Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Gabrielle Javier-Cerulli
My Creative Life is a weekly interview, with the same five questions, with folks who are living authentically, creatively, and making a living out of their passions.

This week I’m honored to have Holly Friesen, a creative woman with paints and with poetry. Most of her paintings reflect the natural environment but it's her figure paintings that really got me hooked on her work. Be sure to check out her lovely, calming creations at www.hollyfriesen.com.
Twitter @Holly59

1. What do you do? (career wise - whatever you want to share)
I am a working painter. Inspired by the living, breathing landscape around me, particularly the ancient rocks of the Laurentian mountains in Quebec.

2. How did you prepare for this career? (formal and informal education, books, workshops?)
Formally I studied Fine Arts at John Abbott College in Montreal where I was able to explore every medium from photography to printmaking, sculpture to performance art. From there I went on to York University in Toronto to study Fine Arts majoring in painting. I found the university environment to be stifling and confining and after three years, cashed in my scholarship, bought a motorcycle and headed for California. This bike trip was the beginning of my career as an artist. I carried a portable watercolor kit with me wherever I traveled. I learned to observe closely, to see beneath the surface and reveal what I saw in paint. I traveled and looked at great Art everywhere I could as well as studying with many different artists in different mediums. I sat with the rocks, rivers and forests and listened.

3. Besides living according to the values of creativity and independence, what other values are you honoring by following this path?
I am following what brings me spontaneous joy! This is both a blessing and a curse but I have no choice. I am following the path of all those who have gone before me and all those who will continue on ahead of me. The path of most resistance, the one where everyone keeps telling you not to do what you do so you have to be sure enough of your vision to follow it anyway. I have learned to trust my intuition and let it guide me.

4. What struggles or challenges do you face, if any?
Doubt. Always the gnawing doubt that I am not good enough to call myself a painter. Also,the images that evolve and want to express themselves come from deep within and reveal themselves through dreams and visions. Revealing these inner images can leave one feeling vulnerable and exposed. Viewers negative or positive criticism can be disruptive to the process so there is always a need for shielding & balancing the inner with the outer visions.

5. Can you give some advice to folks who would like to do what you do?
Do whatever it is that brings you joy, the rest will follow naturally; leading you to work
many, many hours with an unparalleled discipline and and devotion to what you do. To learn what you need to know, do what you love, live your passion!
Gabrielle Javier-Cerulli

This piece is created on unstretched raw canvas - giving it an "earthy" feeling.
As always I was going for flow but this time with fewer distinct colors so to emit a sense of ease.

The frame is metal
with UV glass which will protect the painting from fading or discoloration.

Title: The Calm
Size: 14x11 inches
Medium: acrylic
Date: 2009
Price: $165

Ready to hang.

More photos available.

Can be mailed with or without frame.

Gabrielle Javier-Cerulli
I've been working on this piece for well over a year. It seems like a long time doesn't it?
That's how some paintings come to be - a very long process. While others just reveal themselves within a week or two. I bet this happens with writers too.

Title: She's here
Size: 18x24 inches
Medium: acrylic
Date: 2009
Price: $315

Sides are painted and it's ready to hang. More photos available upon request.


Gabrielle Javier-Cerulli
My Creative Life is a weekly interview, with the same five questions, with folks who are living authentically, creatively, and making a living out of their passions.

This week I am honored to have Erich Camping, a Rochester, NY photographer. To describe his work as lovely, artistic, intriguing are all understatements! See what I'm talking about at his website www.campingphoto.com and also check out his photoblog http://www.erichcampingphotoblog.com. The photo of Erich in his studio was taken by Steve Pfost.


1. What do you do? (career wise - whatever you want to share)
I am a photographer specializing in Natural . Fine Art . Wedding Photojournalism

2. How did you prepare for this career? (formal and informal education, books, workshops?)
BA from SUNY Empire and R.I.T. l also attend yearly conferences and workshops

3. Besides living according to the values of creativity and independence, what other values are you honoring by following this path?
More than anything humor and trust define me. Keeping life real is also very important to living life to its fullest.

4. What struggles or challenges do you face, if any?
My challenges are balancing family life and my career. Being self employed is much more difficult than I ever dreamed.

5. Can you give some advice to folks who would like to do what you do?
Work hard and smart. Do what you love, and develop a niche that is unique to you.
Gabrielle Javier-Cerulli
Thank you Gus23 for hosting a wonderful month long series called April Art Attack!
Getting to know the many different artists and their process is a treat.

An extra big thank you for posting my artist profile!

Check out Gus23's blog!
Gabrielle Javier-Cerulli
My Creative Life is a weekly interview, with the same five questions, with folks who are living authentically, creatively, and making a living out of their passions.

This week I am honored to have Lynn Wigell a.k.a The Yarn Wench. With a name like that, you have to be creative! She produces the most gorgeous roving and yarn for knitting, crocheting,
needlefelting, wet felting, etc. Visit her website, www.TheYarnWench.com and her flickr page to oh and ah over her goodies.

1. What do you do? (career wise - whatever you want to share)
I have a website called The Yarn Wench where I sell my hand-dyed, handspun art yarns and hand-dyed fiber for other spinners and fiber artists. I'm starting my 4th year in business.

2. How did you prepare for this career? (formal and informal education, books, workshops?)
I got my B.A. in Fine Arts from Indiana University. My area of concentration was Woven and Constructed Textile Design and I studied with acclaimed weaver Budd Stalnaker. For a number of years until I had my first child I was a full-time weaver and spinner in the San Francisco area. After my first baby came along I became a full-time mom and squeezed fiber art and my other artistic passions (complex cloth design, mixed media, collagraphy, jewelry making, quilting, paper making, to name a few) into my rare free moments. It wasn't until my husband was downsized from a job he'd held for 15 years that I suddenly found myself needing to make a living. I turned to the only thing I knew after 17 years as a stay-at-home mom - my art. The Yarn Wench was launched and I'm having the time of my life!

3. Besides living according to the values of creativity and independence, what other values are you honoring by following this path? I am able to live a simple life free from the stress and anxiety of the corporate world. I'm afraid I would wither away if I weren't able to express myself creatively. In my business I don't even have to leave home - the postman comes to me to pick up my outgoing orders and to bring me my supplies! A typical week involves several days manning the dye pots, some time at the spinning wheel, photographing and inventorying the items I have completed each week, launching an update, invoicing and shipping out my orders. I enjoy how this little business is a self-contained entity that I control - and it feeds my soul!

4. What struggles or challenges do you face, if any? At first, it was hard to realize and adjust to the number of hours of work it took to get established. I went from a full-time mom to a full-time mom and a full-time business woman practically overnight. Suddenly I was working 7 days a week as a Yarn Wench and that went on for two years until my husband found full-time employment again! I was the breadwinner for the first time in our marriage. It was a challenge but it also was the best thing to have happened to me personally as I really got back to my artistic roots and reunited with what I do best.

5. Can you give some advice to folks who would like to do what you do? Make sure you're passionate about what you are doing! Starting a little business like mine is so much more work than you might imagine. With that said, it is also one of the most fulfilling things you'll ever undertake! Make a schedule and stick to it - it's too easy to find other things to distract you when you're working from home. Treat your business like a full-time job. And have fun!
Gabrielle Javier-Cerulli
2/19/09 This humorous video discusses art, it's role in society, and what it means to different people...err...animals. Enjoy!