And the day came when the risk to remain tight in a bud
was more painful than the risk it took to blossom.
–Anaïs Nin
This week in my online shop.
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And the day came when the risk to remain tight in a bud Life Blossom necklace. 100% recycled sterling silver and labradorite. This week in my online shop. Sign up here if you want to be notified of my shop updates by email Time Traveler ring. Labradorite and 100% recycled sterling silver. This week in my online shop. I recently cleaned out my studio and found my old notebooks. For years, I wrote down lists of things to do, and dreams I had for my future. As I read the letters I had written to my future self, I realized not only that time travel is possible, but something even better: All that I had wished for had come true. This was a huge gift, because I had stopped trusting the power of my intentions. I had turned to reason and logic, and had decided that the only thing that exists is what I can see. But I’ve realized there is so much more than what already exists. There is what could be and what I want there to be. I create my life as I imagine it. This confirms what I have always known in my heart: I am much more powerful than I think. So I will let myself dream, want, ask for, expect, and receive. I saw an old U2 video the other day. I was shocked to realize how young Bono and his band mates looked. What surprised me most was that years ago, when that video came out, I thought they looked so old. I’ve now decided to see my life in reverse, as if I was watching it backwards from the future. I am so young! I can do anything! I am vital and healthy! Youth will not be wasted on me. Today I started a new jewelry series using amethyst. I don't usually work with purple gems, but when I opened my box of stones, these seemed to shine brighter than usual. I find that lately I am living life like this: guided by my curiosity and my senses. I feel that everything seems to flow much better this way, and every day becomes an adventure. Now that I am 41 years old, I think more about the mark I make in this world. Many of my friends have children, and whenever we meet they encourage me to do the same, but it has always been my dream to be a full time working artist. My children are the jewelry I forge, the drawings I create, and the pieces I sculpt. These will be the fossils of my lifetime. The Fossil rings are now in my shop. This week, I decided to follow my own advice and explore variations on a single subject: fish. I am drawn to fish both for their beauty and variety as for what they symbolize. In Greek and Roman mythology, fish represented change and transformation. For Buddhists, fish symbolize happiness and freedom; and for Christians, abundance and faith. My most recurring dreams are about fish and water, which I believe represent the mystery and wisdom of the unconscious mind, a theme that fascinates me. My dreams are vivid and I remember them clearly. They help me get to know a part of myself that is not revealed in my waking hours. These insights have helped me make wiser choices and gain awareness. For my fish series, I began by drawing as many shapes as I could in one sitting. Then I chose the ones I was most attracted to, and turned them into pendants using recycled sterling silver sheet and wire. I could make more, but I love variety and I am already exited about starting a new series. The Fish necklaces are now available in my shop. I've been getting emails from jewelers and artists, asking for advice on how to find a unique style. I don't think that style is something that is adopted or decided. Rather, it's the result of a series of choices we make as we create something. We all have preferences and inclinations, the more we are aware of them, the clearer our voice will be. Below is a list of pointers I've found helpful in my path towards owning my work. I hope they are also useful to you. Use Limited Resources / Apply restrictions The less elements you have to work with, the greater creative freedom you will have; and the clearer and more specific choices you will make. It is through each decision, that you find your voice as an artist. Having too many choices can be overwhelming. Explore variations on a same theme How many different fish can I draw? How can I combine basic geometric shapes in new ways? What forms in nature inspire me? How many styles of shoes can I imagine? In how many ways can I create texture or volume? How do I integrate text into a piece? Discover your medium Are you a carver? A builder? A lover of line? Do your senses awaken when you add layers of paint and combine colors? Do you like to meticulously construct something by hand, or would you rather develop as many ideas as you can digitally? If you find a blank canvas intimidating, make a collage of existing images and shapes. If you prefer to create an image or an object by removing elements, try etching or carving. If you'd rather work with an additive process, sculpt with clay. If you prefer soft materials, you can knit or crochet. If you like harder surfaces, learn to forge metal. Try as many mediums as you can. You will know which is your medium when ideas of what to make flow easily. Find your favorite techniques / tools Once you've found your medium, it helps to discover what tools and techniques work best for you. If it drives you crazy to cut metal sheet with a fine saw, use pliers. If you are too impatient to embroider by hand, use a sewing machine. If your designs feel too simple, use an elaborate method to construct them that will make them layered and interesting. If you are a perfectionist and everything you make feels sterile and machine made, use rough tools to enliven your work. Find the technique that feels right to create a specific idea. Discover your favorite tools and use them until they become an extension of yourself. Do things your way. Find the finish you like, not the one everyone else suggests. Combine mediums if a single one bores you. Fill your well of ideas Just like writers need words, artists need images. Walk, touch, observe, annotate, draw, film, photograph. Go out. Think variety. Learn to see and make it a daily task. How many different shaped trees or clouds can you observe? How many faces? Shapes of rocks or leaves? Visit an aquarium or a botanical garden and feast your eyes. Get visually educated Study all the artists, writers, architects, poets (creators) you can. Find what moves you and study it. Then see who influenced the artist you like, and study her too. Then continue to investigate other artists. Read Steal like an Artist, by Austin Kleon. If you are obsessed with only one artist, you will find it hard to find your own voice and you will copy. You are a combination of all of your influences, so have many. Wilson Mizner once said: if you steal from one author it's plagiarism, if you steal from many it's research. Study other mediums and other disciplines. You will make a much more interesting jeweler if you combine architecture, poetry and biology into your work, than if you only study other jewelers. Everything informs your work. What are you attracted to? Use Pinterest or Tumblr to find images that excite you: clothes, decoration, places, objects, postures, faces, etc. Carry a camera and shoot whatever catches your eye. Then look at what you’ve selected on the web, and what you've photographed. Are there visual elements that repeat themselves? Styles you are jealous of? Eras you are obsessed by? Are you a minimalist, or do you love baroque? Are you into bright coors, or muted tones? What stories turn you on? What books do you read most? What subjects fascinate you: science, psychology, politics, literature, music, religion, etc.? Make work for yourself Make the clothes or accessories you would wear. Write the music you want to hear. Decorate a space you would love to inhabit. There will always be others like you who will find your work appealing. The more specific you are in your tastes, the more unique your vocabulary and vision will be. |
welcomeI am Jennifer Musi, the jewelry artist behind MUSIBATTY, and this is my blog archive.
Here you can find posts from December 2013, to May, 2016. I will no longer update this site. Please click on the link below to see my recent work. @musibattyOn Social Media
ConnectRespectI made this blog to share my work with you. I believe in generosity and I want to live in a world where we all inspire each other.
All of my designs and photographs are copyrighted. If you would like to reproduce them in any way, please email me first. Archives
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