I had the treat of returning to David’s Tent this summer, after a couple of years break. So good to see so many lovely friends and to get to paint live with a whole army of artists in the big top. After a summer of no studio time, I made the most of this creative space and made a start on 7 pieces which I rotated and layered through this long weekend. The perfect place to use my fantastic artristical easel. Video tour of the art area Here’s a little video tour of the art space and my art area at David’s Tent this year. I really enjoyed the chance to create alongside others and in such an amazing atmosphere! Being on the end of the row by the door means good light, getting rained on, needing lots of layers in the evening, the smell of the toilet chemicals, a great space to dance (which I did at least as much as painting!!) and lots of interested onlookers - thankfully I’m used to painting in front of people! It was also a real treat to have my daughter sitting and drawing with me some of the time this year.
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Currently my art is on display in a one woman show at The Locker Cafe called COLOUR STORIES - the exhibition runs from the 19th August until 26th September 2019 and I thought you’d like to take a look. Last Friday I hosted a Private View evening at the cafe which involved me painting live to beautiful live harp music from the super talented Lucy Bunce. It was a really lovely evening with very positive response from those who came. One lady exclaimed “heaven must be a bit like this”! Here is a movie that I’ve put together which includes a tour of the exhibition as well as some clips of the live art and harp. If you’re local to Cambridge, do make a visit to the Locker Cafe, it’s a lovely setting and the art looks even better in real life!
Last weekend I had the treat of joining a whole ‘army’ of artists all painting together at a music festival. There was over 70 artists - young and old, professionals and newbies, with a breadth of style and medium all gathered in a big blue tent in the middle of a field in West Sussex. Focussing on the creative process Being an abstract artist my artwork is very much inspired by music and dance, so soaking in this type of creatively encouraging atmosphere, being able move and express myself without inhibition gives way to a heightened focus on the creative process, over the need for a certain outcome or specific result. Where my journey as an artist began I actually consider this festival as my birthplace as an artist - 5 years ago I turned up never having painted on a canvas before with lots of fear, lots of hang ups and lots of enthusiasm. And I’ve never looked back!
Eight big beautiful abstract pieces celebrating creativity and brightening the walls of my local primary school. Last year I enjoyed a week’s art residency at Arbury Primary School, and I’ve recently been back for a visit to see the art we created actually up on their walls. Performance Art in School AssemblyThe week began with me painting on stage in the school assembly. I painted in response to their favourite song ‘A right to be loved’ whilst the 450 pupils sang along and watched the picture evolve, projected onto the large screen. As the morning progressed each class was invited onto the stage to take a closer look and add their own circle round the edge. This painting is now pride of place on the back wall of their Expressive Arts Hall. Here is the time-lapse video of the performance art
I photographed their beautiful creations, so the school could purchase some large canvas prints to display around their building. Here are the seven finished prints that I saw on my recent visit, now hanging in the corresponding year group areas, for the children to remember the fun we had. To see more ... To see more pictures and read more detail about my week as artist in residence at Arbury Primary School last year, here is the blog post about:
Book your artist's visitTo make enquiries about booking me for your school, community group or event, please email me at Kate@KateGreenART.com and we can discuss a package that is tailor-made to suit your setting.
At Easter I spent the week as the artist in residence at a conference in Butlins, Minehead and thought I'd share with you what I got up to. There were three main parts to my role. 1. to provide all age activities for the morning programme called the BIG START. 2. to lead an art workshop for the guests one afternoon and 3. to paint live in the evening session. I also had the opportunity of selling my art and merchandise in the bookshop. BIG START The creative team leading this morning programme had to dress in school uniform to fit the week's theme – hence the pigtails! I based my activities around the idea of a graffiti wall and each morning added a new word. I'd learnt from the previous year to keep things super simple as there would be a large number of kids, about 10 minutes to do things and it was too loud to give any explanation, alongside the songs, games and drama also happening. We used chalks, made handprints, created collage and sketched. ART WORKSHOP
LIVE ART Each evening, next to the stage, I got to paint HUGE pictures to live music. Working so big and with limited time lent itself nicely to expressive, messy work. I barely used a brush or palette, I just threw the paint on the canvas roll and manipulated it with a shower squeegee and sponges. There was a camera over my shoulder a lot of the time, with a live feed to the large screens either side of the venue, with images of me painting interspersed with footage of the 3000+ audience and the band. I was having so much fun that I was mostly able to block this out of my mind and just get on with what I was doing. Each evening I left my paintings to dry over night, then in the morning I hung them from the bleachers. The pictures are available for guests (and anyone else) to purchase as poster prints in my Etsy shop (click each image below for a link).
I've been an admirer of the all singing, all dancing Artristic easel for a while, ever since I started following Sarah Rowan Dahl (a very successful Australian performance painter) on social media and saw her using one of these clever easels. As my live art bookings become more frequent and take me further afield, I've been struggling more and more to physically carry my equipment to each event. Balancing my wooden easel on my shoulder whilst riding buses and the London underground might have got me noticed but also got me bruises! UK LAUNCH It was time to take the plunge and make the investment. When I sent an enquiry to www.artristic.com asking whether they shipped from Oz to the UK, I was delighted to hear they were right at the start of a launch into the UK and the easels were already on their way over here! GOLDEN EASEL As you may have seen in my social media posts I was particularly blessed to find that the box I received was amazingly one of only 3 GOLDEN easels the company had packaged randomly worldwide to celebrate their new series of easel and so my gorgeous easel was actually FREE! VIDEO DEMOI've been promising a video to lots of you, so yesterday I finally put one together – a little demo of how to use the easel (rotating, angling and turning) and also a glimpse at some of the variety of options it offers (different shapes and sizes of canvas and board, even fitting 2 at a time) whilst also being wonderfully portable. The video concludes with some footage of my new easel in action, being put through it's paces at a festival I painted at in the summer. artristic easel coupon CODE I mentioned to the guys at Artristic that I would be writing a blog about my new easel and they have kindly given me a special coupon code to share with you. So if you are interested in buying one of these babies yourself use the code: KATEGEASEL and you'll get 5% discount at their website www.artristic.com
There were over 7000 people at Newday this year, camping at Norfolk Showground. Part of my role was giving visual art support to the team, this included updating signage and site decoration. ART INSTALLATION In the afternoons I invited delegates to interact with a 3 stage art installation on the main concourse. Pieces made from countless thumb prints of all ages entitled 'True Identity' sparked easy conversations about where we find our sense of identity. 15 hours of LIVE ART The highlight of my week was getting to paint live outside the Big Top where the whole camp gathered each evening for the main meetings. Eight foot OSB plywood boards (one for each of the 6 nights) were secured around 2 trees. Below are the six abstract paintings I created and some images of the details. The theme for the week was TRUTH, so each board was based on a different bible passage about truth. To read the explanations of the pictures and/or to buy a poster print – click on each image (which will link you to my Etsy shop). |
Being held at the largest event space in Euston I decided to upgrade to using 1 metre square canvases for this occasion. I'd been invited to paint in four of the sessions over the 3 days I was there and would be given 30-45 minutes to work on each picture, so my next decision was to arrive with my first layer of colour already complete for each piece. Did I have a plan? |
Although I am an abstract painter and my style is very loose and free I always think through in advance of an event like this, what the theme of each painting will be and how I will symbolise this with colours, shapes and marks. I decide on a title and print out a brief synopsis to attach to my easel for people to read. I often have some idea of composition (where the points of interest might sit within the whole) but am not clear on what the picture will look like when finished. I like to work expressively and freely, layering various techniques that include a good dose of spontaneity and 'happy accidents'. I like to respond to the emotion and heart of the moment as well, ready to add elements that I hadn't anticipated if it seems right at the time and if it expresses the life that is growing from within the painting.
Images by Relational Mission/Chris Johnson Photography
Here is a little movie I've put together of me painting at the conference
My Paintings
I aimed to bring the pictures to some sort of conclusion by the end of each session but once in the venue I decided that finishing touches (which usually involve splatting paint) would need to wait until I got them home. My 6 year old daughter enjoyed observing my paint splatting in the sunshine, the following day. |
When working in this spontaneous manner and on this scale I have found that once they are complete I discover many 'paintings within the painting', sections of the picture that have a personality of their own – the treasure within the details. Here are some that I have captured.
What's it like painting live?
I've had many conversations recently with people intrigued by what it feels like painting live. There are practical concerns – a desire to be true to my style and technique whilst honouring the venue and not leaving any evidence of what I've been doing. Getting my equipment to the right place at the right time – on this occasion I had a go at driving into London for the first time, as there was no way I would have managed on the train, and then finding willing helpers to carry big canvases and resources from the car park. Once all this is overcome and I'm set up ready, I look over my sketch book notes, pray and choose not to worry about what people will think of me or the work I produce! I make a decision to have fun and to give myself to the process. As painting at this type of event becomes more familiar to me I am finding I am increasingly relaxed (especially once I'm started) and can just get on with enjoying and expressing myself – it feels like I'm doing what I was made to do! I get such positive feedback and interest, and it seems to always inspire other creatives to be brave and take risks themselves. |
What happens to the paintings next?
Another question I get asked a lot is what happens to the paintings once I've finished. Well first I take them home, add any finishing touches and take photographs to share on social media, my website and for making prints. I paint the edges of the canvas, sign the picture and varnish it. Unless I have it agreed in the contract for the event that the payment for my booking includes keeping the painting (for example at a Wedding, or a school residency) then the pictures are available for anyone to purchase (I offer a 10 month payment plan which makes it more affordable for many). The paintings not sold immediately will be included in my next exhibition and offered for sale in a gallery. As many people are not in a position to buy one of my original pieces I also offer poster prints of pictures created at such events, for a limited period.
In the case of these particular paintings, I have sold 2 (one will be sent to London, the other to Holland – both of these people were at the conference), I have someone coming to view the third picture in a week's time (who has only seen it as a photograph so far) and the fourth will be displayed in my Open Studio exhibition in July.
The prints are available on my Etsy shop - click on these images for a link
In the case of these particular paintings, I have sold 2 (one will be sent to London, the other to Holland – both of these people were at the conference), I have someone coming to view the third picture in a week's time (who has only seen it as a photograph so far) and the fourth will be displayed in my Open Studio exhibition in July.
The prints are available on my Etsy shop - click on these images for a link
Interview
If you would like me to create live art at your event, do get in touch. My paintings are unique and personalized to the theme of your occasion. I am available for weddings, concerts, conferences, charity fundraisers, cocktail parties, festivals and indeed any event where you would like me to add a splash of colour!
I also offer a tailor made artist in residence package for schools, churches and community spaces - from single workshops to a 5 day event.
I also offer a tailor made artist in residence package for schools, churches and community spaces - from single workshops to a 5 day event.
The next part of my Studio Journey programme with Nancy Hillis was to play around with scale. Working large if you were used to small and small if you were used to large. I have experience of working from a range of 5” pieces of paper to 6ft canvas roll on the floor but there were a number of things I thought would be fun to try. This exercise was perfect timing as I prepared for my week as an artist in residence at Spring Harvest conference, Skegness Butlins over Easter.
Working Tiny
First I had a play with some mini canvases (4”) with a view to offering some more affordable art on my stand at the conference. I loved the freedom of working on 6 or even 12 pieces all at the same time! Applying my style and techniques in a pocket size format was fun. I like seeing them all together and am wondering whether I might sometimes offer them as a 'polyptych' (a multi panelled art piece)
Big is BEAUTIFUL
As part of my art residency over Easter I got to paint in front of 3500 each night for a week in a big top tent as part of the conference, this gave me a chance to work REALLY big – which I love to do. I have only ever painted 6ft pieces on the floor until now so my first new challenge was working vertically (nothing like trying something new with an audience!) I also used this as a chance to try out some new ideas for materials and tools.
I so enjoyed working on this scale, the mess, the physicality and the expression. There was a live feed of me working, on and off through each evening and I got such positive feedback from people who'd never seen anything like this before!
I find when working this size there is a wonderful raw, rough energy in each piece. Once dried I photograph the work so that I can offer prints for sale and I always take a number of shots of the painting close up as well. When a piece of art is this scale I find that there are many paintings to be found within the painting. Here are the paintings I created, each with a couple of detail images.
What next?
These pieces are rolled up for storage, waiting for the opportunity to be shown in an exhibition or offered for sale in a gallery. At this point they will be stretched onto canvas bars and varnished.
If I want to continue working this big (and I do) then I need to develop a client base that will purchase pictures this size (with a price tag to match). Between exhibitions those that don't sell I plan to rent out to corporate spaces, as I don't have anywhere to store them!
Here is an example of one stretched and hanging in a client's living room.
If I want to continue working this big (and I do) then I need to develop a client base that will purchase pictures this size (with a price tag to match). Between exhibitions those that don't sell I plan to rent out to corporate spaces, as I don't have anywhere to store them!
Here is an example of one stretched and hanging in a client's living room.
I've realised that I love working both really big and really small, just like I enjoy working messy and expressive, AND working neat and detailed. I'm inspired by the extravagant dimensions and intimate detail of creation, what is seen through a telescope as well as what is seen through a microscope, so I guess this makes sense that these contrasts exist within my own art.
This time last week I was at Butlins Skegness working as the artist in residence at Spring Harvest #SH2018. It was an amazing, stretching, encouraging, very busy week and I loved it! I got to work in the Creative Arts Team alongside the talent of Kees Kraayenoord from Holland, 4front theatre, NGM dancers and the fantastic Luke Aylen (who heads up creativity across all 4 SH breaks), in front of an audience of 3500! I thought you'd like to hear what I got up to.
Evening Meetings
Next thing on my programme was my favourite part of the whole week, creating 6 foot paintings live in front of 3500 people in the big top each night! I love working big and working messy, I love combining worship and the prophetic with paint, I didn't feel nervous I experienced a tangible grace as I co-created with the Holy Spirit for my Daddy God and did what he made me to do! I was projected live onto the big screen on and off through the meeting for folks to see, and hopefully my visual/creative response to the biblical themes of the day helped people engage further in their worship of God. Once dry, the pictures were hung up around the venue.
I'm an abstract painter and 'sing with colours', I studied and prayed about the themes for each day in advance of the week so that I could help people engage with God and with the teaching, through my art. Each night I started with a title, a colour palette, a plan of which shapes and details I would bring in related to the theme and then worked whilst praising and praying, partnering with the Holy Spirit to discover where these ideas would take me and what picture would result. Clicking on each painting will take you to my Etsy shop where you'll find an explanation of the picture as well as being able to purchase a print if you wish.
I painted on canvas roll taped to large boards with emulsion and acrylic paint using a squeegee, water spray, paint pens, sponges, various stencils and of course my hands. The original paintings will be stretched onto canvas bars and varnished for exhibitions and sale in galleries, and I believe that wherever they are hung their colours and their message will continue to sing over those around them. If you or your church would like to invest in purchasing my large original worship paintings they are £1500 each (for which I offer a payment in instalments plan). This is an example of one prepared for hanging that now lives in someone's lounge. |
BIG STARTS
Another significant part of my week were the Big Start sessions each morning at 9am – all age 30min meetings in the big top using drama, art, dance and music to engage with the focus of the day. We had a fantasy theme running through this so I dressed as a butterfly art pixie alongside a unicorn, some trolls and other fantasy dressed folk from the fab Creative Arts Team. I planned, prepared and led the art activities each day for ~100 children, each activity was stuck to a huge letter spelling out KING. My highlight was rolling paint onto the hands of tiny little children.
Live art on the street
On the Tuesday afternoon I decided to do one of my BIG LIVE ART pieces on the floor of Skyline, the shopping arena in Butlins, to music. Although I painted live each night in the big top, this gave people of all ages the chance to come up really close to see me working and chat with me, and hopefully I inspired some 'wanna be' artists to give it a try. Here is a timelapse movie of the creation of this picture. Music is by the fabulous Kees Kraayenoord - one of my favourite songs from the week: 'Saviour's Song' (used with permission).
Art Workshop
On the Wednesday afternoon I offered an abstract art workshop called 'Sing with colour' and 146 people turned up! It was like feeding the 5000 trying to find everyone a place to sit and to make the resources stretch to double the expected number. Everyone did a great job of embracing the 'thinking in colours' and 'drawing with eyes closed' exercises. I intentionally whetted appetites, leaving people wanting more, sending them away with a desire to continue experimenting. I was thrilled to see the results of their playing with paint.
Interactive Prophetic Art
On the Thursday evening as I was praying before I painted, I felt God nudge me to offer my picture as an interactive creative element on this occasion. After dialogue with the event hosts we agreed that during the ministry time at the end of the evening once I'd completed my piece we would invite people to respond to the challenge of surrendering their all to God by coming up and putting their thumb print on my picture, like a physical statement of individual commitment. As people queued to do this I prayed for a pouring down of heaven over them as they gave their all afresh. It was a really poignant and humbling moment. On returning home my 6 year old helped me count the thumb prints using kidney beans - we discovered that over 230 people had responded that night.
At the end of a wonderful week of flinging, throwing, splatting, dribbling and flicking paint to my heart's content, I left a few marks behind! I had so so many people come up asking me about my work, thanking me for the impact my art had had on their week, interested and inspired by a way of working that they had not seen before. I've not done anything on this scale before but genuinely found grace and courage to REALLY enjoy myself!
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