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Artist Spotlight

Artist Spotlight: Devon McKnight

Note: Be advised there is strong language in this piece.

In the Artist Spotlight series of blog posts, The Layered Onion highlights an artist in the community. We’ll get a chance to learn more about them and their work. 

In this post we are featuring Devon McKnight (they), an artist based in North Carolina.

Devon is a prolific painter with an innovative eye for color. Devon describes their work as coming “out of a history of formality and a desire to break apart the structure of a system, specifically Painting. I question what makes up a painting: how it is formed, what it can be, what it can mean, where it comes from.

I consider the formal in its most basic existence, separating line, color, shape. Using these elements I arrange and rearrange, coming upon more questions within these fragile relationships. There is a lot of looking that takes place. After putting down paint, I sit and look, trying to see the forms and spaces that have been shaped and those that could be.

I try to stay in this liminal space of transience. It is a place of wonder and precarity, lines and forms falling apart, barely stable.  To not know, to be insecure in meaning, draws out openness and a welcoming of fear and doubt. There is strength in the pursuit and in the mere existence. There is energy in the endless exploration that transfers to and draws from everyday life and I hope enters the lives of those that encounter this work.”

Devon McKnight hails from Greensboro (Climax, really), North Carolina where they studied Painting at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. They traveled to California seeking a new landscape and completed their Masters of Fine Art at San Jose State University in 2015. After graduating Devon lived and worked in East Oakland but has since returned home to North Carolina where they help run a community arts organization. McKnight’s work has been shown throughout the United States, as well as Australia. Their practice comes out of a history of formality within painting and a desire to break apart or unmap the structures of our dysfunctional systems: social, artistic, political, educational. Devon has curated their own and other artist’s work through an artist collective called Spare Room and is a contributing writer to The Coastal Post.

Devon did a Q&A with The Layered Onion, talking about their art and community work:

What first drew you to art?

Art has always been embedded in my life. Our house was filled with art, no actual paintings that I remember, but reproductions of Georgia Okeefe paintings, I think I remember a print of a Bruegel painting?, weavings, a family photo wall, and hella books. Going to see films as a family was a thing, even as a child. My mother taught high school English so the arts were always being discussed.

Both of my parents are creative, my mother as a teacher and writer and my dad in less obvious ways, in his ability to fix anything and build anything…he’s into woodworking now after retiring from being an electrician. The way he thinks through a problem…I remember when he’d help me with my math homework, he never did the steps like my teacher taught us but he still got to the right answer. And music, my father taught me about music. We grew up listening to it all, and talking about it.  My Aunt is a doctor but she’s an artist. When I was little she was making ceramic jewelry and now she’s a pro knitter and even my grandmother was making ceramic pieces when I was a kid. It fed into my brothers as well. One is a creative director and has been one all of his life even before being paid and given the title. The oldest is a botanist that works as an urban designer/city planner. He’s the otherworldly type, always spaced out studying the flora and fauna. So all that, to say I don’t think I was really drawn to art, rather, it is of me. I don’t know what it’s like to not have a world centered around the arts…books, music, film, stories, poetry, painting, all of it.

I was a kid that played outside, so I wasn’t really painting or drawing early on, but I was deeply imagining. As a visual learner, I was probably thinking creatively from an early age, but I didn’t really step into capital A art until college. I was probably making art in various ways and just didn’t consider it art; playing guitar in high school, cutting down a tree and carving a totem pole for my senior project, writing poetry and participating in writing contests, helping create the yearbook each year, designing layouts. However, I remember struggling in my art classes in high school, lacking the skills to achieve what I had in mind.

Devon McKnight, untitled. 8x6in, pigment and medium on panel. 2022.

You have an eye for color and texture. Why painting?

I want to say it’s what I’m good at. To get your BFA you have to take courses in all the mediums and I struggled with all of them except painting. Everything except painting had too many steps between me and the surface, me and the thing. I like that with painting it’s very direct and immediate. And the colors, I could just eat them. They’re so beautiful and full and I can literally feel parts of my body tingle when I use certain colors. I remember first learning to mix colors with oil paints, like truly. I would spend whole days just preparing my palette for a painting, mixing the colors I’d need, each shade, each tint, 10 shades of red, working with the cools and warms, realizing how much a speck of white can alter a color, making your own black from blue, yellow and red. It’s fucking incredible. The way colors sit next to each other and adjust or how they shine through one another on the canvas, I mean you see all of that in nature when looking at tree leaves for example or in us as people and how we shift next to each other. Painting changes the way you see the world, the way you relate to it.

I remember when I was 16, for my birthday I got to go see the Monet exhibition at the local museum. I was floored. I mean come on, the color! I see his paintings as color, period. Sure it’s cathedrals and hay stacks, but what makes your heart explode is the way he puts down color, which is texture, the marks. When I go to see paintings, I go for the marks. I want to see how it was made, how the artist put down their marks and wonder why. It’s like studying their imprint, reasoning, choices, and it’s all tied to their environment, time period, personhood.

Halfway through undergrad I got really depressed. I was attempting to major in Graphic Design, which I was failing at. I knew I was creative, but I didn’t know how to move forward with it and I thought graphic design was the ticket to a job in the arts. I was terribly wrong. I stopped going to classes and barely left the house. Then, a friend said she was going to Europe for a few months, sort of tagging along with a study abroad group and I decided to go with her. I cashed in stock that had been building since my birth to support the trip. We backpacked through Europe for a month and then lived in Prague for 3-4 months. When I got back, I switched my major to painting. I’m not sure if it was the exposure to Art centers (and art colonizers) of the world or the adventure and independence I experienced that gave me permission to follow this path. The genius thing about art making is that it’s so of the self. You gravitate to what works for you like a magnet, if you allow it or are able to make space for it. For me, I want to put down color on a surface. I want to see the mark that my brush makes. I could do just that for multiple lifetimes. But it took me a long time to be okay with that. To own it. Even with 2 degrees in painting, I still feel shy about it.

You talk about line, color, and shape – sitting with them and rearranging them. Do you have a specific process that you go through?

I’m in it for the process. Painting is the making, not the thing.  I’ve moved through different mediums: oil, watercolor, acrylic, found materials, collage, but the process is the same, always about using the elements of composition: line, color, shape, to ask questions or question things. So I’ll put down a mark and then I’ll react to it. The idea is to get to a space where I’m not thinking, I’m painting. It takes a lot of work to get to that space. There’s so much time spent on fretting, failing, faking it, realizing I’m faking it and covering it up, being insecure, getting hella mad and frustrated and doubting myself, asking questions, reading, listening to other artists, looking, a lot of looking, wondering, pep talks, and of course all that feeds into the work. So once I’m in that non-thinking space, it can kind of just come out. There are some days where I walk in and I can step right into that space and there are some spans of time where I stay frustrated for days on end and usually that means I need to switch things up, try something new or it’s just working things out. I work pretty quickly because I’m after immediacy or of the moment, but this happens over long periods of time. Like right now I’m working on maybe 20 different paintings all at once. But I’ll probably be moving around them for a month or so. Some paintings are done in 5 minutes and some months and months.

Because I’m in the thick of the process currently, I’ll use “now” as an example. I switched up my mediums when the pandemic hit and I got a new studio space. I wanted to move away from watercolors on paper, which I’d been working with for the past 5 years. Acrylic has always been difficult for me, so I wanted to lean into that and see what I could discover. There’s been a long process of figuring out materials, learning about them and what I want from them, experimenting, finding the right brushes and surfaces and how to make all of that conducive to supporting an output.

So I landed on pure pigments, liquid pigment (the color is unbeatable) and I mix them with clear mediums that have a matte finish. This sort of “fixes” them to the surface. I had to learn that. Then I lay them down on wood panels. I can buy panels somewhat cheaply, but I’ve been working with my dad to build them out of Luan, a super cheap plywood. We buy huge sheets and cut them down to whatever size I choose and then he frames them in wood. They become these precious objects, handmade. I live with my dad so I’ve loved having this relationship with him as we troubleshoot. I can tell him what I’m needing and he can problem solve. Like, for a while we were using scraps from our wood floor to frame the panels. The finished pieces just look so interesting with that flooring on there, it’s hilarious to me, and one of a kind.

There’s that part of the process and in tandem, I’m making marks, figuring out how I want the paint to sit on the surface, which is so wild when I really think about it. There’s so much tension and contradiction. I am so in love with the mark that it’s really, really difficult for me to push or edit. I’ve been used to watercolor, which is all about that first mark and leaving it. So I think that has led me to this repetition of mark. But I’m trying hard to let go and dive in. This means, making marks on the surface that aren’t comfortable for me, covering them up, trying other marks, covering those, wiping it out, moving things around. But truly all that is difficult. So much of me resists it. I get frozen and of course I get scared. There’s a lot of fear. And I realize that sounds weird…to be afraid of a mark, but this is my heart, my deepest insides, my truest self that I’m investigating. I want to see something I’ve never seen before and that’s complicated because lots of times that process is really uncomfortable or I’m completely unsure about it and I just can’t tell if what I’m making is crap or I’m onto something. So that’s where I have to do a lot of sitting and looking and asking. And I definitely don’t do this enough. It’s sort of like how we are asked to look at ourselves…we don’t do this enough because it’s exhausting and oftentimes we just don’t want to go there, it’s too much, too painful. I know if you’re looking at my work and the beautiful colors you wouldn’t think pain, but change is painful isn’t it? Growth, that shit hurts and the only way to grow is to reflect.

I want to add that I have had support along the way. I have a mentor and friend who I speak with regularly. She was a professor in grad school and we got on so well we just stuck. She’s a painter too, as well as her son. We three have a regular chat where we share work, materials, artists and ideas. I have another friend who’s a painter and we chat everyday. Most of my friends are artists so that community is vital. I’ve been without it before and it was terrible, I felt lost. That is why I’m so incredibly excited about The Layered Onion and its specific community.

Some of your art seems to deal in symbols. It reminds me of hieroglyphics. Can you describe a little more about these pieces?

Oof, I’ll try. I started making the “glyphs” soon after I moved back to North Carolina from Oakland where I’d been living and working post grad school. 

Devon McKnight, untitled. 11×8.5in, pastels on paper. 2019.

I decided to move home for a variety of reasons, but a big one was that my health was declining and I needed a support system. I had become increasingly physically weak, so it felt best to sit at a table and paint with the least amount of movement. I was making really small marks on 8.5×11 inch paper and working in sketchbooks. I found myself sort of grouping these small marks and building lists of them. It was a very repetitive process with small or minimal variances. It really took me out of my head, but also required focus or concentration, the kind I didn’t have to think or worry about. And I remember liking the way they sat together. You could see the individual as well as the grouping. I started to think of them as “in community”. Even within the “individuals” there were parts supporting each other or merging.

Feeling too ignorant about hieroglyphs, symbols and linguistics to really know what I’m talking about, I’ll say it’s on my mind. Hieroglyphs were an alphabet that made up the Egyptian language, right? I like the idea of images as the first written language.  I think the paintings of mine you are referring to remind folks, and me, of hieroglyphs or language because of the format they’re in; a repetitious listing. It looks like, reads like, language or categorizing. I think that’s more evidence of process or thought process and maybe a comfortable format for me to work within. Painting is both a safe space of comfort for me and also a terrifying, challenging space that’s constantly shifting and moving and is infinitely boundless. Reflecting now, I started working in this way to form intimacy with myself. I was needing to go inward.  These paintings I make are evidence of what’s going on within me and thus all around me. Trying to make sense of it all, pushing my understanding of existence, questioning everything, and when it’s really good, it’s beyond knowing. Isn’t that what artists do? We observe, take in, and then because we exist in the freedom of what art is, we can go into unknown places and make those places available to others through the work we make. What I love about painting, specifically abstraction, and most especially the work from my favorite painters, is how much we can express, convey, say or present with a color, a form, a line…space. The universality of it is everything.

In tandem with painting, I’m deeply investigating the systems we live within and how they show up in me or how I participate in them. I’m wrestling with rape culture, whiteness, patriarchy, fatphobia, anti-blackness, gender, sexuality, capitalism, ableism, etc. and of course this isn’t apparent in the work, but if bell hooks taught us anything it was to think critically. If we can start there, then it’s sort of like dominos. So when I am making marks, what guides me is the search for the unknown and the continuous and non linear process of getting “there” is what you see and what I believe is at the core of liberation. I love how I can make these forms that seem to exist in an in-between. We are so controlled in every aspect of our lives, but inside we’re limitless, if we want to be, and when we go here or exist in that space, it extends beyond us, radiates out and into others. When I can get to that space in painting, then the painting can serve as a reminder to me (and others) of that possibility.

You display some of your art with quotes. How do you pick what fits with the work?

Last year I was reading a ton; lots of bell hooks, Toni Morrison, Octavia Butler, Ocean Vuong and I would pull quotes from what I was reading. I mean, they’re all just so quotable. You want to savor each line because each line is so full. I was bringing these writers into the studio with me and sitting them beside the paintings I was making. Maybe trying to make connections or just seeing how they interacted. It’s more for my personal consumption, to help me in my own thoughts. I did this in grad school with music I was listening to while painting. And then I’ve done it a bit in a book I made where paintings are interspersed with quotes I pulled from my life…things I overheard people say, nothing deep, more like a nod to how we were living at a certain time. I usually have a long list of “writings” or quotes and I think the visual and textual just gravitate towards one another, or it’s a feeling, a curiosity, or a trying-on of sorts. In grad school, you know, we had to produce a written thesis along with an exhibition of works and instead of positioning my work in an art history context, I wrote a sort of memoir-ish prose that sat with the paintings, again, quotes or moments pulled from my everyday and deep past. I reckon I was giving them context. It sort of tied place and memory to all the unlearning I was going through at the time.

Tell us more about the community arts organization. What’s your favorite part about working with it?

I am the art + community coordinator for Center for Visual Artists (CVA) in Greensboro, North Carolina. We are located inside the city’s Cultural Arts Center which is home to 20 or so art non-profits. CVA has a gallery that shows mostly local artists year round as well as classrooms and a ceramic studio that hosts art classes for all ages. We work to make art and art experiences accessible to all.

My favorite part is most definitely the people. I get to work with all different kinds of artists, which can be difficult because so many personalities, but…so many personalities! Most, if not all(?) of my friends are artists and many of them I met or became close with through the CVA. We work with artists of all ages and all levels, so I get the privilege of having a front row seat to this community and I get to support them, shine a light, which most always creates ripples.

In this work I get to see the growth of an artist, their work and themselves. I see the confidence grow, the skill, the joy, the opportunities and in some cases they are growing their families at the same time and it feels full circle. Community is a buzzword these days, but that right there is community to me, to be amongst that growth and to do what we can to provide resources and support so it can continue and thrive. That is the goal. The relationships and community connectedness is life giving.

And my team. As a small organization and team of 3, we don’t have many resources, but we have a lot of freedom in our ideas and are united in our dedication to supporting artists. We continue to try new things, seeing what works, what doesn’t. And we work directly with the community to give them what they need. There’s so much collaboration going on, which is my favorite way to work.

I am a highly anxious person, for a variety of reasons, but when I allow myself to step back, I am reminded that I spend my days talking with artists and working for us. So many artists showed their art for the very first time at CVA, sold their first piece, bought their first piece, made their first piece or gained community. Art makes our world go round and as artists, we are severely undervalued, so to work everyday to uplift artists and art and in the town where I was born and raised?…Wow, what a life.

You also mention writing for The Coastal Post. What kind of pieces do you write?

We do studio visit write ups at The Coastal Post. I started when I was living in the Bay Area after Francesca Cozzone, one of the co-founders, visited my studio in grad school and wrote about my process. I began writing about the work of the artists in my life, aiming to choose artists who I feel could offer something different, whether it’s how they’re thinking or what they’re doing with their work…there’s usually a social aspect. And I look to spotlight artists who are somewhat in their beginnings. It’s been incredible to see them grow.

In Oakland I wrote about self-taught artist Wardell Mcneal who was making these incredible drawings on the subway during his commute and then would turn them into paintings, working in a corner of his tiny bedroom, teaching himself to paint from books. Wardell now has a studio outside of his bedroom and is represented by pt.2 gallery in Oakland. You should go look at his work and do a deep dive so you can see the drawings.

I continued writing articles once I moved back home to NC and I focused on the local artists here. Ashley Johnson is an artist in Winston-Salem and I wrote about her in 2016 after she released a series of incredible photographs, the first we had really seen from her. Then later I profiled an exhibition and performance she presented in Greensboro. She currently has a solo show in Brooklyn presented by The Coastal Post co-founder Nick Naber.

That’s the cool aspect of the Coastal Post. The co-founders bookend us from the 2 coasts, NY and SF, and the writers are dispersed around the country (and abroad), usually focusing on the artists relative to them. Connections get made and the visibility helps the art spread. 

Beautiful and thought provoking words and art. You can check out more of Devon’s work on their website and Instagram @devonairess. Thanks for sharing, Devon!

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Artist Spotlight

Artist Spotlight: Haley Strassburger

In the Artist Spotlight series of blog posts, The Layered Onion highlights an artist in the community. We’ll get a chance to learn more about them and their work.

In this post we are featuring Haley Strassburger (they/she), a mixed-medium journaler. Haley has taken bullet journaling to the next level and has made both her daily tasks and powerful messages pop and come alive as art. She also is not afraid to mix in different materials to create what she calls “spreads.” It brings the work three dimensional – and sometimes engages your additional senses (note the olfactory addition in the below)!

Haley did a Q&A with The Layered Onion, talking about her art:

Can you describe your art style?

I consider my art style to be a mix of function and freedom— I love utilizing my bullet journal to keep up with day-to-day tasks, but I also love having a chance to be creative through a variety of colors, mediums, etc.

What’s your favorite part about journaling?

I think my favorite part of journaling is just how versatile it is; there’s no wrong way to create anything, and the ways in which journaling mixes writing, drawing, scrapbooking, and so many other activities really allows you to be as creative or rigid as you’d like. I’m physically disabled, and though my journaling isn’t nearly as precise as it used to be (I have hand tremors and mobility issues), I can still find new ways to express myself.

You have an extensive collection of stickers. How do you choose them and which spreads they belong in?

Haha, I love stickers, and I won’t lie when I say my collection is growing a bit out of control! At first, I mostly picked stickers up from Amazon and other big-box retailers, but lately I’ve started supporting a bunch of small businesses that I’ve discovered on Instagram and Etsy! I’ve been fortunate enough to work with a couple of small creators, like @bluemoon.paper, @noellepapershop, @rusticrose.shop, @lixing.co, and more— I have discount codes available in my bio on Instagram (@spoonie.bujo). I also am affiliated with my two favorite journal companies— @archerandolive and @notebook_therapy— and I have affiliate/discount codes in my bio as well.

Overall, I like to select stickers that fit my themes, whether that’s based on their colors, imagery, shape, or other factors. As I mentioned before, I’m physically disabled, so I also often use stickers to cover up shaky lines or other “mistakes”— or to insert artistic visuals that I can’t create with my own two hands!

 What kind of markers/pens do you use?

Just like with my stickers, I tend to pick up pens and markers from everywhere! Lately, I’m a really big fan of @archerandolive’s Acrylographs and Calliograph pens, but I also just love a good fine-tipped colored pen from Staedtler. I’m left-handed, so I have to be very selective with my pens to avoid smearing or ink staining, and all of these options work great!

 You have a good eye for color. What inspires you from a color perspective?

Thank you so much! I have synesthesia, which is a perceptual phenomenon in which colors often become associated with sounds, sights, sensations, and more; basically, if I’m listening to music, I often see a color appear in my mind that somehow connects to the music I hear! It’s considered an overlapping of mental processes (visual/auditory processing), and though it can be frustrating at times— because my brain can get a bit overstimulated!— it also allows me to have infinite color and stylistic options in my creations.

You are an extensive reader. Any recommendations for the crew from your recent readings?

I largely read poetry and nonfiction, particularly because I’m often really busy with my gender studies masters degree program— but I’m also a big fan of the classics (like Dracula and Les Miserables)! I’d definitely encourage checking out Dracula Daily, which is a new multimedia reading experience for Dracula (in which emails are sent out each day, in correlation with the book’s timeline!). My all-time favorite read is Crush, a collection of poetry by Richard Siken.

Haley gives us a great example of how art can be accessible and part of how we go about our daily lives. You can see more from Haley on her Instagram – @spoonie.bujo!

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Artist Spotlight

Artist Spotlight: Martina Collender

In the Artist Spotlight series of blog posts, The Layered Onion highlights an artist in the community. We’ll get a chance to learn more about them and their work.

In this post we are featuring Martina Teeny Collender, a playwright and writer based in Ireland. In her words:

“Martina Collender is a queer disabled Playwright, Director, Stage Manager, Drama and Creative Writing tutor, Poet and Spoken Word artist living and working in Waterford City and County. She has been commissioned to write for Loose Screw Theatre Company, RigOut Productions, Trinity Players, Comeragh Wilds Festival, Imagine Arts Festival, Waterford Youth Arts, Brothers Of Charity, Rehab Care Waterford, Waterpark School, Red Kettle Theatre Company, Garter Lane Arts Centre and Theatre Royal Waterford. Two of her plays Crotty The Highway Man and Pettiecoat Loose have been published. Her work has been published in The Waxed Lemon and The Lonely Voice run by the Irish Writer’s Centre. She has over ten years experience teaching drama and Creative Writing to young people aged 4 to 19 and to adults with disabilities at Waterford Youth Arts, Brothers Of Charity, Rehab Care Waterford, Blast, Teachers Centre Waterford, Waterpark School, Presentation School, The Mercy and Imagine Arts Festival.” 

One of Martina’s works, Crotty The Highway Man, was recently performed at the end of April and beginning of May by the Dungarvan Drama Circle. The compelling teaser: “Step back in time and into local folklore to join us for this immersive storytelling experience. Up in the Comeragh Mountains, on the doorstep of the local legend William Crotty, encounter the story of the highwayman who stole from the rich to give to the poor. Meet Crotty, the woman who loved him and the man who betrayed him…” The performance was outdoors at Crottys Lake.

Martina did a Q&A with The Layered Onion, talking about her plays and inspiration:

Did you always know what you wanted to do from a young age?

When I was 16 I saw a play called To Leap From Paradise by the late great Jim Daly. When I saw it I thought “I want to do that” and that was the moment for me.

What’s the process been like as an playwright?

Research. Research. Research. No matter what the topic is read or better still talk to as many people as you can. Theatre comes from real life experiences and by engaging with people you can achieve the ultimate goal of putting someone’s life and heart on the stage.

Are there performances or characters you’ve written that you remember fondly or are especially proud of?

If The Lights Change, which is dedicated to my sister Mary is about siblings, you rarely see siblings portrayed in the Arts and I am proud of doing it justice.

What’s your favorite part about writing? What empowers you?

The first read-through with the actors, hearing your words voiced for the first time is a rush and so exciting.

What led you towards writing for theatre? What do you find most challenging and most rewarding?

Getting funding is the most challenging, it’s so so hard. The most rewarding thing is opening night seeing the actors, director, Stage Manager, lighting designer, sound designer all add their piece to create the magic of your words is wonderful.

What is your favorite thing to write? Where do you draw your inspiration?

I draw inspiration from everyday life. I like to write what will give the voice to the voiceless.

What themes do you include in your work?

Pro Choice, Pro Euthanasia, LGBTI rights, Traveller rights, miscarriages, alcoholism, obsessive behaviour, folk lore, rape culture, relationships, stillborn, FFA, gay rights, religion, mental health nationality, anything I’m passionate about.

Anything that’s inspiring or exciting you that you’re working on right now?

I’m working on piece about Rape culture, how the guards treat rape victims. It’s tough but should make an exciting piece of theatre.

You can check out more from Martina on Twitter (@Playwrightcoll and @Martinacollend1), Instagram (@martinacollenderplaywright), or Facebook.

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Artist Spotlight

Artist Spotlight: Laurie Dameron

In the Artist Spotlight series of blog posts, The Layered Onion highlights an artist in the community. We’ll get a chance to learn more about them and their work.

In this post, we are featuring Laurie Dameron. Laurie is a talented musician based in Colorado. 

A Billboard Magazine award recipient, Laurie has been playing the guitar for over five decades. Between solo performances and performances with her band, Laurie D and the Blues Babes, she has performed for hundreds of venues in and out of Colorado over the past 20 years.

Laurie is extremely versatile and includes selections from all genres, allowing her to play a variety of venues. She has entertained at Boulder Creek Festival, Capital Hill People’s Fair and A Taste of Colorado and the 2008 Colorado Democratic Convention to name a few. Other performances include Denver’s popular clubs, including Dazzle Jazz Club, The D Note, Mead Street Station and the historic Stanley Hotel in Beautiful Estes Park.

Get a 60 second intro to Laurie in her own words here

Laurie did a Q&A with The Layered Onion, talking about her music and activism:

You have a lovely voice. What first got you into music? 

My mom probably got me singing shortly after birth! I learned three part harmony driving in the car with my mom and sister. 

You’ve been a musician your entire career. When did you know this was what you wanted to do?

I was in love with music nearly all my life. But probably when I was about 7 years old. I wrote my first song, with three part harmony, in 4th grade and we performed it at the school talent show. 

What do you enjoy most about being a musician and songwriter?

I am happiest when I’m playing music and so happy when making other people happy with my music! I LOVE entertaining – can’t even describe it – my spirit soars when playing! 

What influences your musical style?

The first album I ever owned was James Taylor’s “Sweet Baby James,” my second was Bonnie Raitt’s “Give it Up” and then Pat Metheny. So there’s your folk, blues and jazz. 

What’s your favorite song you’ve written?

“Sunlight in a Snowstorm.” On my birthday, May 5th in 1978, it snowed three feet here in Boulder, Colorado. So I was stuck inside for a couple of days and wrote this instrumental. I had two old cassette decks and recorded the rhythm guitar on one deck and then added bass while playing along with the other deck, then added the lead guitar by bouncing one more time. I finally recorded it professionally in 1999. 

Do you have a favorite song that you perform?

Oh gee – there are so many. But maybe “I Can’t Wait to See You Again.” It was the fastest song I wrote. My date dropped me at home and I came into the house thinking “I can’t wait to see her again!!!” and I wrote it in like 30 minutes! The song received Honorable Mention in the 2008 Billboard Magazine World Song Contest. 

As an environmentalist, you have a multimedia approach to activism. What led you to creating music videos to promote sustainable habits? 

I’ve always shared simple actions we can all do every day to be more healthy and sustainable when performing but in 2012 I created Spaceship Earth: What Can I Do? I believe by combining art, music and science, it uses both sides of the brain making an even stronger impact. I’ve had several science teachers agree with that. 

We’ve had an eventful last couple of years in terms of the climate – seeing an increase in fires, tornados, and more. What worries you the most when you think about the future? What gives you the most hope?

What worries me the most is that so many folks are apathetic, not paying attention and not taking action. Of course this has a lot to do with our economy. Folks are working two and three jobs to barely get by! So they don’t have the time to learn and understand. But I’m hopeful as Mr Rogers said in his 60 second YouTube video “Look for the Helpers” and there are a lot of helpers out there! 

You make it a point to actively engage children in thinking about the future. Have you had any memorable interactions that have excited you?

I was very excited to share Spaceship Earth: What Can I Do? with around 60 5th graders and afterwards they said they were going to get their school to stop using Styrofoam in the cafeteria! One other time kids were asking for my autograph! That was so very cute and exciting! 

Anything else you would want to share with the community?

As Bill McKibben, founder of 350.org said in 2016: “We’re under attack from climate change — and our only hope is to mobilize like we did in WWII.” I implore EVERYONE to practice simple actions every day. And if you need a list of simple actions please write to me or watch “Spaceship Earth: What Can I Do” on YouTube for free. 

You can see – and listen to! – more of Laurie’s work and music on her YouTube channel and Instagram.

Thanks, Laurie!

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Artist Spotlight

Artist Spotlight: Katie Sanford

In the Artist Spotlight series of blog posts, The Layered Onion highlights an artist in the community. We’ll get a chance to learn more about them and their work.

In this post, we are featuring Katie Sanford, a writer who uses her experiences with mental and emotional wellness like schizoaffective disorder to break down stigma through speaking and writing, including in her blog, Not Like the Others. Katie is a staunch mental health advocate.

In her own words: “Hi, my name is Katie, and over the course of my life, I’ve struggled with mental illnesses like depression, obsessive compulsive disorder, post traumatic stress disorder, and schizoaffective disorder. My illnesses brought me fear, shame, and a profound feeling of isolation. Recovery wasn’t always easy, but, despite the obstacles, I’ve accomplished a great deal. I graduated from a highly ranked college, hold down jobs, have meaningful relationships, and now speak publicly about living with mental illness, primarily schizoaffective disorder. I created [a] blog to break down preconceived notions about mental illness, and to show you that, not only can you go on to have a fulfilling life after being diagnosed with a mental illness or brain disease, but also that everyone’s story is unique, and, even when you’re not like the others, you’re not alone. Whether you have a mental illness yourself or are looking to help or better support someone else, know that no matter what you’re going through, there is hope.”

Hope is everything and it is ok to not be like the others – you can be your best you and that is amazing and deserves to be celebrated. 

Moving on to the Q+A portion…

What drew you to making advocacy your life’s work?

When I was diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder at 17, I felt like my life was over. I struggled with many things ranging from academics to shame and feeling like my dreams were no longer possible. Over time, I learned how to live with it and realized I could still achieve my dreams, and I wanted everyone to know, including people who didn’t live with schizophrenia spectrum disorders. I didn’t want anyone to have to claw their way through it the way I had, and I quickly discovered that sharing my story could change people’s minds, offer them hope, and help them better understand the disorder, whether they lived with it or not. I want to make the world a place where people like me are supported and understood and have a better shot at a positive outcome. 

What do you find most rewarding about it?

It is so rewarding to hear people say I changed their view or gave them hope. It makes me feel like all of the struggles I went through to get my life back on track and the anxiety I face every time I share my story are all worth it.

Where are the main challenges you find yourself puzzling through?

I think one of the biggest challenges I face is visibility. I have to fight feelings of not being good enough and fears that I will get backlash or that people just won’t care every time I put something out there. I’ve been working on building my social media presence to share my blog, my videos, and my thoughts in general, but it’s hard to fight those feelings and also to find enough time. I don’t have the funding to do advocacy full time, so I’m working and trying to balance my job as a legal assistant, advocacy, sharing what I do, and still taking the time to care of myself, and it’s tough sometimes.

What is it like to be a speaker?

Being a speaker is nerve wracking sometimes, but I have found that my message and my story hit home even more when people hear it directly from me, and the response I get from that is really rewarding. Plus it provides the opportunity for a live Q&A, which I always like. Because of the pandemic, it’s mostly been over Zoom lately, but I’m hoping to be able to do more in person talks soon. I find it’s easier to connect with people when I’m speaking in person.

Are there major challenges you see as part of your work that stick with you?

Yes! One of the biggest challenges I face is making sure that people understand that what I talk about covers not only people with schizophrenia who operate at a high level, but also those who don’t. I am constantly bringing up the fact that we are all human, and it is the same disease, and that I could just as easily be one of the people who find themselves at rock bottom, and there is hope for those who do find themselves there because it is so important for people to understand that. I try to take great care to make sure that what I say and write is inclusive, but it can be difficult sometimes because what strikes a chord with those who function higher and the caregivers of those who are struggling immensely is not always the same. 

How do you engage with your writing?

My writing often begins with a thought that becomes an idea and then I’m off! I am passionate about what I write, so, in situations where I have that spark of inspiration, it just pours out onto the keyboard. When I don’t have a specific idea or am trying to complete a piece I had previously started, it can get a bit more difficult and I will begin searching for inspiration in books, on social media, or online, which I don’t always find. But when I have that bright spot of inspiration, it’s like second nature and I become immersed in the thought or experience about which I am writing.

Any stories that you’d want to share with the community?

After my first time speaking for Crisis Intervention Training for Sheriff officers with NAMI Chicago, I had a few people wait to talk to me afterwards. One said that he had been avoiding this training course because he didn’t want to have to hear about how you have to handle people with mental illnesses with kid gloves. He said that hearing my story changed his whole mindset and he wanted to do whatever he could to help others. The other man told me that his sister had been diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder and he and his family didn’t really get it because she seemed fine. He said that now he understood and he was going to go home and call his sister. Stories like this are why I do what I do and they are reminders of how powerful stories of lived experience truly can be. 

Any websites or links you’d like to share or comment on?

For general info on mental illness, I always recommend NAMI.org. For those looking for support for themselves or another with schizophrenia, sczaction.org has a helpline among other resources. And for those who are students of any age living with an illness involving psychosis (or advocates, teachers, supporters, etc), I highly recommend checking out Students With Psychosis at www.sws.ngo. They have a ton of programming including support groups, creative meetings, speakers and more.

Home – Schizophrenia & Psychosis Action Alliance
The Schizophrenia and Psychosis Action Alliance stands for hope and recovery through the promotion of education, support programs, & better public policysczaction.org

You can learn more about Katie on her website or check out the Not Like the Others Etsy shop for some cool designs! Thanks Katie for sharing your lived experience and inspiring us all to be brave!

Katie’s Websites/Links:
Personal website: https://katiesanford.net/wp/
Etsy: NotLikeTheOthersShop
Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/katiesanford

 

Categories
Artist Spotlight

Artist Spotlight: Mohammad Amin Nayebi

In the Artist Spotlight series of blog posts, the Layered Onion highlights an artist in the community. We’ll get a chance to learn more about them and their work.

In this post, we are featuring Mohammad Amin Nayebi. Amin is a photographer from Afghanistan. Amin’s work includes portraits, landscapes, candids and more. Amin worked closely with a Non Governmental Agency (NGO) in Afghanistan which teamed up with the Memory Project.  For many years the Memory Project organized youth arts activities in Kabul with the help of several Afghan youth leaders.  When the Taliban took over in August 2021, those youth leaders fled the country with their families.  Their story was covered by the New York Times.   

How did you get involved with the Memory Project?

I have done three projects for the International Program of the Memory Project in Afghanistan. The director of Memory Project, is Mr.  Benjamin Schumacker from USA, this project was amazing and I love it, not only me but all the kids benefited from this project were happy and smiling, the rest of children asked me to continue this project in Afghanistan but everyone know that the situation changed and we lost that happiness and smiles, during these projects in Afghanistan I have photographs thousands of Kids and will never forget the memories of the Memory Project.

How did you get your start in photography?

Since 2011, I started working in an Afghan American NGO to August 2021, I was working in many positions but because my photography vision was better than my other colleagues, I covered all events of this NGO. In 2016, a pregnant dog settled in our office area and She gave birth to 10 children, a few days later when she was playing with her children, I took pictures of them and posted on my Facebook page, my friends surprised and encouraged me by their messages and comments under that post, when I received that much love, I really encourage myself and I decided to continue on this path because I had the talent in it and love photography. This story was the beginning of my photography.

You do many kinds of photography, ranging from landscapes to portraits. What is your approach when you take a photo? Does your approach to taking a photo change depending on the subject?

I have studied photography in general and I have not chosen a specific style for myself, I like to take photos in any range and capture that moment, I know this is not right but I like every range and I want to photograph everything and keep it with me, but among all, I like most portrait and nature photography.

Band-e-Amir Different View

What do you like best about the medium of photography?

Photography is an art that every part of it is lovely and I cannot prefer one part than another part, but in photography I like humans and animals more and I want to capture a lot of photos of them, the style I like most is portraits and nature. And I love to capture real and documentary images of human and animal life. I love to have a professional camera and use it for my photography dreams.

Portrait, Kabul, Afghanistan

What kinds of challenges might you run into when taking a photo?

Photography in addition to being a beautiful art, is also a challenging art. In order to be able to take a lot of photos, we have to spend a lot of money on it. There are all kinds of dangers and challenges in photography and it can even endanger human lives, but the major challenges I may face. People’s actions and reactions can be, insults and humiliation can happen, they don’t have the photography documents and permissions, the camera may be broken or taken, and even the arrest of the photographer can be and dozens of other challenges that depend on the place and time to occur.

Is there anything else you’d like to share?

During this period, I held photography classes for 25 girls and taught them basic photography. At the end of this course, we hosted an exhibition and the students printed and displayed their pictures in the Kabul university. It is very valuable for me to share my art with others.

Thank you for sharing and walking us through your love of photography!

Categories
Artist Spotlight

Artist Spotlight: MJ

It’s time for another Artist Spotlight! In this series of blog posts, The Layered Onion gets to know an artist in the community and learn a little more about them and their work. Today, MJ (she/they), an illustrator and creator currently based in Australia, will be sharing a series of works that engage with mental and emotional health challenges in the form of self care art.

But first, let’s learn a little bit more about MJ in MJ’s own words:

I’m MJ and I love to make illustrations. I grew up in South Korea and currently live in Melbourne, Australia.

My illustrations are all about mental health, self-love and personal growth. I create to help sad souls who struggle with their mental health issues to feel less alone. I also create art to heal my own. Making art is helping me a lot to open up and let out. I’d like to let depressed warriors be heard through my art.

I believe that little things can lighten up our mood and bring moments of joy. My art is here to remind you to take care of your mental health. It will help you to take a tiny little step to make it through the day. My arts are a mindful gift for sad souls who want to be kind to themselves and motivated.

Here are a couple of MJ’s illustrations:

MJ's illustration. MJ focuses on self care and mental health in art. 

Originally from South Korea, MJ resides in Australia.
MJ, I am valuable even tho I don’t know who I am, Print
Link for purchase
MJ. From South Korea, lives in Australia. Arts focuses on mental health - mental and emotional health challenges.
MJ, It’s a Beautiful Day, Print
Link for purchase
MJ's illustration. MJ focuses on self care and mental health in art.

Creates stickers, a sticker can go where you need to see it to help with mental and emotional health challenges. Digital.
Various stickers from the “It’s okay” sticker pack.

I find the use of color and form very striking in these works. Many pieces of MJ’s artwork are also available for purchase in the form of art prints, stickers, even journals on MJ’s Etsy Shop, which can be found by searching for “SadHumansHope” in Etsy or by clicking on this link. This Artwork Spotlight also happens to coincide with the launch of nine new sticker packs in MJ’s Etsy shop (there’s also a price discount for the few days after the launch). 

You can follow MJ on social media in the following places: Instagram and TikTok. MJ’s handle for both of these platforms is @hhumanmj. Also don’t forget to check out MJ’s website at www.hhumanmj.com, which features more illustrations, comics, etc. I’m a new follower on Instagram, and can attest to the content’s quality, especially as a fellow creative. I love the journal prompts in MJ’s Instagram stories!

Categories
Artist Spotlight

Artist Spotlight: Carrie Ravenscroft

Today, we’ll be sharing our next artist spotlight! In this series of blog posts, we’ll get to know an artist in the community and learn a little more about them and their work. 

For our second post, we will be featuring Carrie Ravenscroft. Take it away, Carrie!

Artist Bio:

I’m Carrie Ravenscroft, a watercolour illustrator and mental health advocate from London. I am cisgender, female, queer, white and living with a chronic disability. 

More recently, I consider myself neurodivergent, as I have gone through a therapeutic journey that has enabled me to use my experience to support others.  I aim to address discrimination, stigmatisation and ignorance in my work, in a way that is tolerable through colourful, whimsical and nonsensical paintings. As part of my recovery, and to help others feel less alone, I intentionally talk openly about mental health.

As I believe creativity can be a powerful tool for wellbeing, I encourage people to engage in artmaking; I’m dedicated to this socially engaged work, such as facilitating Creative LGBTQI+ and Women’s Spaces voluntarily at a charity. I am also a mental health support worker at a mental health charity.

My most recent illustrations have been for Disability Arts Online and Wellcome Collection.  With a background in Fine Art and Care Work, I am now moving towards graduating as an Art Therapist. My professional life and personal art are kept separate, however my illustrations often draw from life experience.​

Oh and I absolutely LOVE blending pretty, shiny colours, painting on pieces of cardboard, breaking art rules and mixing media in ridiculous ways!

Thanks, Carrie! Below is a piece she is currently working on. Several of Carrie’s other projects can be seen on her website at carrieraven.com. You can also follow Carrie on Instagram at the handle @ravenscroftcarrie

Work in progress – Arts council funded project ‘The Bigger Picture’, on individualism & connection as a neurodivergent person. Iridescent watercolour, ink, acrylic + marker pens on found cardboard. Each piece is 55 x 35cm

Categories
Artist Spotlight

Artist Spotlight: John F. Gerrard

Today, we’ll be sharing our very first artist spotlight! In this series of blog posts, we’ll get to know an artist in the community and learn a little more about them and their work. 

For our first post, we will be featuring John F. Gerrard.  John is sharing his artist statement and a little bit more about him. Take it away, John!

Portrait by Emma Palm at Workshop Studios
Photo by Emma Palm

I am a multidisciplinary artist, with a focus on visual art. In my teens and 20s I was active creatively as a musician, touring across North America and playing locally. During this time I got my feet wet with visual art, doing graphic design work for bands and small businesses. I went to ACAD with the intention to pursue a design degree, but became obsessed with creating with charcoal and paint. I majored in drawing at ACAD and then went to work at a commercial sign company. In 2016 I left to pursue art full-time.

In 2018 I was trained by the Canadian Mental Health Association as a peer support worker. Since then I’ve been developing my art practice with mental health advocacy work.  

A highlight for me has been working with Branch Out Neurological Foundation, making images based on interactions with neuroscientists, and taking part in their charity events for three years in a row now. 

In 2019 I had my first international show in Chicago as a part of the Some People Everybody exhibition. This multidisciplinary project examines the ethics, people, processes, and systems that constitute the maintenance of, and barriers to, health for human beings.

Here is John’s Artist Statement:

As a visual artist I’m currently focused on making drawings that are text based and speculative. The work is meant to be enjoyed for its form and aesthetic quality, but also invites investigations into the strands of literal meaning. The text is readable in linear and non linear ways, and is themed on subjects such as the mind, free will and how that relates to whether we discover or create identities.

Formally, the work usually consists of compositions of multiple panels. I draw each panel by hand and then invert the black and white digitally. After they are inverted and in a grid, I mirror the piece both vertically and horizontally. This symmetry gives order to the disorderly nature of the vast and varied text. It holds the tension of a middle zone. The finished work is presented as an image that is playful with the rational and the chaotic. There is structure and randomness coexisting with design. 

I’m influenced by other artists who approach their work without direct representation of the physical world, as well as makers who could be classified as “outsider” artists. I find myself coming back to the work of Jean Michel Basquiat, Hilma af Klint, and Agnes Martin, and I’m inspired by the way they make images. When I was at art college, I was exposed to the beatniks, as well as the godfather of beatniks, William Burroughs. His non-traditional use of text as well as those of the Dadaists motivate me to create in the way I do. 

Being introspective, it is a very personal project. I think externalizing our inner worlds in this way can be very rewarding, and that so often our thoughts and our guesses at their implications swirl through our heads in an awful repetition. A lot of it I don’t think we’re aware of. By making this work, I continue to learn about myself, making conscious the issues and ideas I’m encountering.

These drawings are so natural and exciting to make. Working on each panel, I feel connected to something beyond, and that my language to do so is developing further with each image. There is a story being built between and within each piece, and it’s an exercise of rationality and intuition to find or make those next steps with it. 

I’m often faced with conflicts that force me to rethink things and consider and reconsider possible end games, of what I could be suggesting or not suggesting inadvertently. I do my best to record that process on the page, as I want to reflect the realities of being conflicted or of not knowing. There is this back and forth, between doubt and feeling sure.  

Art is a great space for us to experiment with hard topics. The drawings serve as a way for me to explore my own beliefs and values, by examining my thoughts through a physical process on the page.

You can check out more about John and his work by visiting his website www.johnfgerrard.com. Here’s a preview of some of John’s work:

jfg_coldcluster.jpg
Cold Cluster, John F. Gerrard
jfg_crowd15.jpg
Crowd Drawing # 15, John F. Gerrard