What I’ve Learnt From Running Art Workshops

Creative workshops

Recently I had the opportunity to set up a private art studio and start running art workshops. I’ve been running or facilitating creative workshops for many years, on and off, from crochet through to watercolour but this was my first chance to do it in a dedicated space. I thought I was prepared and it would be a seamless addition to my working week. I was so wrong!

My sweet studio

Here’s what surprised me the most-

  • So much work needs to be done before I’ve even planned the date. I heard I was accepted for the studio rather unexpectedly, so I did have to hit the ground running. This is my third month, and I only feel like I’ve just about sorted out the literature, the order of play, and have a decent idea of what people expect out of the workshop. Despite starting a couple of weeks before I opened the doors, I’ve only just finished writing up all the handouts!
  • There will always be snags where you encounter problems during the pilot workshops, whether it’s the limits of the chosen materials, or different examples if my explanation is falling short. I have a wide demographic, so lots of different people with different abilities and expectations. But the good thing is: the sessions then instantly become group trouble-shooting sessions, and solutions are found that wouldn’t even have crossed my mind. These are creative people, after all!
  • Having your own physical space is tiring. I mean, I knew it was tiring, but there is a huge gulf between the energy it takes running a workshop once a month in a space someone else is taking care of, and having to swap out all the botanicals every time, keep everything dust free, and having to keep stock of everything right down to paper towels and washing up liquid. It adds a good couple of hours each side of each workshop, after which I need to decompress and recover from all the over-stimulation. I absolutely adore having complete freedom to arrange it all how I want though, and not having to figure out where the lights are or if we’ll be kicked out by the next class.
  • I am not cut out for marketing myself constantly, just like a lot of other creatives. I need to get on top of a consistent and achievable schedule and plan for this, as it’s one of the aspects I find most draining. I’d say: outsource this or find useful apps if you can! Luckily people are still managing to find me, but it’s still absolutely terrifying to have to promote myself and fill seats otherwise the rent doesn’t get paid. I just have to remember that at least I’m giving it my best shot!
  • I underestimated how rewarding and inspiring it would be. I have been raring to have my own space to teach for years, purely because of how inspiring it s to share knowledge, but I didn’t realise just quite how much being around all that enthusiasm and different creative approaches makes me want to undertake more of my own projects. Now to find the time!
  • Being able to set my own themes and workshops has absolutely scratched a creative itch. Even though I’ve only covered watercolour painting workshops, sketching and drypoint etching, its been a surprisingly varied experience, and to be honest I’m enjoying being the boss and deciding what it is I think the attendees need to hear most!

If you’re interested in joint us at the studio for a session, whether for drypoint etching, drawing or watercolour, take a look at my Agenda page to see what’s on, or sign up to my monthly newsletter where I announce upcoming workshops.

Hope to see you in 2025!

Top Tips for Artists Working From Home… with a Child

Creative life, Uncategorized

… or What I’ve Learnt as an Artist-Mama, Working From My Living Room, With a Young Child

My little studio assistant

We made it through to school age! I have a little school-goer! What a ride. Caring for small children is a job in itself. I honestly don’t know how we as parents have time to breathe sometimes, let alone focus on ourselves for part of the day and *gasp* HAVE A CAREER. All I know is, if you’re going through it (and you’ve all not throttled each other yet), hats off to you.

These tips are quite general. Having a young child around the house is a trying time for everyone. I’m sure all WFH (work-from-home) parents (and even those who work outside of the home) will relate, not just mamas. Read on for what I learnt, and maybe it’ll help you just to know it’s something a lot of people around the world are struggling with. I’m sure non of it is new or revolutionary, but a bit of solidarity goes down well with a cup of tea on a particularly trying day.

  1. Double box your art materials! And put up as much high, out-of-reach storage as you can

If they can reach it, they will touch it. Particularly the black. It’s always the black. There’s darkness in the souls of young children that simply must be expressed, apparently. All over your nice clean paper stock.

2. If you’re drawing nudey bits, and you leave it out on the desk, be prepared to explain.

Just saying.

3. Have a strict ‘no drinks’ policy around your desk, and your tech, and a no ‘sticky fingers’ policy…

Ok, this will be impossible. If you so much leave anything that can be made grubby, children will go out of their way to make it so. Even if you’ve just wiped their fingers. I don’t want to think about what they make half of those marks with.

That’s the practical side of things. Now on to how to save your sanity, self-esteem and some semblance of basic hygiene.

4. Don’t be under the impression that you will keep a professional appearance at all times.

Pj’s and comfies are just workwear here, barring the hours of maybe 10-2pm. If I have to be seen in public before or after that, well: that’s what coats are for. Maybe once a week I put on actual grown-up clothes first thing in the morning, even when I don’t have to meet anybody, and don’t I feel swish. I challenge you to do better.

5. Get a decent set-up, from the Get-Go.

My posture is awful. My chair is too high, my screen too low. I cram in between my desk and my shelves, whilst doing an awkward quarter turn towards my graphics tablet. Save your joints. I already have chronic pain: you’d think I’d have learnt, but no. I don’t need to advise regular stretching exercises, because you already have a toddler who ‘needs’ you to get down on the floor with them and play with that one little figurine. Again. And every two minutes after that. No use climbing back up to your desk actually. Maybe you don’t need that fancy set-up after all.

One half of my desk. Isn’t it a glorious set-up *eyeroll*?

6. You will Develop an iron Sense of Self Control…

… but not before you’ve gone through a period of unbridled self-indulgence, relishing the fact that you have an open plan living room/kitchen/work area, and love snacks. And The Child is asking for snacks constantly anyway, so you can’t avoid that short walk to the snack cupboard. No tips here. I still drink too much coffee, but I think I just got bored of the sugar highs.

7. It’s ok if you dont ‘have it together’ for a while.

My productivity levels are all over the place. It depends on if there are school holidays, if there’s a sick boy (or mama, or papa) resting on the couch, how much we’ve been up in the night… and that’s ok. We’re creative people, so I suppose we need to give in and apply that to our business schedule too. It’s tough not being able to apply myself full force when the muse hits, but I’ve been trying to be softer on myself and use any downtime to rest and contemplate, instead of wringing my hands in frustration. Ok, I still do that, but I’m getting better at it.

It also means I utilise what time I DO have really well, if I do say so myself. I managed to knock all these out in the two weeks before our first summer break-

Watercolour landscape painting
Background paintings, all completed in two weeks

And then once in the holiday, this was my entire plan for marketing my 2024 calendar (which was a huge project for me this year so I really need to put a lot of effort in to marketing)…

Scribbled on the back page of my planner, because I hadn’t bought a new one, and written in the five minutes my son was using the bathroom during an ‘at home’ day

… yeah, that was the best I had at the time. Once I write EVERYTHING down, and in multiple planners and calendars, I usually don’t need to look at it again because it’s filed in my brain. If I don’t write it down, however, I’d get to November then remember that I hadn’t finished the calendar yet. It doesn’t matter if you have an analogue or digital agenda system, but USE IT! Planning doesn’t have to be pretty (although I’m a major sucker for pretty stationery, especially as a visual person) it just has to be DONE.

So I hope that you at least feel a little bit comforted if you remember that the pressure we and society put on ourselves to be ‘switched on’ or pushing our career as soon as our children are barely able to mumble ‘mama’ is absolute nonsense, and absolutely not helpful when applied to the messiness of everyday life. Chuck that pressure out the window.

Also worth looking at is this fantastic book ‘The Motherhood of Art’ by Melissa Huber and Heather Kirtland. A look at lots of other artist mamas (but could easily apply to papas and carers) and how they make it through the day as a creative with little ones.

This book reminds me we’re not alone on this journey. ISBN 9780764359187.

(Not a promo: my sister gave it to me and it reassured me I wasn’t alone as a WFH creative on this parenting/work struggle).

I’ve also been hearing the idea going around a lot at the moment that you don’t stop being an artist (creative, crafter etc.) if you’re not actively making art. YOU ARE STILL AN ARTIST. This is just a season, and your creativity will re-kindle, and I hope you can be kind to yourself if things aren’t quite perfectly in balance.

Take care,

L x

New work

Art, illustration, Uncategorized

In the last couple of months I’ve found that if I can work, I MUST work, for my sanity!

A series of one of my favourite subjects, doors and windows, has been the result of some snatched sketches and painting. The reference photos were taken by me over a couple of years with the theme in mind, so I have a couple of good ‘uns. I’m just finishing up the last one this week, and am pretty pleased with the paintings and also noticed an improvement in my technique. I was certainly quicker, after painting all those bricks and sandstones! Once it’s wrapped up I’ll clean them up and have a limited amount of 2019 calendars made, so do let me know if you’d like one reserved.

Here’s a quick glimpse of a couple (you can see more on my Instagram @illustratorlaura )-

 

Back to work!

Art, illustration, Uncategorized

I’m back in ‘work mode’ after the holidays, finally.

Can’t wait to get stuck in with my ongoing and new creative projects, I’ve so many plans!

I’m trying to share my work more with the world this year, so that people can see what it is I actually do! Some projects are too personal to share, or I can’t share them yet, but here are a few pet portraits I was lucky enough to be commissioned for before Christmas-

All watercolour, and the little wooden plaque was gouache.

Do contact me if you’d like me to do something personal for you, human or furbaby!

Happy New Year, and here’s to a creative 2018.

Laura