Creating in a Series

December 05, 2019

Boho pendant

Hope Floats No 1

 

My method of creating has been an idea pops in my head that I can't resist and I focus on creating the best version of that idea into a piece of jewelry.  Once completed I usually feel completely satisfied and jump to the next idea I've been sitting on.  I never worried about my art being recognizable as mine, as I figured over time my body of work would have to look like it came from me.  In other words, someone would see a necklace of mine and think:  I know that's Janet's.  I asked that question once and was assured by several people that was so.   :-)

Many artists, many successful artists, work in a series.  I suspect many of them have degrees in art and one of the things they were taught was the value of working in a series.  I'm sure there are many things I will learn about the value of working this way, but I'll share that for the first time this past summer I purposely did so and right away the value I saw for me was a longer focus on an idea which had many benefits.  I'll share what I see as benefits in my next post.

 

boho jewelry

Hope Floats No. 2

 

The first three boho style pendants I created started with the amazing lampwork by Keysha Koy.  They're large hollow beads of art glass with such wonderful transparency and warmth of color and design.  I'd never seen anything like them before.  Although at the time I had absolutely no idea how I would be able to make wearable jewelry from them, I had to have them!  I enjoyed having them in a small bowl by my desk as just art.

 

Artisan lampwork necklace

Hope Floats No. 3

 

In my office I also have a large wire bowl filled with a collection of Japanese fishing floats which are very large blown glass balls that were used in the fishing industry.  The first of these types of floats were used in Norway in the early 19th century.  Some of the Japanese ones can still be found washing up ashore on the Pacific coast, but since they are no longer used there is a diminishing supply.

I also have a collection of hag stones (aka adder stone) that I've collected through the years, but also some I purchased from Scotland, my paternal homeland.  They can be a pebble, glass, anything where the hole is created naturally.  As a jewelry maker anything with a hole catches my eye!  They're considered lucky and ward off evil.  I love their natural smoothness and magic.

I've mentioned before that when I'm feeling a lot of stress it helps me to put my head into some creativity and get lost.  The world is a scary place to me right now and working in a series kept me lost for a good amount of time.  It was healthy to just gather my hopes and ideas and beautiful collection of baubles and bits and create art.

"Art enables us to find ourselves and lose ourselves at the same time."  Thomas Merton