Grunewald Guild near Leavenworth WA is a favorite place of mine, one I enjoy teaching at every year.
Grunewald Guild Core Purpose To be a sanctuary for experiencing the Diving through art.
This year three classes were structured around a theme "Welcoming the Year," exploring the church calendar. Gilly Sakakini from England concentrated on Holy Week, Laurie Clarke from western Washington taught myriad aspects, historical and cultural, of The Tree of Life for the long green season, and I taught/facilitated "Advent and the Creative Void." Author and ordained Methodist minister Jan Richardson was our keynote speaker and the glue holding all the classes together.
Jan Richardson glues us together
My students and I explored how many ways the creative process was like the season of Advent, a season of entering the darkness to create something new. Kind of fun celebrating a time of darkness and cold in 95 degree weather and long sunlit evenings.
We explored silk painting as an incarnational activity, birthing intangible ideas from our imagination into the physical realm in order to communicate them to ourselves and to others.
Student Work
Pam
We were thirteen students and one teacher/facilitator. Sometimes it was so quiet you could hear a pin drop, and once in a while someone would break into song. Joyful duets and full choruses accompanied our painting.
Joanna
Harriet
Pam
Jamie's pieces
But mostly people worked. Class time was 9:30 to noon, but many were there before breakfast, all afternoon and when I came to check on things late at night.They produced a lot of work.
Student work
Finished scarves ready for the steamer
Lynn
Ready to roll
When the scarves were all painted we rolled them up in paper, hung them inside the above contraption, lit a fire under them and steamed them for 4 hours. This sets the dye to bond it permanently to the silk.
Unrolling the silk after it has been steamed is like opening Christmas presents after Advent. Also like opening a kiln-load of freshly fired pots...a very joyful occasion.
.Well here they don't look quite as excited as little kids, but really it was fun.
On the last day we celebrated! Our pieces were finished, real, and done, after waiting for inspiration, struggling with the materials, a bit of muse-whisperings and a lot of hard work. Merry Christmas!
I am now writing for the independent study I created around "Liturgical Arts Week." It is beautiful to renew the spirit of being there through your reflections and photos. Ever a blessing to me.
This is my first visit to your blog and I love it!! Some very good silk work!! And so much fun!! Thanks for sharing, gabriele (One of your Followers now. :)
Interested in painting? I work with oils, acrylics,watercolor, silk dye on silk, and stained glass. My work tends towards realism, a titch towards magic realism, and definitely towards the colorful and emotional.
Interested in public art? I work a lot with churches, as I believe that art can change the world. Churches at their best are venues for radical cultural change. My artistic goal in making art for churches is to help tie the rhythms, beauty and wisdom of sacred creation back into our humanly constructed sacred spaces.
7 comments:
This looks very inspiring!
Thanks Lynn. It was lots of fun.
I am now writing for the independent study I created around "Liturgical Arts Week." It is beautiful to renew the spirit of being there through your reflections and photos. Ever a blessing to me.
Very nice pictures of some good art work. It would have been a good learning experience for those who attended. giclee printing
This is my first visit to your blog and I love it!!
Some very good silk work!! And so much fun!!
Thanks for sharing,
gabriele (One of your Followers now. :)
Welcome, Gabriele!
kristen kristen kristen
you are the best...
thanks for sharing your
process and art.
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