The mural project is underway and we are now entering the 4th week! The team of artists have become a family as they are learning to work together and make the peice beautiful. The lead artist Victor (working with the Star of Hope) has encouraged, inspired, and coached the team through various techniques such as layering colors, mapping out the composition, and placing the paint with different brush strokes. During our first meeting, we visioned and spoke out each of our desires for the piece then transitioned into building the frame, glazing the canvas, and finally adding color. It has been a beautiful process to watch different people come together through the avenue of art. The team is expected to finish the project ahead of schedule and will be beginning the details of the landscape this upcoming week. The title of the piece “Colorful and Abundant life” was inspired by a certain kind of tree which grows in the rainforest (rainbow eucalyptus:pictured above right). The group united around the idea to make the piece colorful and paradise inspired. |
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LoveIsStudios quote from Donald Collins, Founder/Director and #TAPHArtistPartner , for the Abundant Life Mural Project: "Just as the tree provides life to many just by the very nature of its being, so the artist brings inspiration to all just by the nature of creativity. Be Creative! Be Inspired!" Donald is one of TAPH Artists have the privilege of partnering with. We seek avenues for them to share their art with the City of Houston, as well as provide space and opportunities for them to create, grow in technique & skills and sell their art. He is currently one of the commissioned artists creating the Abundant Life mural that will be featured at City Hall this fall. Recently Donald Collins put out an artist statement on No Studios Studio sharing his story. With his permission, here it is for The Art Project, Houston community to share learn... Ever-sporting an infectious grin, wild silver hair and a lead pencil, Don Collins is as much of a die-hard social activist as he is an enthusiastic artist. One of the quirky Texan’s earliest creative memories centers around the gift of coloring books, Crayons and blank sheets of paper given to him by various family relatives. “All of the women folk were constantly saying, ‘He loves the colors, he loves bright’ – - and I did. I still do,” Collins relates with a laugh. Although he remembers attending every art class offered up through grade 6, Collins’ formal art training reached its peak in 1972 when a NASA employee-turned-art-teacher offered the 19-year old, then serving a year-long prison sentence, a series of one-hour art lessons. That seed of artistic expression would prove to lay dormant, however, over the next forty or so years because once released from prison, all of the sketches and other artistic pieces that Collins had created were thrown out; he didn’t pick up a pencil or paintbrush again until 2008 when a dramatic sensory experience at a local music concert breathed new life into Collins’ artistic endeavors. Now, almost two and half years later, the man with a perpetual twinkle in his eye is so passionate about art that it is almost impossible to stumble upon Collins without a sketch pad, pencil and color in hand at literally any time of day or night. Collins best describes his art work as free-form liberationism, often incorporating his passion for social change with his view of the world around him. “Like impressionism or expressionism,” explains Collins, “my painting is all of the above, depending on the music I’m listening to and the mood I’m capturing and how I throw my paint. Life’s your canvas,” he continues. “Paint it!” The dedicated sketch artist most often finds his inspiration from forms around him, whether they be trees in the park — a representation of worship as the altars of a living God, notes Collins — circles of homeless men or even the goblet shapes during Sunday’s communion. Although proficient in a wide variety of artistic mediums, Collins gravitates towards watercolor, acryclic and soft pastels as well as towards charcoal, pen and ink, and lead. Acting as the energetic mastermind behind NoStudio Studios, a holding space for homeless artists and itinerant souls with a bent towards creative self-expression, Collins’ personal viewpoint and encouragement to others it “to be true to yourself, be true to your heart, be true to your God, and,” he concludes with conviction, “you will create beautiful art your whole life.” It is no great surprise that this mantra serves as a source of inspiration for all who cross the artist’s path. |
Lanecia A. RouseProject Manager of TAPH Archives
May 2015
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