Wednesday, October 10, 2018
The Natural Order of Things and Being
In my upstairs bedroom I have a large south facing window that looks unto a majestic honey locust tree. She looms over my balcony with delicate quivering leaves. In the summer, a deep sap green, in the fall, golden yellow. As of now her leaves have begun their departure as the post fall winds will leave her bare.
I want to be more like her, anchored and organized in her rhythm of time.
But, I am not like her. I am messy, and more than I care to admit, ungrounded and often an enemy of time.
Over the years I have come to realize that this beingness of mine is where the primary thrust of my creativity comes from.
Even at eight and nine years old I remember ferociously scribbling on paper in what resembled abstracted tangled knots in the shape of ovals. I then set myself the task of filling in the gaps with multi colored ink pens. Searching out the order in my chaos.
We all have dominant ways of being in this world.
And in being human, crave to know the “other”. It’s the magnetic force of opposites attracting in relationships.
I have witnessed that search for the “other” in my teaching practice. I somehow give permission for the mess, as participants search to expand their boundaries of known expression.
Recently I have come across three styles of being that makes sense in not only the context of relationship but in the way we can describe the order of creating, especially in the context viewing the organizational sense of a painting or composition.
In a book entitled “Wired For Love”, psychologist Stan Catkin describes three poignant visual metaphors for distinctive ways of being in the world.
Anchors. Islands. Waves.
Three nouns that not only provide us access into a deeper understanding of feeling, but also three symbols that work in the visual narration of describing the principals of design.
In a painting we look for an anchor that might hold our attention in space. A wave moves our eye along so we are not stuck on one aspect in a composition, moving our direction and flow, and islands create the content, the main event.
It’s a generalization but in the sphere of human interaction; anchors search out ways to loosen their grip and move into bolder expression - islands explore different terrain i.e… materials and content to work, waves work to hone in their emotion and focus.
I am a messy, emotional wave. I search out anchors to bring me back to intention and islands so I might have something to crash into.
In an ideal world it’s like my honey locust tree, longing to sway with grace when change comes, yet remain fully present and grounded while recognizing the importance of our form and content and as a gift to the world. A steady pace with the natural order of things, our environments and each other.
Upcoming Workshops:
Soul Work in Action: Exploring Women's Spiritual Hunger with Paint November 2nd and 3rd, 2018
Tuesday, August 21, 2018
Swallowing Beauty
News from Mantecón Studio
For a full list of workshop visit here
Please scroll on down to the bottom for more detailed information.
My friend Jens has no filter when speaking his brilliant mind. It’s a quality I admire, especially when discussing creative edges that push our limits and call out for personal growth.
Recently Jens and I were in my Santa Fe studio.
Large disheveled under-paintings I had just begun were leaning against the wall. Over worked paper pieces were scattered on the floor- in progress or abandoned? (it could go either way). They felt vulnerable, raw and not too sure of themselves.
Jens was animated as he discussed his latest project of turning mud into functionality and grace. He had just bulldozed and excavated a cave on land he recently purchased on the outer borders of New Mexico into Arizona. He was making livable space. Art.
I talked of mind clutter and the impatience /anxiety of feeling discomfort in visible vulnerability hovering around me. I mumbled something about re -creating what I had done in my last series. Exploring the tension points between the visible and unseen. Smokey clouded layers covering the ambivalence of life.
Jens leaned in close, “so are you now making fake paintings? “
I knew what he meant. I was at that edge believing painting existed in a realm that could be birthed like a machine.
I quickly responded “almost, but not yet.”
That was the truth -take the plunge of investigating the heart's longing in the now, or be an imitated version of myself set on automatic go.
Zombie Formalism is what comes to mind. A term coined by artist and art critic Walter Robinson in 2014. My definition: production of abstract painting that is devoid of passion and more concerned with how it is made. Image, shape, color, singing together in a doable composition that is pleasing to the eye.
Sometimes when hitting that uncomfortable edge, it’s tempting to go there. Production.
The how to, neglecting the deep inner crevices inside ourselves that ask of us the why?
It takes time and care to birth a project. When we are not tending to the delicate
needs creativity requires of us bridging mind to heart, a radical distrust can set in.
For me- I usually need some space to become a bit untethered from daily left brain life.
I guess my growing pains are asking of me to raise my frequency of light form the inside out. I still crave to paint just that.
And when I am still enough to wait out the unlpleasantries of my mind I sometimes glimpse the realization that my vulnerabilities are my courage moved from the outside in, waiting to swallow beauty whole.
Personalized Private Classes and Studio Mentorship
Open Studio Wednesday
Why Color is Important- One Day Workshop- Saturday October
6th
Large Scale Painting Workshop October 25th-26th
Women's Spiritual Hunger's November 2nd-3rd
Video Tutorials
Wednesday, March 14, 2018
Spring Greetings,
It is my hope all are gracefully emerging out of the hibernation of the winter season.
After having completed a large body of work last fall along with a full teaching schedule, I have used the last few months to slow my internal pace in contrast to an outside world that has warped into quickening speed bringing more constant anxiety that seems to be the new normal.
As a painter, I search through abstract language to communicate how I experience the world in which I live. My art has evolved and changed over time and I have grown to depend on my lived experience of the evolution or de-evolution of the world to come through me and onto surface in subtle ways.
Lately, my painting and teaching appears to be asking more of me, and I am not sure what that should look like. But, some deeper questions that have arisen are providing clues:
What brings inspiration to all of us in these changing times?
What brings deep nourishment and connection?
What acts or non-acts can I incorporate into my process and teaching to really listen and
guide myself and others into more authentic ways of being in the world?
I believe engaging in creativity is a way to know ourselves and others deeply. Painting consistently with a group every Wednesday for the last four years has taught me that.
Some participants have served as anchors every week while other visitors have attended from various regions of the world.
I have witnessed how of the power of creating can bring people closer to their selves and the seat of their souls.
I bear witness to my own painting process, and everyday learning to trust in the “not knowing”, but doing what I can to just show up and stay conscious to the subtle needs of the painting and to those that attend my classrooms. My hope is through this process we may all bring our deepest authentic and courageous selves into the world.
“Dare to not rush any faster than we are ignited from within.
Dare to slow into true presence.”
Mark Nepo
Below is a short list of upcoming workshops and Mantecon Studio announcements and registration links are highlighted.
New- Virtual Studio Mentorship
Mantecón Studio- Ongoing Wednesday Open Studio 1:30-4:30pm
Mantecón Studio The Creative Visonary Intensive Saturday March 24th/ Catherine Trapani and Lauren Mantecon
Weehawken Art Center, Ridgeway, Colorado Expressive Painting & Mixed Media Techniques May 19th-20th / Lauren Mantecón
Mantecón Studio Soul Work in Action-Art & Psych June 2nd-3rd / Nina Rossand Lauren Mantecón
Mantecón Studio Color Theory -Why Color is Important / Lauren Mantecón
Mantecón Studio Anything Goes An in Depth 4 -Day Mixed Media and Painting Investigation June 23rd-26th/ Lauren Mantecón
New Work, Exhibit Muse Gallery, August, 2018/ Lauren Mantecón Hilton Head, South Carolina
Cullowhee Mountain Arts Lake Logan Art Retreat, North Carolina, August 20th-25th / Lauren Mantecón
Mantecón Studio Abstract Painting with Krista Harris- Full- please contact Krista for wait list.
Mantecón Studio The Space Between- Painting with Intent & Intuition November 1st-4th /Stacy Phillips and Lauren Mantecon
Coming Soon- On-Line Video Tutorials
It is my hope all are gracefully emerging out of the hibernation of the winter season.
After having completed a large body of work last fall along with a full teaching schedule, I have used the last few months to slow my internal pace in contrast to an outside world that has warped into quickening speed bringing more constant anxiety that seems to be the new normal.
As a painter, I search through abstract language to communicate how I experience the world in which I live. My art has evolved and changed over time and I have grown to depend on my lived experience of the evolution or de-evolution of the world to come through me and onto surface in subtle ways.
Lately, my painting and teaching appears to be asking more of me, and I am not sure what that should look like. But, some deeper questions that have arisen are providing clues:
What brings inspiration to all of us in these changing times?
What brings deep nourishment and connection?
What acts or non-acts can I incorporate into my process and teaching to really listen and
guide myself and others into more authentic ways of being in the world?
I believe engaging in creativity is a way to know ourselves and others deeply. Painting consistently with a group every Wednesday for the last four years has taught me that.
Some participants have served as anchors every week while other visitors have attended from various regions of the world.
I have witnessed how of the power of creating can bring people closer to their selves and the seat of their souls.
I bear witness to my own painting process, and everyday learning to trust in the “not knowing”, but doing what I can to just show up and stay conscious to the subtle needs of the painting and to those that attend my classrooms. My hope is through this process we may all bring our deepest authentic and courageous selves into the world.
“Dare to not rush any faster than we are ignited from within.
Dare to slow into true presence.”
Mark Nepo
Below is a short list of upcoming workshops and Mantecon Studio announcements and registration links are highlighted.
New- Virtual Studio Mentorship
Mantecón Studio- Ongoing Wednesday Open Studio 1:30-4:30pm
Mantecón Studio The Creative Visonary Intensive Saturday March 24th/ Catherine Trapani and Lauren Mantecon
Weehawken Art Center, Ridgeway, Colorado Expressive Painting & Mixed Media Techniques May 19th-20th / Lauren Mantecón
Mantecón Studio Soul Work in Action-Art & Psych June 2nd-3rd / Nina Rossand Lauren Mantecón
Mantecón Studio Color Theory -Why Color is Important / Lauren Mantecón
Mantecón Studio Anything Goes An in Depth 4 -Day Mixed Media and Painting Investigation June 23rd-26th/ Lauren Mantecón
New Work, Exhibit Muse Gallery, August, 2018/ Lauren Mantecón Hilton Head, South Carolina
Cullowhee Mountain Arts Lake Logan Art Retreat, North Carolina, August 20th-25th / Lauren Mantecón
Mantecón Studio Abstract Painting with Krista Harris- Full- please contact Krista for wait list.
Mantecón Studio The Space Between- Painting with Intent & Intuition November 1st-4th /Stacy Phillips and Lauren Mantecon
Coming Soon- On-Line Video Tutorials
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