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Artwork Spotlight

Artwork Spotlight Julie Kitzes’ Panic Cattack

In the Artwork Spotlight series of blog posts, The Layered Onion highlights a specific work by an artist in the community. These works could range from short stories to visual art to music and more! Today, Julie Kitzes (she/her) will be sharing her piece Panic Cattack.

Julie took the time to participate in a Q+A with The Layered Onion, but before we share the dialogue, here’s a little bit more about Julie:

Julie grew up in a remote wooded area of western Canada where she became accustomed to living in the wilderness and developed a deep respect for animals and the environment. She’s loved drawing and creating since the time she could hold a pencil, and would often take inspiration from observing the natural world around her. She originally set out to study veterinary medicine, but when a neurological condition left her too ill for the physical demands that entailed, she decided to pursue art seriously. After enduring six brain surgeries, Julie graduated summa cum laude with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Illustration in December of 2017. Currently residing in northern Colorado, she uses her personal work to examine the connections between life, death, growth, and decay, as well as the various plights faced by our natural world. Julie specializes in pet portraiture and animal art, and believes in creating impactful work that touches her audience while keeping art affordable and accessible to everyone.

Julie Kitzes' Panic Cattack that shows a panic attack and anxiety in pets. 

An abstract work of animal art that displays anxiety from this Colorado artist. 

Author of the coloring book Cats Being Dicks. Cat art.
Julie Kitzes, Panic Cattack.

Now on to the Q+A portion…

I love the inspiration of nature and animals in your pieces. I’m a cat person myself and love how you captured emotions and overlapped different parts of the cat body. It captures the complexity of emotion. How’d you approach painting this piece? What was your inspiration?

I approached this piece by sketching out different faces/poses on tracing paper and playing with layering them until I got a composition I liked. Once I solidified it I traced it onto bristol board and finished it with watercolors and colored pencil. I really wanted to capture the range of emotions encompassed by anxiety, and give it a frantic energy. My inspiration comes from having panic attacks myself, but also watching my cat Roger experience anxiety and restlessness when a family of barn swallows had decided to nest right outside our apartment door one spring.

Do you use live subjects for all of your work or also rely on some abstract?

I tend to blend the two in a lot of my work. I feel adding abstract or surreal elements makes the work more interesting.

What led you to the project of representing anxiety in pets?

This actually was a rejected piece of work for a pet anxiety clothing company, so I retained the rights to use it personally, and now it’s part of a bigger project I’m working on.

Are there any other series like this that drew on similar inspiration?

Yes! So the bigger project I’m working on is an illustrated book about mental health with my cat Roger as the main subject. He guides the reader through everything from emotional regulation to the importance of setting and maintaining healthy boundaries with others.

Anything else you would want to say about this work?

I’m excited to keep working on this project and to keep producing more pieces like this for it. I really hope the book, once finished, is able to be of some help to even a few people.

Any websites or links you’d like us to share?

Absolutely. My work can be seen at www.juliekitzes.com, or on Instagram at @juliekitzes. My book has it’s own Instagram where you can get behind the scenes peeks and tidbits from the book, and you can follow along with that one at @butwithcats. I’m always open to commissions and do a lot of pet portraits, so people can feel free to reach out to me at [email protected] for more info or even just to say hi!

In addition to pet portraits, Julie works on a wide variety of diverse projects, including but not limited to children’s literature to custom tattoos to hand-painted needlepoint canvases! 

Know a cat lover? Share Julie’s adult coloring book – Cats Being Dicks.

Cats Being Dicks adult coloring book. Animal art with cats at its finest.

Julie also maintains a blog, where she explores her experience with mental health and wellness and how it interacts with and influences her art. Her post on ADHD is particularly accessible, honest, and enlightening. Julie is currently working on a book project.

Thanks for sharing, Julie!

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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!

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Artwork Spotlight

Artwork Spotlight: Harper Hazelmare’s Current Dream

In the Artwork Spotlight series of blog posts, the Layered Onion highlights a specific work by an artist in the community. These works could range from short stories to visual art to music and more!

Today, Harper Hazelmare (she/they/y’all) will be sharing their piece Current Dream. Harper took the time to participate in a Q+A with The Layered Onion, but before we share the dialogue, here’s a little bit more about Harper:

Harper Hazelmare is a writer of cautionary tales and mental health articles, a professional Witch with her own company, and a keeper of a community apothecary. Their life in scenic painting took them into visual artistry with acrylics, watercolors, graphite, and a deep love of charcoal.

Harper is most influenced by the visual art of Kim Noble and Anders Zanichkowsky; with writing, their touchstones are Chuck Palahniuk and Shirley Jackson. She currently resides in the Midwest with her spouse and their two geriatric cats.

Now let’s get into the Q+A portion! Today, we’ll be discussing Current Dream. By way of introduction, Harper says “This piece has echoes of a Jennifer Dodson creation, Copy + Variant, coming from her series exploring neurology in transition.”

Harper Hazelmare, Current Dream, Charcoal and graphite.

What mediums did you use for this piece? I know you are a fan of multiple! 

Charcoal and graphite, my favorite combo!

When you look at this piece, what stands out most to you or draws you back in?  

I still see the face in it which I originally saw upon completion; this is a subconscious theme in my work. When making visual art, there are usually 2-5 alters present with us co-creating simultaneously or taking turns—something which lends itself to “hidden” discoveries within each piece, some of which are quite tiny. However, the main draw for me in Current Dream is the stark lines, like a person struggling to practice control and commitment.

You also write mental health articles—do your written and visual artwork play together and expand on each other?  

They tend to be miles apart, actually! I’ve gotten feedback on how approachable my written work is while our visual art is consistently intense and abstract. That said, I’m launching a new book project this month and considering a bookmaking side project to go with it. Stay tuned!

Neurology in transition is a complex and inspiring topic. You mention you have some background in science, was that part of the inspiration for this piece?  

Neurology in transition is ASTOUNDING. My background is in medicine plus I’ve been committed to recovering from two TIAs and the education/retraining that warrants; I’ve had a front row seat to my brain’s on-going evolution. But don’t we all? I applied this same methodology toward understanding our DID and life as a system, life as a multiple. Much like the evolution from TIAs, and being human in general, our system keeps expanding and contracting as well—we’re currently in our fifth generation.

Is there any website or social media page(s) you’d like us to share for folks interested in seeing more of your work?  People can find my writing online at Medium and other work at my company Brown Horse Herbal.

Thank you for your responses and sharing Current Dream!

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Artwork Spotlight

Artwork Spotlight: Dee Rovetta’s you paint like a child

In the Artwork Spotlight series of blog posts, the Layered Onion highlights a specific work by an artist in the community. These works could range from short stories to visual art to music and more!

Today, Dee Rovetta (she/her/hers) will be sharing her piece you paint like a child. Dee was kind enough to share some thoughts about the piece, but before we jump into the Q+A segment, let’s learn a little more about Dee.

Dee Rovetta is an artist currently residing in Raleigh, NC with her boyfriend and two cats. She finds comfort and relief in experimentation with several mediums and bright, loud colors. Her journey as an artist began in February 2020 on a whim, starting with watercolor and quickly moving to acrylic; now her favorite medium. She believes in making with intention, being introspective, jumping right into new territories without a second thought, and not expecting too much of yourself in the process except peace.

Topics like existing with stress, anxiety, and internal pressure to feel happy are discussed regularly through her use of organic drips of paint, haphazard but intentional lines, fingerpainted bursts of color, and unruly marks with markers. A longtime advocate for self-mental health, holding a Bachelor’s degree in Psychology from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and currently pursuing her Master’s in Clinical Mental Health Counseling from Walden University, Dee hopes she can inspire those who feel the same way she does through her honest artistic journey.

Now, let’s jump into the Q+A portion. This is what Dee has to say as an introduction to you paint like a child:

It was genuinely a lot of fun to make. I usually don’t like cleaning up messes I make while painting but the whole thing — seeing how the paint mixed together when I washed my hands — it was a full circle moment, like I had finally closed the chapter on a particularly miserable part of my life and turned it into something to grow from. Bye preschool teacher me, hello budding artist and counselor me type stuff.

Dee Rovetta, you paint like a child. acrylic, paint pen and gold metallic marker on 36×48 canvas. August 2021.

I saw that this piece is just one of several works that make up your Inner Child series (link to check out more of the series here). You describe the series as a way of “processing your childhood,” using techniques like finger-painting thoughtfully to underscore and explore the boldness and curiosity of your younger self. Where did you find inspiration to begin work on this particular series?

The inspiration for the Inner Child series came from my time as an assistant preschool teacher. I taught all ages from infants to pre-K for about 2 years up until June 2020. I was in charge of lesson planning for a week while the head teacher was on vacation, so I remember being super excited to finally do my own thing with the class. I’ve never been a fan of those cutesy “art projects” for kids that end up being the teacher telling each kid where to glue something or only use this color here, etc. it’s very restrictive and I could tell all the kids were bored out of their minds — I would be too if I had to do art every day but only how someone older than me said to do it!

Long story short, I read my two year old class a book called Little Blue and Little Yellow by Leo Lioni: plainly speaking, it was about two colors, both different in their own ways, who became friends and, in turn, became a completely different color to the shock of the people around them. 

I let them finger paint with blue and yellow for art that day and, I kid you not, every single child had a distinct way of working with the paint. Some didn’t mix the colors at all and wanted to wipe their hands after smudging each other, some covered the entire paper in color, and some decided to paint themselves instead of the paper. This was around the time where I was first starting to paint myself. The series is an ongoing project, mainly because I see our inner child as needing nurturing throughout our lives, not just at certain points.

you paint like a child was the first time I decided to paint with my hands. I felt comforted and weirded out by how good it felt to just spread paint where I wanted it to be, wipe my hands, and continue with the next color. I like using paints that have a “ketchup bottle” type packaging (like LUKAS acrylic studio paints!) so I can just squirt out blobs of color on the canvas and then figure out where it wants to be.

You mention the importance of intentional making in your work, but also the critical element of being able to jump right in. To me, your phrase of “haphazard but intentional lines” really captures this. For me, I often find these concepts at odds in my own work. I’ll often be introspective to the point where I become afraid of beginning and being able to represent my ideas—which is something I’m really looking to work on. How do you balance these two elements in your creative process? How does that translate into your artmaking in the moment?

My definition of intention isn’t just limited to knowing what marks you’re going to make or where the color is going to be placed, it’s about listening to yourself too. A lot of the time, I genuinely have no idea how a piece is going to come out because the process involves me not knowing and being ok with that, in a way. That’s where the haphazard comes in. Sometimes I’ll look at something I did and be so critical of it, and then once I’ve done a few more layers or added details, it makes sense and I’m more welcoming of it than before. Right now I’m at a point where I don’t know what I want to make next. It’s an exploratory period, so the haphazard-ness of it all has taken over the intention. I intend to explore, that’s it!

What a great way to think about intention—a definition that allows you not to have all the answers (who does, anyhow?). I want to switch gears and touch on another medium you work in…

You also have a collection of beautiful handmade earrings. Can you describe a little bit about how your process differs from your work on the canvas to this collection?

Thank you so much for your questions and compliments, I really appreciate it! My earring making process is a little different than my work on canvas — I tend to work with polymer clay when I’m frustrated and need to bang on things/chop things up but painting is my respite, my place to calm down. 

Thank you so much for your thoughtful responses. If you would like to see more of Dee’s work (and I can strongly recommend that you do!), please check out her Instagram @rovettadesignco and website here.

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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

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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