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Balancing the Teacher and Artist in Me, By Jackie Thomas

Balancing the Teacher and Artist in Me

Jackie Thomas

As a Fibers Artist, time has always been a challenge for me.  Just plain living takes so much time, and when a teaching career is added, there is little left for the creative process and studio work.  I thought I was not really productive in the studio while I was going through challenges of balancing home and school.  But in retrospect, I realize I really was productive by channeling my creative energies in a number of ways:

As a brand new teacher, fresh out of college, and having already decided to specialize in Fibers.  I packed up a project bag with a pre-woven rya rug backing (on which I drew a simple design), some yarns, a measuring tool, and a large tapestry needle.  I kept the bag at school, available for the snippets of time available to work on the rya rug during faculty meetings and in the faculty room (I was told that teachers thought I was stuck up if I never left my classroom, so I scheduled a couple of periods a week to talk with teachers in the faculty room and did my planning at 5:30 in the morning and at home).  It was a bulky bag that I lugged around, but I learned about trying to fit into the building and being a member of the larger school community.  I believe it took all year to finish that Rya Rug.

Rya Rug

Time to balance teaching and art making didn’t shift any over the years, and I decided that I wanted to complete more than just one artifact in a school year.  I looked for projects that would not require much of an investment in time.  I tried jewelry making for a couple of years.  A new bag of materials accompanied me to meetings and on car trips when someone else was driving.

Feltmaking jewelry:

felt bead bracelet
felt bead pin
felt pendant necklace
felt pendant necklace
felt pendant necklace

Waxed linen coiling/twining jewelry:

coiling twining necklace

But I eventually decided I didn’t really find jewelry satisfying – too much assembly.  And, fibers jewelry making was not really transferable and informative to teaching my students.

Quite by accident I began to make miniature dolls as fetishes and found that quite satisfying for more than ten years.  My sister and I attended the American Crafts Council Baltimore Winter Market every year, and I bought one tiny wearable fetish animal doll from An African doll maker each year.

African Animal Fetishes:

African Animal Fetish

“A fetish is an object of magical powers.  It is a guardian chosen by you.  Once you have chosen your fetish you must promise to faithfully care for it.  You must keep it in a warm, dry place and feed it one grain of corn or rice or bean each year.  In return, it will insure you good health, clear sight, protection against injury, success in hunting and trading, and abundant love.”

After the fetish artist moved back to Africa, I went through fetish withdrawal, and I began to design and make my own little fetish dolls.  I have worn a fetish every day over the past 40+ years.

I usually worked on a series of fetishes of one color/fabric but each with it’s own look/design (one to keep and the others to share).  I tried to complete one step in each sitting (i.e. trace the pattern onto the cloth and cut them out; sew the fetish shape with right sides of the cloth together & leaving an opening along one leg; turn the cloth fetishes right side out, stuff them and stitching them closed; embroider the faces; add hair; clothe one fetish at a time).

Some of my Fetishes:

fetish Mickey Mouse

An AHA! Moment occurred when I realized I had boxes and bags of process and project samples for feltmaking (and other fibers processes).  They were already of my own hand and design.   I pulled them out and began to assemble them into larger sculptures (a technique I then used with students as well).  I also challenged myself to create one-a day miniature artifacts to be assembled later into larger pieces.

“Pulls”

pulls

“It’s An Octopus!”

The challenge is the time.  I dedicate time (usually weekend or evening) to get a project concept defined in my sketchbook and to organize materials.  I look at my schedule to see where I might capture unscheduled time.  And I always have a bag or a box loaded and ready when time suddenly and unexpectedly becomes available.  I have rules: 

  1. Never let my own art work interfere with planning for my classes and experimenting with materials and techniques before teaching them.  Planning is important.
  2. Never work on my own art during teaching time.
  3. Request someone else drive whenever possible so I can work on a project during the trip. 
  4. Always have a journal or paper to write down ideas, things to remember, and to record discoveries and things I learned.
  5. Collect materials and experiences on every walk, vacation, and opportunity.
  6. Never throw away project failures or demonstration projects.  They may serve another purpose later.  At the very least, failures help me remember how NOT to do it (because otherwise I will usually do it the unsuccessful way over and over again).
  7. Teaching others is a prime way to learn and improve my own skills.
  8. There is always something to be learned, even in the most repetitive experience.
  9. ALWAYS be ready to work on a project…. i.e. ball gown components created while sitting at Little League games.
trapunto dressing the landscape front
trapunto bird dress front

If nothing else inspires, I can always redesign/embellish wearables from my closet.!

C’est Finis!

Felting a Sneak Peek…

Hi everyone!  There have been quite a few posts highlighting some awesome sessions coming up during the conference.  It’s really going to be hard to choose!

 

We’re still hoping for more people to send us their session descriptions and photos so we can highlight them (there’s still time!), but until then, I thought I’d show off some of my students’ work.  And hopefully entice you to come to my FREE session (ticket required, though, so get one!) called “The Future of Felting” on FRIDAY, 2-2:50 PM, in Wilson 434.

 img_6183

I’ll show you some felting techniques that I have used with my students, and ideas you can use to “felt” it into your curriculum (some felting humor for ya).  Using this form of fibers is an easy way to create sculptures and 3D art in the classroom.  img_6260This will be hands on, so bring your ideas and we’ll jump in!  Hope to see you there!