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Jeanette Clawson Art

~ Working to increase peace and beauty in the world.

Jeanette Clawson Art

Category Archives: Zentangle Inspired Art

Pandemic Art 3: Kitchen Mural October & November 2020

09 Tuesday Feb 2021

Posted by Jeanette Clawson in Art, Zentangle Inspired Art

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Art, art process, ceramic tiles, folk art, kitchen mural, Mondrian, mural, talavera tiles, Zentangle, Zentangle Inspired Art

The tile was installed and grouted at the end of January but the beginning of the mural started more than 15 years ago.

finished

This is the third kitchen I have remodeled/ had remodeled. I didn’t do any of the actual remodeling work this time, I just focused on the mural. I had a lot of ideas for a mural when we remodeled the kitchen of the house we lived in more than 15 years ago. Too many ideas. I could not decide what I wanted and we didn’t finish the backsplash until we were going to sell the house. We used ordinary commercial tiles to just get it done. I regretted that and decided I wouldn’t let it happen again.

The crux of the design problem is that I love two different styles of art with similar color patterns, folk art and modern art. My specific inspiration in modern art is Mondrian. His work has a combination of color and geometry that speaks to me and makes me so, so happy. I literally danced with joy when I finally saw some of his work in person at the Museum of Modern Art. Folk art uses similar colors and basic shapes in very different ways. My biggest influence was Talavera tiles from Mexico. I also looked at Polish, Dutch, and Italian folk art for inspiration. The last piece of my design influence was Zentangle patterns.

After a lot of research and design ideas, I came up with a rough idea of what I wanted to do. Then I needed to try out the porcelain paints to see what I can do with them. I have a tremor in my hands and that makes some media more difficult than others. It usually depends on how to hold the tools and weather or not I can brace my hand some way and I had a lot of challenges with the outliners. I spent some time mixing colors and playing with different ways of applying the paint.

getting started
learning the paint
play with design

I worked with a lot of technical challenges in drawing the designs on the tiles and transferring patterns from the paper sketches to the tiles. Many of the designs I wanted to create were not within my skill set, but I eventually found a combination of paint and paint pens that worked to create the look I wanted. I was able to incorporate the vibrant outliners in strait lines by bracing my hand so I could support the applicator while making the mark. I also could make somewhat controlled curves for my vines of flowers. The imperfections in the vines and leaves gave it an organic feel that I liked in these shapes. My circles and ovals never came out very well. I discovered that, fortunately, I could peal off the thick outline media.

outer circle first design

First design with organically connected circles in outer ring. I couldn’t make them small enough for the coordinating ring on the middle tile.

transfering design

Inspiration to include Mondrian inspired geometry.

circles removed

Outlined circles removed

My design was alternating rings of floral motifs with geometric shape rings. Two of the geometric shape circles were Zentangle patterns made with blue Pebeo pens and 2 were of Mondrian inspired patterns that incorporated some of the circles from my original design and leaves to tie into the floral circles. I love sun flowers and was really happy with the way the center sun flower turned out. I wasn’t sure what I wanted to do in the corners so I “auditioned” different designs.

auditioning corners
center design

I liked the combination of the sunflower with the Mondrian inspired pattern. Once I had all the tiles painted I followed the directions for curing them in the oven and I was ready to have them installed. I had to bake them before the kitchen was torn out in November and wait for installation until everything else was done in January. It took some time to design and paint them, but they will last for as long as I live here and will perhaps be part of my legacy. This is a project I would recommend to anyone who wants their own mark on their home.

me at work
painted

Mandala 60/100

01 Saturday Dec 2018

Posted by Jeanette Clawson in Art, Zentangle Inspired Art

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Art, collage, CZT, CZT NJ, MCAA, mixed-media, Morris County Art Association, New Jersey, Zentangle, Zentangle Inspired Art, ZIA

I was asked to donate a piece of art to the Morris County Art Association for a fundraiser so I made this little cutie. It measure 4″ x 4″ and comes with a tiny easel for display. Here are the pieces:

mandala 60 collaged base
Mandala 60 tissue

Here is the completed piece:

mandala 60

I hope you find some beauty in your day.

Brooklyn Art Library Mandala

18 Wednesday Jul 2018

Posted by Jeanette Clawson in Art on Exhibit, Zentangle Inspired Art

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Tags

100 Mandalas, Art, Brookly Art Library, Mandala, mixed-media, Zentangle, Zentangle Inspired Art, Zentangle Method, ZIA

I created this mandala with the prompt “Homer” for the Canvas Project at the Brooklyn Art Library. This year I plan to participate in the Sketchbook Project as well.

Homer in pieces

I went with Homer Simpson, rather than the classical interpretation. The mandala is inspired by Homer’s yellow head with black curls of hair. This photo shows the collaged canvas and the tissue paper Zentangled mandala.

Homer mandala 58

This is mandala 58 out of 100.

Flower of the Day: Dahlia Dalliance

27 Tuesday Feb 2018

Posted by Jeanette Clawson in Art on Exhibit, Zentangle Inspired Art

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

acrylic paint, Art, collage, dahlia, Flower of the Day, flower painting, flowers, mixed-media, rhodendron, Zentangle, Zentangle Inspired Art, ZIA

dahlia dalliance painting finished

Here is the completed piece. I created the dahlia stencil from a photograph provided by Cee from her photography blog. I took some pictures along the way so you can see the work in progress. It will be part of an exhibit that will run all of March at the Frelinghuysen Arboretum in Morris Township, NJ.

dahlia dalliance painting starting
dahlia dalliance painting collage
dahlia dalliance painting tangled

I will also be exhibiting my Mandala with Rhododendrons in this show.mandala 41

I hope you have a beautiful day.

Geographic Gratitude

02 Friday Feb 2018

Posted by Jeanette Clawson in Gratitude Journal, Zentangle Inspired Art

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

100 Mandalas, Art, Art Journal, copada, Gratitude, Gratitude Journal, grid, grid art, Mandala, Mondrian, Tangle patterns, Tangles, Zentangle, Zentangle Inspired Art, Zentangle Method, ZIA

geography gratitude

A few big ideas are included in this gratitude journal page spread. First, my husband picked up a 2018 calendar for our kitchen wall because our opportunities to get one at an art museum kept being thwarted. I had shopped on-line at the MoMA and Metropolitan Museum of Art’s shopping websites and the calendars were on sale, but the shipping seemed ridiculous. I had almost purchased a Mondrian calendar. When he called to say he was stopping at a store and asked if I wanted anything else, I told him a wall calendar. Guess what calendar he bought! If you have followed my blog for a while you may know that I am fascinated with grids and with Mondrian and he knows that, too. But isn’t it nice to feel known?

I have filled the grid with the ABCs of gratitude for beautiful places I have been. I may do one for places I still want to go. When I have insomnia I sometimes do an ABCs of gratitude in my mind. It can be for the day just past or anything I can come up with at 3 am. I know there are places I have left off of this grid, but I have really been to a lot of beautiful places! How blessed am I?

The right hand page is mandala 55 of 100. It is some variations on the Zentangle® pattern copada by Margaret Bremmer. She is such a talented artist and she has made some wonderful contributions to the world of Zentangle. I think I’m going to do some variations on this variation. I really enjoyed it. I’m so grateful for Zentangle® Inspired Art and all the good things that the world of Zentangle® has brought into my life.

I hope you have a beautiful day.

Sharing Gratitude

27 Monday Nov 2017

Posted by Jeanette Clawson in Art, Diva Challenge, Gratitude Journal, Zentangle Inspired Art

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Gratitude, handmade cards, holiday cards, Thanksgiving, Zentangle, Zentangle Inspired Art, Zentangle Method, Zentangle Tile

thanksgiving cards

I have been very fortunate this year to have friends to drive me to my many doctors’ appointments and invite me to join in fun activities as I am able. So I decided to send out Thanksgiving Cards as my holiday cards this year. I have been making lots of Zentangle Tiles and people ask me what I do with them and now you can see. They make a lovely accent on a simply painted watercolor card.

Thank you for stopping by. I hope you have a beautiful day.

Alhamra Art Center Exhibit

12 Sunday Nov 2017

Posted by Jeanette Clawson in Art, Art on Exhibit, Zentangle Inspired Art

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

100 Mandalas, Art Exhibit, Fine Art, Fine Art Prints, flowers, green mandala, justice, justice mandala, Mandala, purple mandala, rhodendron, solstice, solstice mandala, Torus Mandala, Zentangle, Zentangle Inspired Art, ZIA

Draw the Circle Wide Completed

Draw the Circle Wide – Layers    $1,000   Mixed media collage on gessoboard        5-2017  30″ x 30″

The name of this collage is the chorus of a song we sing at the Unitarian Fellowship I attend. We sang it this summer while I was working on this mandala and it really fit with my vision for this piece. I regularly journal about things I’m grateful for, sometimes in a journal and sometimes in my art. So, on top of the collaged layers I did a variety of journaling and then included the eponymous lyrics.

draw the circle wide mandala in progress
draw the circle wide mandala iris layer
Draw the circle wide collage mandala layer 1

For the next layer I used acrylic glazes to paint an iris on top of everything. I really wanted parts of all the pieces to be hinted at in the final product so I covered it with a large neutral glaze and used some hydrangea leaves as masks to keep some of the layers visible. Then I used my big compass to draw a large torus mandala. I really love the shapes and possibilities of this expression of sacred geometry. I have to say if geometry had been taught using this when I was in high school I might have become an engineer or architect.

“Sacred Geometry charts the unfolding of number in space. It differs from mundane geometry purely in the sense that the moves and concepts involved are regarded as having symbolic value, and thus, like good music, facilitate the evolution of the soul.”                    Sacred Geometry (2001) by Miranda Lundy

DSC_1617
DSC_1621

I then created individual pieces to fit into each space in the mandala. I was inspired by a community mandala that I facilitated at the Unitarian Fellowship where individuals and families contributed pieces to a 72-piece torus mandala. I had never created such a large piece before and I really enjoyed the scale.

Throughout the process I struggled with how much of the background to let show through and I kept wanting to add more layers, so I did. Fortunately, some of the background layers are still visible and some just suggested when the piece is viewed in person.

big mandala 47 detail
big big mandala 47 detail 2

Draw the Circle Wide Layers

Draw the Circle Wide-Transparencies     $1,000   Mixed media collage on gessoboard  9-2017  30″ x 30″

I planned to make a pair of mandalas for my living room. I used colors, textures, and designs that I enjoy. While I believe that either one works on it’s own, I really enjoy them together. In this mandala I continued to explore the layers, but I wanted more to show through. I put fewer layers so that each one was more distinct.

in progress collaged papers
in progress drawing torus
DSC_1644

Creating these large mandalas was very satisfying and provided me with many hours engaged in the process and thinking about them. I have migraines most days and endometriosis. I spend a lot of time laying in a dark, usually quiet, room with my ice pack, heating pads and my imagination. I spend a lot of that time thinking about the pieces I’m working on and imaging different ways to take the collage. My skills as a collage artist are beginning to allow me to make what I imagine, but sometimes things turn out differently than I imagined. The large neutral glaze in the first mandala didn’t come out as I imagined, but it led me down very interesting paths. In this piece I continued to work with layers of glazes to find a balance of color and texture that I greatly enjoy. When I had both of these pieces on top of my bookcases I spent a lot of time enjoying them.

mandala 41

Mandala with Rhododendrons   $225       Mixed media collage on canvas  5-2017  11″ x 14″

This collage is part of a process I have been going through for the past few years. I take a canvas that I’m not satisfied with and I collage and play with art supplies to make a fresh substrate. I take a lot of photographs of flowers and I’m always looking for ways to integrate flowers and my photos into my collages. I have been painting flowers on paper and adding them to collages as a finishing touch. The mandala was drawn using the Zentangle® Method of drawing patterns. I find this method of drawing to be a wonderful meditation. It also allows me to work in small increments when I’m not feeling well and after a few days or weeks I have created something that I find very satisfying. I drew and shaded this mandala on tissue paper and then collaged it to the canvas. This is a tricky process and the paper tore a little and that happy accident led to the placement of the rhododendrons. This was a very satisfying recreation of an old piece.

eclipse mandala

Eclipse Mandala                $450      Mixed media collage on canvas    8-2017  16″ x 20″ 

The total eclipse of the sun was one of the highlights of my summer. This was another canvas refreshment and it was inspired by some of the images of what was called the diamond ring effect or Bailey’s beads. Those images changed how I looked at this canvas that I had painted at a Paint and Sip fundraiser for a little boy with cancer. It has always been an emotionally charged painting for me, even if it was not my style of painting. After the eclipse I saw it with new eyes and it became the sky behind the eclipse. Of course, I had to add patterns in white on my black moon and I greatly enjoyed playing with this variation on the Zentangle® Method. I was very happy when someone at the exhibit noticed that the gold paper of the diamond ring was made of a page from the dictionary talking about scientific facts about the Earth. My papers are generally selected with thought and care and it really made my day to have someone notice that detail.

JeanetteClawson_StillAssemblingThePieces_Mixed media on gessoboard_16x16

Still Assembling the Pieces           $375       Mixed media collage on gessoboard  9-2017  16″ x 16″

This piece was also inspired by news stories of the past summer. For years I have had a few old Life magazines that I use in my collages. This particular article has always spoken to me. I am an advocate for social justice and I have 2 adopted sons who are African-American. Usually I use my art as a soothing meditation. This one forced its way out of me. The mandala pieces kept stalking my thoughts as I absorbed news stories about Black Lives Matter and kneeling at sporting events. My sons and I have known all their lives that we have not made as much progress on Theodore Parker and Dr. King’s “arc of the moral universe” as you would think we had when you saw Barack Obama as our intelligent and capable President. Now white people know it too. The racists have been given permission to be overt in their behavior. The Ride for Rights needs to continue and I was compelled to create this piece to acknowledge that “We the People” doesn’t include everyone, yet. Again, the selection of papers was very mindful in this piece. The mandala pieces are made from a reproduction of Constitution, the dictionary page including the word “justice,” and meaningful selections from the article. It was a creative decision to leave the word “justice” out of the quote and include it in the mandala pieces.

No image

Self-Portrait, 106 Nails, 3/13/2015             $175       Copper nails and paper on Maple art board  10-2017 6″x 6″

This piece was inspired by an Art Assignment from the PBS series. The episode is called Measuring Histories by artist Sonya Clark. She has used her own hair to chronicle her life in her art. She inspired the assignment “Think about something from your personal history, your own cultural history, something that you want to share. Something that is hard to imagine, hard to conceive of; something that you’re going to help in the second part (of the assignment). Help your audience understand. You are going to pick a material that is going to help quantify, measure, bring to fruition, actualize what that history is.” At that point I had had constant migraines for about 4 years. That prolonged, persistent pain is something that is difficult for people to understand. Copper nails immediately came to mind to represent the headache. The paper that I used to create my self-portrait is one of my headache journal pages. I selected the day, 3/13/2015, because it was an ordinary day. I had many days where my pain was a lot worse and a few at that point that were better, but this was my history. My days generally contained 106 units of pain. Each nail represents one square from the chart for that day. I’m doing better now. I have more good days but a good day is not one free from nails; it is a day in which I make art in spite of the nails. If I’m going to be in pain anyway, I might as well have something beautiful at the end of the day. Everyone has their own history and this is mine.

box number 2 cover

box end view variations on 10 of 100
chartres labyrinth and grid
JeanetteClawson_ChartesLabyrinthIllluminatedBox_Mixed media on cardboard_10x16x13

 

Illuminated boxes            $100 each           Mixed media collage on cardboard banker’s boxes  8-2016 – 10-2017   10″ x 13″ x 16″

In 2016 my husband and I moved from Wisconsin to New Jersey to follow a job opportunity he had. We found a cozy little house with a total of 3 small closets. I had a lot of boxes full of stuff and nowhere to put it away. I shopped for storage options and all of them were some kind of box. I had plenty of boxes, I just needed to make them pleasant to look at. They make me think of illuminated letters from medieval books. Instead of decorating an individual letter, I was decorating an ordinary box. Now I have an attractive place to store my sheets and band-aids. The top picture is the cover of the box that holds my bathroom supplies and I had this image printed on a shower curtain that I enjoy daily. If you want any of the images on a shower curtain (or tote bag, or phone case)  let me know and I will make sure I have the image on my FineArtAmerica page. Have a beautiful day.

 

Inktober 2017

03 Friday Nov 2017

Posted by Jeanette Clawson in Art, Zentangle Inspired Art

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

100 Mandalas, illustration, Inktober, Mandala, Torus Mandala, Zentangle, Zentangle Inktober, Zentangle Inspired Art

completed ink

Mandala 53 of 100. This mandala contains 31 different Zentangle® patterns, one for each day of October. I was interrupted by health issues, but have now completed the ink portion of the mandala. Inktober was created by Jake Parker

“I created Inktober in 2009 as a challenge to improve my inking skills and develop positive drawing habits. It has since grown into a worldwide endeavor with thousands of artists taking on the challenge every year.”

Laura Harms, from IamtheDiva, provides the list of tangle patterns that are suggested for the Zentangle® version of Inktober. She also provides videos of how to draw each pattern. Mine isn’t done yet. I plan to do some shading and probably add color, too. I greatly enjoyed this process and may do this again.

 

Draw the Circle Wide Mandala

20 Wednesday Sep 2017

Posted by Jeanette Clawson in Art, Art on Exhibit, Zentangle Inspired Art

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

100 Mandalas, Art, collage, green, Mandala, purple, Torus Mandala, Zentangle, ZIA

Draw the Circle Wide Layers

This may look familiar. It is part of a diptych I made for my living room. I’m greatly enjoying having them both up until the show at Alhamra Art Center in Bernardsville, NJ in October and November. Here they are together. They are mandalas 47 and 49 of 100!

Draw the Circle Wide Completed
Draw the Circle Wide Layers

Here are some process pictures of the second one.

DSC_1644
in progress collaged papers
in progress drawing torus

I hope you have a beautiful day!

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