Introduction - Juliana Coles
Transcription
Introduction - Juliana Coles
Introduction Field Notes: A Book of Reminders 829.0 Coles, Juliana Section 1 Booklet 1 With Juliana Coles Notice of Copyright: All rights reserved. Once these educational materials, herein described as “workshop” have been downloaded/printed for your private use in adherence to terms of contract for use, please do not distribute these materials in any way through reproduction or by email. This curriculum is available for nonnon-commercial use only. No part of this “workshop” may be used or reproduced in any manner inconsistent with use in a course of study without written permission from Juliana Coles. No part of this “workshop” may be used to teach or facilitate others. Any artwork you create using my methods is your own. While you may incorporate my methods into your teaching, practice, or therapies, please do not use this “workshop” or these materials as your curriculum. And at least if you do use them, against any authors /artists “moral rights” please at least credit me. Do not use my soul child as your own or claim it as your own. My terms and terminology are created and copyrighted by Juliana Coles and relate soley to the process of Extreme Journaling® Journaling® and should not be used in conjunction with any other methodology. All “workshop” content, unless otherwise noted, is copyrighted by Me and Pete Productions. Unauthorized use of any content constitutes unlawful, unkind, and unethical use of my soul child, as well as serious copyright infringement. This will be extremely damaging to your Karma and will constitute grounds for expulsion from the Institute, ridicule in the tribal council forum, and serious retribution from the universe. -CONTENTSField Notes Booklet 1 Contains the Introduction to “Field Notes” Introduction Class Description pg. 4-6 What is an Extreme Visual Journal? pg.7 What is an Artist Sketchbook? pg.8 Choosing your book pg.11 Resource and Reference Library pg.14 Introduction: Summary of Tasks pg.15 Every reasonable attempt has been made to identify owners of copyright. Errors or omissions will be corrected in subsequent editions. -1-1- Thank You -2- Field Notes A Summer Art Tour Introduction Mixed MEdia Join an expedition team of budding as well as seasoned Visual Journalists on a Summer Art Tour and learn to combine notes from the field with a sketchbook of sorts while creating a book of reminders that begins with your own imagery. This unique book will become your constant traveling companion: an enlightened witness to your remarkable journey. Create on site: while traveling, camping, picnicking, with friends at a cafe, alone in a restaurant, in your own backyard, at a store, a gallery, anywhere you can go, your extreme journal as testament to the journey, will travel with you. Its simple drawings, collages, mixed media, writings and observations will be the foundation for your Extreme Visual Journaling process when you return to the studio to deepen the experience. This workshop is enhanced by sharing with fellow journalists in optional discussion forums by gaining valuable insight into your work from myself as facilitator and moderator, while receiving tremendous support and cool ideas from your newfound tribe. Though Extreme Visual Journaling is typically done privately in a studio setting, at a desk or table with our myriad supplies set before us, summer is here and it’s time to get out of the house. This Summertime Online workshop is geared towards Visual Journaling on the go. Have Sketchbook Journal, will travel. Explore artist as traveler whether you are planning a trip or staying home. Your assignment as journalist on site or reporter in the field will be to capture moments in time by combining sketching ( yes you can!), easy collages, and mixed media with thoughts, memories and ideas, snippets of conversations overheard, words from songs, etc., using creative lettering techniques. These spontaneous collages, gestural drawings and notetakings will serve as future assignments to explore in our Extreme Visual Journal as we combine journal writing and our unique one- of- a -kind imagery, with mixed media. There are enough creative assignments in this workshop to last well beyond the summer!!!!!! -3-3- -4- Oh I know, I really hate to call it sketching or drawing; so many of us are intimidated by that, so we’ll call it notetaking. That’s really all it is. You can all draw, though it may not be how you expect it or how you think it should look. So people are convinced they can’t do it. Not good at it. Don’t know how. (Don’t want to know how!) Can’t draw a stick figure. Can’t even draw a straight line. Well I will show you otherwise, because drawing a straight line has nothing to do with expression or collecting evidence. The Visual Journalist uses drawing in order to document the world around hernot to be a great artist or render a perfect image. There’s little life in that. Drawing is simply note taking. Drawing is research. Drawing is learning to see and to make comparison‘s between this and that. A scratch here, a line there, that we carve through our years and smear across the pages of our Visual Journal. This is not drawing 101. We will not be learning any boring mechanical drawing exercise taught in art school. I am going to challenge you to redefine what drawing is and how it should look while you learn to make marks in your own unique style, in your own strange and beautiful hand through my pioneering methods of Expressive Drawing. But drawing and sketching is only part of our explorations out in the field! -5- Your task then, as Extreme Journalist, will be to take these notes from the field, and return to the studio for further and deeper exploration. Doing our inner work in public, while on vacation, on the road, or on location is not so easy, and can be far too intense (as I learned in Greece), so we begin in the field by taking notes and playing. Then we expand on these notes back at the ranch, or studio, by developing our pages from these random collage items gathered in the field, incomplete doodles, vague, kooky, fun, playful, gestural sketches and written notes into a solid foundation for expressing our personal mythology: the legendary tales of ourselves. -6- Gestural My drawing and sketching assignments are fun and easy and no matter what you say about your ability, talent or experience, everyone can do these assignments and feel like a success! It’s time to get outside whoever you think you are (or aren’t) and take notes, watch carefully, and pay attention to the world around you. Not a day goes by without signs and symbols calling out to you: learn to record and incurporate this synchronicity into your Sketchbook Journal. You won’t need magazines, rubber stamps or stock images: the stuff of your life is the real journey into juicy raw imagery that only you can create. Take the time to see the sacred in the everyday. Your life has meaning. I did this Journal Page while looking in the bathroom mirror on a ferry ride from Athens to Mykonos, Greece! Summer SKETCHING? But What is an Extreme Visual Journal? What is the difference between diaries, art journals, scrapbooking and memory making, sketchbooks, altered books, artist books, and Visual Journals? Some of these terms are very specific and have their own definitions, while others can be used interchangeably. I have a unique definition for my process, and use the term Extreme Visual Journals as the container for that process. A Visual Journal is a blank book, sketchbook, altered book, scroll, used scrapbook, antique photo album, classical record set, a well traveled atlas, a worn wallet with pages stapled in, antique handkerchiefs sewn together, or any other form that might be considered or used as a book. These Visual Journals come in all shapes and sizes with rice paper, Bristol paper, watercolor paper, old ledger paper, graph paper, notebook paper, glittery paper, painted paper, whatever anyone can imagine. What makes these books Extreme Visual Journals is the act of combining journal writing assignments such as non-dominant handwriting, letter writing, Declarations of Independence, lists, dreams, word associations, etc. with art making assignments such as collage, sketching, drawing and painting, photography, rubber stamping, totem/fetish creating, and various mixed media techniques to create a unique book of self expression. In a visual journal, we are after the rich interior. We are concerned with our own and unique inner, ancient wisdom. We want to find our voice, our style, our flair for life, by documenting our past, present and future in a book. We are NOT concerned with making art. We are NOT concerned with a product or pretty picture. We want to know how to unfold and in that moment, there is remarkable beauty on the page we did not know we possessed. WELCOME, TO THE REVOLUTION REVOLUTION -7- To get started, you need to find a book...Think of some things that could be used to house your art and words in a book format…Don’t worry, you can always start another, and another... An artist’s sketchbook, while personal, is not necessarily private. We see artists out and about sketching the world around them- they don’t need to hide what they do, nor do they feel ashamed - it’s just practice, note taking, observation, and not an attempt to be great. Learning to see and hear and then translating that vision or voice to the paper or journal involves practice, practice, practice, and that is how we eventually make great art or write that incredible poem. And most often, it is by accident. Daily Practice But an Extreme Visual Journal is an altogether different and entirely private affair. It is not meant to share with anyone, let alone passersby on the street or fellow customers in a café. It is a witness protection program, a place to go for safe keeping. It is not for public consumption or viewing. So we extreme journalists tend to create in isolation because we need to protect our inner voices. And that’s fine in the Winter, a time of hibernation. But it’s Summer in the city: it is time to get out! So we will learn various visual journaling assignments that we can explore as reporter in the field. We can go anywhere and do anything and document it all along the way without fear of our inner most feelings, incomplete ideas and tender memories being exposed. We will use our extreme visual journal as more of a combination sketchbook scrapbook notebook and set up our pages out in the field. -8- You don’t have to be a world traveler to see the world: it is right in your own backyard., or on your front porch, or out your window, down the street, at your favorite cafe, or pressed between the pages of a sketchbook as extreme visual journal. It’s time to get out of the studio, workshop, or home office and take a field trip or road trip with your “Journal Mobile Unit.” You won’t need a lot of mixed media materials but you will need a basic Sketching/Journaling kit that will contain your book as well as a few supplies. Each Journalist’s day tripping kit will be different as it reflects each individual’s unique needs. Become artist as tourist., as distant traveler, as pilgrim on a summer art tour and learn to document the world around you. These are fun and easy projects designed for the beginner as well as the seasoned visual journalist. You can do it with the whole family! (I hope they’ll all sign up...) Your lesson plans will include many sketchbook journal dates in the field as well as road trips to help you develop your travel kit from choosing your Sketchbook Journal, to supplies, to journal bag or whatever container will be necessary to become your Journal Mobile Unit. In the studio or at art conventions or workshops, journalists typically bring too much crap: you will be surprised by what you can do with very little. You won’t need any fancy or expensive supplies. You will love how these quick notes and sketches become intricate Extreme Visual Journal pages as I give you the tools to complete these gestural images with creative assignments aimed at guiding you to explore your own mythology. Many of these sketches will be great as is, without further need for information or embellishment. Pack your journal bags, this is the journey of a lifetime. For all levels of drawing/writing experience and personal growth. We are all seekers. -9- Uncover, Discover, Recover Your book is an extension of YOU. Pick it up. How does it feel? Put your hands around it, touch the pages- it must feel right - like an old friend, or a new one you instantly fall in love with. Will it be leather bound-do you imagine your story to be an Out of Africa or an Indiana Jones Discovery Book? Should you alter Grandma’s old cookbook, or even your own baby book? Should it be brand new, pristine, a clean slate to begin your journey fresh? Only you can decide. Starting a new book is fun, but you can always use a book you all ready have. Maybe it’s a sketchbook you started years ago, or a notebook with graph paper from college, or a journal or a blank book or a book you make specifically for this purpose. I have some samples of sketchbooks and journals I would like to share with you from my Enchanted Studio. It might give you some ideas to help you choose your book. You probably have a great idea all ready… Check out the video where I share with you some of my Sketchbooks as Extreme Journal to give you some ideas for possible book forms e -10- Choose Me DOCUMENTATION: Finding your Extreme Visual Journal for Field Notes, or rather letting it find you, will be easy. You may have a great book, full of potential, lying around the house that someone gave you years ago. Or one you started, but didn’t get very far in. You can use a blank book, journal, sketchbook, you can alter a book and use any kind of book with any kind of paper. It can be good quality paper, it can be cardstock, it can be water color paper, it can be graph paper, tracing paper, lined notebook paper, it doesn’t really matter because we can always change our minds and our paper as we go. Size will be the greatest consideration as we make decisions regarding our Journal Mobile Unit. How will you get around conveniently with your journal and supplies, because is if it’s not easy, or if it’s a burden, you are not going to do it. Will you need a special journal bag? Or a box or basket you can carry? Should your book fit neatly into your purse or in your pocket? You’ll need to think about what is going to work for you. It will be trial and error, and we will constantly be making alterations. You may want to journal about it or discuss it verbally with a trusted friend or supportive family member to brainstorm, get your ideas out in the open, and get to know what your needs and desires are. Tribal Council: You can even pose your questions, concerns, Journal Writing Assignment to discover our perfect book: Well, I don’t know if this is really a journal writing exercise, maybe it’s a list making experiment, but it is definitely our very first assignment. You don’t need a special book for this so don’t worry about having to -11- Prepping Pages No, not quite yet, but whichever book or journal you choose you will have to test it out first to see if you like it and so you may want to explore a few different options. And you may need a few different ones anyway for different experiences and various journeys. Like what you take to a coffee shop or restaurant may be completely different than what you will need at a park or on a hike. You can also alter a book for this process, and I recommend preparing your pages before you go out into the field. -12- Read All About it... needs, and ideas to the “Tribal Council” or discussion forum for feedback. Look under “Discussion Groups” on the workshop’s main page. It will be listed as “Journal Mobile Unit.” THE PERFECT BOOK Finding a Book: find your book before getting started. Some loose scrap paper will be fine. I have separate writing journals I maintain, in addition to my visual journals, as tandem or companion pieces, so I always have somewhere to do my writing. You can write free form or you can make a list, but I want you to brainstorm about what you would like or what you think you need in terms of a book for this workshop. Big? Small? We’ll figure out the logistics later, like how to pack it up, but for now, try to imagine what your perfect book would look like. What kind of paper? Thick, thin? A book with various papers and textures? Do you want to work in a series or one thick book? Do you need it to be light, convenient? Do you think you need it to fit inside something? Do you want to alter a special themed book? (Whichever book you choose we will be doing prep work, so don’t let concerns about how to alter, or how to create thicker paper or texture stop you from choosing a book.) Go ahead and write it down. You are not committed to anything. You can always change your mind. But we start by starting. So sometimes it helps to get your hand to the page- you could begin by writing... “my perfect book would be, or looks like or I wish, or I need or I want,” or anything that resonates that might help you get at the answers you seek. Because it’s funny, you know, that which we make tangible soon manifests itself. But we have to make our desires known. So go ahead, start writing or list making, and see where that takes you, and see if it helps you find your book... on choosing a book). There are many ways to do this, and we will discuss this in later chapters. It’s fun to work on different Library Sales, used book stores, junk and thrift stores - and don’t forget kids books! These are great resources for finding books to alter at a good price. But I bet you have a great book lying around your house! textures and backgrounds, so we will learn many exciting ways of setting up our pages for future exploration both on site, and at home, for more in depth explorations in our studio. If your pages are too thin, you can always glue pages together, build them up with collage, gesso them, etc. So pick the book that seems to choose you, that calls out to you. Don’t set it aside saying, no, not this... too thin, too whatever. If the book seems to say “pick me pick me,” as if raising it’s tiny hand, then you really have to pick it because it has something important to teach you. We will practice all kinds of cool set up later so don’t worry about prepping pages for now. We’ll go into this more later, but be considering all this as you begin to contemplate choosing your Extreme Visual Journal for Field Notes…. Getting your Gear together And while you are considering all this in terms of searching for the perfect book for your process and practice of notetaking on the go, start looking around for containers for your Journal Mobile Unit. A journal bag? A basket? A plastic tub or carrying case? How will you fit in your supplies. Everything will work in tandem: the book, the container and supplies. We’ll need to limit our supplies- this is not our studio, nor do we want it to be. And I On the Go...-13- will give a list of necessary supplies in the next chapter and then you will be able to add to what you like to work with. It all needs to be easy: easy to pack, easy to carry, easy to get around. So start looking around your house and get a feel for what may work. Collect it all with a few different options so that we can begin to put into practice our Extreme Visual Journaling on the go... Artist’s Sketchbooks My favorite books are facsimiles of artists’ sketchbooks. I am more interested in how artists work, and how they feel as humans. Typically artists’ sketchbooks are more raw and energetic than their detailed artworks. Sketchbooks are the stuff of real life vibrating with dynamic energy. I especially love those that incorporate text/ collage! Here are some of my favorites and many of them verge... or merge with Visual Journaling: Dan Eldon’s, “The Journey is the Destination” Candy Jernigan’s, “Evidence” Frida Kahlo’s, “The Diary of Frida Kahlo” William Burrough’s, “Ports of Entry” Claus Oldenburg, “Notes in Hand” Orson Welles, “Les Bravados” (this man was so incredibly multitalented!) Sabrina Ward Harrison, “Spilling Open” Merce Cunningham’s “Other Animals” ( very sweet!) Christian Schellewald’s “LA><SF: A Sketchbook from California” (Simply Great!) Kim Donaldson’s “Africa” (Incredible!) Danny Gregory’s “Everyday Matters” Jennifer New’s, “Drawing from Life” Drawing from Life -14- -SUMMARY- INTRODUCTION Tasks: Brainstorm “Perfect” book for Extreme Visual Journal Check out video: “My SketchBooks” Download Audio: Field Notes: Introduction Field Notes: End of Introduction Please Download Chapter 1 Tribal Council 1.)Show /describe/ discuss the book you are thinking of working in and why under “Journal Mobile Unit.” (This does not have to be definite, this is just our introduction, we are only brainstorming here) 2.) Share your favorite recommendations for resource/reference books on Artists’ Sketchbooks. 15 With Juliana Coles
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