfortable this way?

I make art with kids and so I say “there are no mistakes in art, only opportunities for us to exercise our creativity” at least three times a week.  It’s a good reminder that when things do not go as planned or there’s a drip on the paper or skills are still in development that there are still endless and wonderful possible outcomes.  Those outcomes may lead you down a path you never may have come across through careful planning.  My advice to someone interested in trying to work improvisationally is to experiment with a new medium.  You will likely be free of the expectations you have of your “comfort” medium when you try something new.  Another great way is to collaborate with another person.  Play the “exquisite corpse” or pass a drawing or sculpture back and forth with an artist who works with a completely different approach than you.  It’s fun and may force you outside your comfort zone.

How would you finish the sentence, ‘What if, . . .?’

What if you could free your creative creature without imposing any rules or obligations.

What are you reading, listening to, watching, or any other inspirational obsessions you would like to share?

I enjoy reading science fiction, art theory, graphic novels and kids’ books.  I’ve just finished reading: Thinking Through Craft by Glenn Adamson which considers conceptual and historical inquiry on artworks classified as “craft”, One Hundred Demons by Lynda Barry that examines 100 of the artists’ demons through comics, and The Adventures ofBeekle by Dan Santant that encourages us to place our destiny in our own hands.  I love watching cooking shows (I’m a terrible cook) and recently enjoyed Zumbo’s Just Desserts.  With every episode part of me wishes I had become a cake sculptor.  Depending on my mood, while I’m working I will listen to CBC Radio 2, music (a mix from the 60s-today) or podcasts.  Currently my favourite podcasts are Art for Your Ear by the Jealous Curator that features interviews with artists, Art Made Easy with Patty Palmer which is an art education podcast (motivation and art material info for educators can also be useful for artists) and TedTalks Art.     

Thank you Twyla!  It has been a pleasure learning more about you, your work and your improv process.  I too believe there are no mistakes in art, only opportunities. . . I look forward to looking into some of you inspirational obsessions as well, I am always looking for new podcasts and Art Made Easy sounds very interesting!  I hope to get up close and personal with one of your 'things' someday soon.  You can learn more about Twyla on her website and catch a glimpse of her day to day on Instragram.


If you would like to be featured on The Art of Improv please contact me!  I would love to hear how improvisation impacts your art making process.


2018 | The ART of IMPROV | Peggy Breidenbach


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Peggy Breidenbach

The ART of IMPROV

Our guest this week is an Indianapolis based ceramic artist and educator Peggy Breidenbach. Her ceramic work beautifully reflects her personal universal observations about life, change, growth and the fragile beauty of now. She is influenced by forms found in nature and by nature as metaphor.

Oneness Peggy Breidenbach

Oneness Peggy Breidenbach

What does working improvisationally mean to you?  How would you define the 'Art of Improv'?

 A few years back – after reading Tina Fey’s book, Bossy Pants, I became very interested in Improv.  I took 2, eight-week workshops in it.  This was completely out of my comfort zone and truly terrifying at first.  But it was also super liberating.  Improv is about saying “yes” to the situation your improv partners are presenting you with and then adding onto it with your own “and”.  There’s no time for thinking.  It’s about trusting your own instincts and trusting your fellow improv partners as well.  It’s a great skill to develop. 

 Working improvisationally for me means trying to approach the clay with few preconceived notions.  If I can allow myself some time to simply play with the clay, I usually end up with something pleasing and new.  It means following my instincts. 

 I also find that when I have limited inputs (time, material, tool constraints) I will make do with what’s around me.  For example, we have a cabin we frequently go to for weekends.    Sometimes I’ll bring some clay and a few tools and make simple pinch pots while sitting outside.  Often though I forget the clay and find myself creating with what’s there.  Sticks, rocks and other stuff.  One day while cutting back wisteria at the cabin, I found myself with all these long, beautiful, green vines.   I started to weave very primitive baskets with them.  This lead me down a road of making ceramic pieces that mirrored these basket forms.

Have you always worked improvisationally?

I have not always worked improvisationally, but it is mostly my approach now.

Do you work improvisationally, consciously, intentionally?  If so, how do you begin?  If not, how do you find yourself getting there?

 Yes, I will often make what I call “blanks”… sometimes these are small, closed forms that I will paddle/pinch/cajole into a shape and/or add some other surface elements to.  I LOVE these closed forms, as they possess volume and dimension and are completely contained… like little pods or buds or eggs.  They hold so much potential… What will be born by them?

 Other “blanks” I work with are clay canvases that I make (usually squares) and push together and build upon.  These become wall pieces that can be mounted in various configurations.

Fragments Peggy Breidenbach

Fragments Peggy Breidenbach

How often do you work improvisationally?

I would say 90% of the time I’m working this way.  Sometimes you just can’t.  Recently, as you know, I took an idea I’d been toying with and, with your encouragement, ran with it.  The idea was to make ceramic fortune cookies and fill them with inspirational quotes - small gifts of wisdom, truth & joy - to give out at our art center’s annual faculty show.  This involved making hundreds of clay fortune cookies.  While repetitive and meditative, there wasn’t much improvisation involved.  I did however use improv to construct a small wire loop needed to hold the cookies while dipping them into a colored slip. I felt good about that.

Please share a bit about your process.  Do you have methods to getting started?  Do you have tricks to getting unstuck?  Do you have motivators to finishing up?

Just doing something is usually enough for me.  I recognize when I’m avoiding the studio… or other life stuff gets in the way of me getting there.  The urge to create builds up inside me and I know I have to go do something, anything, to get things going and have progress.  Pushing the material around is often enough for me to know what needs to happen next.  Listening to my instincts, what’s pleasing, and getting lost in the process.  It moves me along to the next steps… how shall I finish?  Should I glaze or burnish?  Where is this going?

Where do you find inspiration?  How do you use it?

All over… often from forms I see and love around me, like stones, or seeds, flowers, tree bark, fungus.  I’ve collected all sorts of these things all my life and I think what’s happened is that I just sort-of absorbed it all by touching and looking at things. 

I also find great inspiration from the work of other artists.  These include Georgia O’Keefe, Richard Serra, Hans Coper, Isamo Naguchi, Alice Ballard, Chris Gustin, Christine Nofchissey McHorse and Florian Baudrexel.  I try to pay attention to what really moves me about their work – their lines, their sensibilities and incorporate those into my own.

One day a few years back I found I was weary of making smooth, undulating, sensuous forms.  I had been looking at works by Florian Baudrexel.  I literally got out a 2x4 and starting whacking away at the closed form.  I loved the results.  For a period, I challenged myself to work on the edge… nothing soft.

I also find that whatever I’m going through in life, always finds its way into my pieces… aging, loss, control, fragility, etc… it all comes out in the clay.

Glow Peggy Breidenbach

Glow Peggy Breidenbach

What advice would you give to someone interested in trying to work improvisationally?  Can you share some good advice that you received that helped you become more comfortable this way?

My advice would be to pay attention to what you love and give yourself the time and space to just play with your material.  It will all come out in the process.

Also, try to surround yourself with smart and supportive artist friends, I consider you in this group, Jen.  I can be so hard on myself and these friends have helped me out of some slumps. 

How would you finish the sentence, ‘What if…. ?’

… all my ideas were magic!  

What are reading, listening to, watching, or any other inspirational obsessions you would like to share?

I find journaling and reading poetry helps me know myself and understand my place in the world.  Some poets I love…  Mary Oliver, Tony Hoagland, Billy Collins, Faith Shearin, Louise Glück and Marie Howe.

Thank you Peggy for sharing your work and your ideas on the improv process. I love that you took an actual improv acting class and pushed yourself out of your comfort zone in this way! Your appreciation of nature, play and the now is evident in the form and beauty of your work. I am so lucky to say you are one of my smart and supportive artist friends! I thank you for that.

You must check out Peggy’s most recent project Food for Thoughts and follow the way it spreads small gifts of wisdom, truth & joy! You also can learn more about Peggy, and see some recent work on her website and follow along as she inspires and shares more about her process on Instagram.


If you would like to be featured on The Art of Improv please contact me!  I would love to hear how improvisation impacts your art making process.


2018 | The ART of IMPROV | Patricia Ryan Madson


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Patricia ryan madson

on The Art of Improv

Having been inspired by the book Improv Wisdom:  Don't Prepare, Just Show Up, I reached out to the author Patricia Ryan Madson and I am honored that she agreed to share some thoughts on improv with me.  Patricia is an author and an award winning professor Emerita from Stanford University, she heads the undergraduate acting division and is responsible for the development of the improvisation program.  There she founded the Creativity Initiative, an interdisciplinary alliance of faculty  who share the belief that creativity can be taught.  She has given workshops all over the world.  Her corporate clients include the likes of Google, Gap, YMCA, and Adobe Systems just to name a few.  She says she is happiest when she is improvising in the classroom or painting watercolor au plein air.  Thank you Patricia for participating and being the very first guest of The Art of Improv.

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What does the ‘Art of Improv’ mean to you?

It’s interesting that you use this phrase.  I’ve never really thought of “improv” as an art.  I experience improv as a way, a process, (and if you want to get philosophical) a Tao. It is the operating system I use to accomplish things.  Improv contains the tools I use to approach life as well as the making of art. Although not all of my art is improvised.  Some of it is highly structured and planned.

If you were rewriting your book with visual artists in mind specifically, would you change or add anything?

I don’t think so.

If you were me, interviewing visual artists about their improv practice or process, what would you want to know?  What questions would you ask?

I might ask:  “How do you improvise? (if at all) 

Or “Are you afraid of improvising?”  (most people are)

 

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You mention a bit about it in your book about how you starting painting and using improv, can you describe your process(es) of using improvisation when you paint now?

These days my preferred art form is a Japanese postcard type “painting”.  It’s not really correct to call it “art” but it uses image and line to create a message that is put on a postcard and mailed to a friend.  I just published an article for the ToDo Institute in Vermont, for their Journal of Thirty Thousand Days, Summer 2018 issue.   In it I explain that when you do an Etegami you are mainly thinking of what you want to say to your recipient . . . more of a greeting card sense.  It does contain, however, some art-like visual image, the more simple or clumsy, the better.  Actually thinking of these as “art” is likely to be an impediment.  (Art is such a loaded word.  ;-) 

Perhaps another example of improvisation is the way my small monoprints are created.  They are in themselves a kind of improvisation, in that after applying the paint to the plexiglass and pressing it onto the card what happens is itself an improvisation.  I have no control really over how the paint splashes. I can mess with it afterward, but the process itself is a very loose technique.

See my YouTube video for this:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z3UAg7n-CcE&t=408s&list=PLDD8BBC6F8E9F7B8D&index=10

I think many of the maxims of improv apply to artists as well:

1. Let go of control over the outcome.

2.  Start anywhere

3. Pay attention

4. Accept what is going on and add to it

5. Make mistakes (or allow mistakes to happen) and then capitalize on them.

6. Be average.  (Give up trying to do “great art”   . . . just DO It.

7. Enjoy the ride

A possible big issue with ART . . . is that I’m guessing most artist have some idea first of what they want to create, and then set about executing that idea as best they can.

With improv it is fundamental that you DON’T have any idea of where you are going until the journey begins. Once underway, the “artist” starts to shape and color whatever is going on in a pleasing way.

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How would you finish the question ‘What if. . . ?’?

“What if you already have what you need?”

What are you reading, listening to, or watching?  What is currently inspiring you?

Nature

Netflix series:  “Anne with an E”  - one of the singularly most beautiful series I’ve seen.

Thank you Patricia for sharing some of your watercolor work and for your insight into The Art of Improv.  I think we all do have what we need and it is just a matter of believing it to be true, no? I also wonder if as artists we do have to have an idea of where we are going when we start? I think this is why improv is so appealing to me. I loved your book and recommend it to everyone!  To learn more about Patricia and her book, visit Improv Wisdom and see more of her watercolor work on Flickr.


If you would like to be featured on The Art of Improv please contact me!  I would love to hear how improvisation impacts your art making process.