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Carte Terra Designs

Art for People and the Planet

  • Bio/artist statement
  • Portfolio
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • upcoming sales and events

From Gallery to Garden

At my show last October at Cameron Gallery at the Scrap Exchange I had an interactive sculpture called “Golden Seeds” With that piece I asked visitors to take home a paper milkweed pod in which I had placed some milkweed seeds. I gathered the seeds the previous fall while I was at Penland. I gave some instructions on planting and hoped that maybe some seeds might make their way into the ground.

The Golden Seed

The Golden Seed

I also planted some of the seeds in a part of our yard best suited for milkweed- right by our HVAC compressor. Hot head, wet feet is a good rule of thumb for milkweeds. Sure enough, this spring I was so delighted when I saw six or seven little common milkweed sprouts among the swamp milkweed and the Joe Pye weed. My kind of weeds!! The milkweed has flourished and are now strong healthy plants!

Milkweed in our backyard in Durham

Milkweed in our backyard in Durham

My own milkweed made me so happy, then I got even better news from Katherine. A coworker who had come to the show brought some seeds home to Chapel Hill and she also has milkweed plants from the seeds!! And she saw a Monarch on the milkweed! I was over the moon at this news. It worked! It worked! Maybe other folks have planted their seeds as well.

Milkweed in Chapel Hill

Milkweed in Chapel Hill

After my show in October, I wasn't sure what the next steps for this work would be. When I heard about how the seeds from my sculpture had become a living plant, I began to see a way forward. What if my work around Monarchs and Migration becomes a work of spreading both habitat and awareness one seed at a time? How can I create even more action, over a period of time, that includes as many people as possible? How can I record that action, map it, show its impact? I regret now not giving visitors who took seeds an opportunity to report back on their success. More people may have planted the seeds had they known that their success would be mapped.

So much that is happening in the world right now is overwhelming. This tiny little action of helping a plant to grow, that helps a butterfly to grow, is something that gives me hope. Given half a chance- Nature recovers. I have to keep hoping we will give her half a chance.

I have lots to work out about next steps but fortunately I have a few months more before the milkweed produces seeds. Meanwhile, I hope that some migrating Monarchs find the plants that we have grown for them and leave some little monarchs behind!

Monarch on Zinnia Durham NC

Monarch on Zinnia Durham NC

Little Monarch!

Little Monarch!

Friday 06.07.19
Posted by Joanne Andrews
 

Street Art

My friend Brenda called me up last month and asked if I would take over a project for her that she didn’t have time to finish due to a new job. The project was painting a mural on a utility box outside the Wright School on Roxboro St. The Wright School is a short term, residential treatment center for children with emotional or behavioral struggles. Brenda had already worked with the students and together they had created the design for the box, she needed me to come in and do the painting. I was happy to take the project, some of my other plans had fallen through so it was good to have some income for the month. 

I’ve worked with Brenda on several other mural projects, most notably the Durham Civil Rights History Mural, but also on some utility boxes around town. She is the founder of the Durham Mural Crew -a city funded project that employs teens in the summer to design and paint utility boxes around town. If you have seen the painted boxes, you know that Brenda and her crew have really set a high standard for this work. They are beautiful and reflective of the surrounding community. 

wrightschool1.jpg joanne.jpg

I do not consider myself a muralist at all but I have learned a ton from Brenda over the years about mural making so I was excited to work on this box and get out into the world for a bit. I spent the month of February in the studio working on a commission, so this project was a completely different experience. Roxboro street is an extremely busy commercial street and the Wright school is a peaceful, wooded enclave that is tucked back away from the road. The utility box however, is right next to the street, so the work environment is a bit noisy and fume heavy. I keep an eye on the road most of the time in case I need to duck for cover from any car wrecks. They happen, a lot. Sometimes folks walk by- most people are really excited by the project, although one lady not so much. She hasn’t been back since though. I have had three job offers- one from a guy who owns a car shop down the street and wants a mural on the wall of the shop, one from a lady who wants a portrait of her daughter on her wall at home and one from the church coffee shop next door. They want a sign with a coffee cup so that folks can see where the coffee shop is. I might do that one- it’s small and I can get to it with a ladder. I told the other two that I wasn’t really a muralist and I was just filling in. I don’t want to get into scaffolding or lifts or portraits (oh no). But it has been really fun. People love to see artists work, especially if its colorful and graphic. I love talking with folks who come by and I like to feel that I am adding something to the community. 

The main reason for the school wanting to do this project was that the utility box was installed last year in front of their existing school sign. Families coming to the school were missing the turn into the school, which is a tough situation to correct for on Roxboro St.  So one side of the utility box is now a huge Wright School sign in vibrating, complementary purples and yellows that can be seen from a block away. Success!

I am so pleased to have the flexibility to take on the variety of work that I have done over the past two years. I really enjoy having the opportunity to create art in a variety of settings for a variety of purposes, while still honing my own personal style of image making. It is a useful exercise to see how my individual art style can extend from small paper collages to large painted utility boxes. One of the challenges I have set for myself is to become flexible with my art style, so that it is recognizable no matter the medium. Next month I will be back in the studio making smaller work. It will be interesting to see how this month of mural making might impact what I do when I go back to the studio.

Meanwhile, if you drive down Roxboro St, check out the utility box in front of the Wright School. You can’t miss it!

Tuesday 03.19.19
Posted by Joanne Andrews
Comments: 1
 

transitions, connections, minimalism and stardust

I love the transitional weeks of late December and early January. A chance to reflect, assess and plan. Katherine and I just returned from two weeks in Southwest Texas, another memorable trip, more on that later. The final quarter of 2018 was a whirlwind and I feel a strong sense of accomplishment and personal success. 2018 was such a crap year on the national and world stage. But in my own small life I felt like it was a very good year. When I started this journey away from teaching I had the first six months planned and then assumed I would be pounding the pavement in search of a job. Eighteen months later and I am still putting one foot in front of the other as a full time artist. Some opportunities have panned out and others have not and I somehow continue to tread water. I owe so much to Katherine for her support both financially and emotionally, but I also met my (very modest) financial goals and received an overall very positive response to my work. Enough to keep me pushing forward.

My exhibit at the Scrap Exchange exceeded my expectations on all levels, but especially the community engagement that occurred. The interactive map of “What’s Your Migration Story?” was so full of interwoven threads and the conversations that took place in front of that map were inspiring. People want to tell their story! I am grateful for the opportunity to have had that space and time to share that work.

I sold work at five craft markets during the holiday season. It’s been fifteen years since I have done the craft market scene and I was concerned that I would not enjoy it as previously I really struggled with being confident about selling my work. What a pleasant surprise to discover that I enjoyed the markets a great deal! I loved talking to people about my work, why I do what I do and why I think it matters. Selling at markets is not easy. If an artist is dependent on that money to pay bills the unpredictability is stressful. But I found the work to be very satisfying and after being in the relative isolation of my studio, it was a nice change to talk with people. I enjoyed talking with other artists and hearing about their experiences. I especially loved being next to the wand makers who have created a business based on pure love for a story (Harry Potter) and the imagination of readers!I am planning out my calendar for 2019 and am already excited about selling my work and meeting new people. I finished the season buzzing with ideas and grateful for the positive feedback I received.

As I mentioned before, Katherine and I headed off to Texas on Christmas eve. This was our third big trip out west during the Christmas/New Years holiday. We doggedly hold onto the mistaken idea that it will be warm in the Southwest at that time and we are always wrong. It was freezing most nights. We like to start with a loose idea of where we want to go, bring our backpacking and camping gear, rent a car and go from there. This year we had hoped to camp in Big Bend National park, but, thanks to the gov’t shutdown there were no permits being issued for camping. So we adjusted and found ourselves in other places which were just as inspiring. Much of my work over the past year has been focused on migration and it was interesting and intense to be back in the borderlands area. We spent some time along the Rio Grande and then spent three days in a very remote area of Big Bend Ranch State Park, accessible only by 4x4. It was just us, the dark skies, the coyotes and every plant that was designed to puncture our skin. The desert has a way of clarifying my thoughts. The enormous space, the density of the stars, the extreme conditions all conjure me to a very essential mental place. I can expand my thinking in the desert. Humans are not big in the desert but it is a great place to ask big questions. The idea of any kind of wall in this landscape is puny and ridiculous. As we traveled around the area, there was evidence of resistance to the wall and yet at the same time- folks were just living their lives on both sides of the border. There is such deep history and culture in the borderland area that rivals the complexities of what we have here in the Southeast. Everywhere is evidence of human activity from now, back through the 17th-20th century to thousands of years ago and then back to the dinosaurs. Big Bend is one of the best sites in the country for the study of dinosaurs. We spent a day and night at the McDonald observatory where we toured the Hobby-Ebberly telescope among others and learned about the incredible research that astronomers there are doing on stars using spectrographs. Using the light of stars to look back ten billion years, asking where did we come from and how did it all begin. I struggled to truly understand that and at the same time felt an overwhelming sense of awe and joy at the brevity of the scientists’ questions. We looked at the nebula of Orion through a telescope, formed mainly from stardust, remains of dead or dying stars and the substance from which all matter is made. The Texas dark skies allowed us to see the Milky Way and the billions of stars and galaxies in the universe. All of which lead me to the conundrum of “ how am I significant when I am soooo insignificant?” I’ll be chewing on that for a long time.

We also spent a day in Marfa TX, the town that Minimalist artist Donald Judd rebuilt from a dying railroad and ranch town in the 1970’s. I have always been a little skeptical of Minimalism and really didn’t know much about Judd’s work. After visiting the Chinati Foundation which is where Judd permanently installed some huge sculptures of concrete blocks in the desert, I have a much better appreciation for his work in the context of the environment. Also- you are required to work to interact with the art. The blocks stretch for almost a mile and to see them all requires a hike that, in the desert sun, is challenging. We fortunately were there on a cold winter day. I left thinking about materials, especially concrete and it’s place in our built environment. I thought about human created debris. I also thought a lot about art that functions as a conduit to higher connections. Places like Stonehenge and Easter Island and ancestral mounds. It seems to me that Judd was trying to transcend the idea of art as individual expression and connect us to a more profound communal place. I certainly felt that. Plus, after being at the observatory and already full of big, universal questions- it was easy to see this artwork in a very elemental way. I have a lot of thoughts about Minimalism as white male privilege as it ran counter to the Identity art of the 1970’s but that would be another post and probably someone else has already expressed those thoughts better than I. Despite that, in the environment in which I experienced the work, there was a completeness that I found very compelling.

There were many more noteworthy occasions on this trip. Conversations with locals about water rights, segregation, racism, gentrification and history. One woman told us about her dad, who grew up in Marfa and wasn’t allowed to speak Spanish and was conditioned to be biased against Mexicans, even though he himself was Mexican. Border Patrol checkpoints- just a way of life there but for me an uncomfortable reminder of the insignificance of my individual outrage against the state machine. Which made me feel like crap. There was the obvious pollution of El Paso, seemingly coming from Juarez factories and the headlines that hotel occupancy was up this year thanks to families of migrants staying in local hotels. This was touted as a good thing. But little news about the migrant camps in Tornillo, just outside of El Paso, where thousands of children are being detained. A lone sign outside of Terlingua “Resist the Wall: rednecks for Beto” And then in the airport, the large groups of adolescent, Hispanic boys, all dressed the same, with matching string backpacks, headed on flights to- where? I naively assumed they were school groups until Katherine suggested that they were migrant children being moved by the government. What is going on?! I left El Paso trying to sort out all of the complexities that our trip had revealed to me.

Now I am back in Durham, filled with gratitude, truly, for home, safety, community and feeling tasked with finding ways to do better by the world in whatever way I can. I deactivated my social media accounts before my trip. I feel more alert and present without them. It may be a challenge to keep my work as visible without social media but I think it is healthier for me to step away from Facebook and Instagram. I think I have a better quality of life without so much chatter. I hope to see folks out in the world and look forward to a new year of growth, health and art making! Happy New Year!

Donald Judd Concrete Blocks.jpg
Don FLavin Neon insatllation at Chinati.jpg
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tags: Environmental Art, Traveling Artist, Marfa, Southwest Texas
Tuesday 01.08.19
Posted by Joanne Andrews
 

Full-time art making and self-discipline!

Thoughts on art making, distractions and self-discipline.

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Friday 09.14.18
Posted by Joanne Andrews
 

Making art in small spaces

I'm fortunate to have a little studio that is mine where I can work. Little is 10x12 feet, so REAALLY little as far as an art making place. But its mine and I don't pay rent on it so, no complaints. For the majority of the work that I do, the cards and collages- It's perfectly adequate. But for larger sculptures, I have to accommodate the space, which means building larger pieces in sections and then figuring out how to securely connect them together for display. I spent the whole day yesterday, re-engineering the hanging system for a piece that was headed to a show. I felt like I was playing Twister in my studio, practically doing headstands to be able to see small connections while the piece was laid out on the floor. I thought about the artists whose studios I had seen photos of- Robert Motherwell, Anselm Keifer, Joan Mitchell. Those huge warehouses and loft studios, where they painted huge canvases. Must be nice! But what I've often thought with my work is that the problem solving that is required to construct and display artwork is something that I enjoy. I don't think I'm very good at it though. Yesterday, I had to eventually say- "good enough" and got the piece into a borrowed car to drive it a mercifully brief one mile to the gallery. Unlike when I was making pottery and would perfect a technique through trial and error and then endless repetition, the sculptures I do now are often invented to express an idea and I have to create techniques that I may never use again. It is constant problem solving. I am recognizing that my accumulated knowledge of simple constructing and building techniques is my saving grace. A book binding technique or a paper folding structure might just be the answer that I need. All of the gifts of a middle school art teacher bear fruit!

Tuesday 08.14.18
Posted by Joanne Andrews
 

Living the art life

It has been a year and a month since I left my job as a middle school art teacher, a position that I held for eleven years. It has been an incredible year and launching this website marks yet another milestone in my progress. There may be some folks wondering how I am managing to do this!? Quitting my state job with benefits and pension when I was 48 was definitely not what my financial advisor suggested. Quitting without another job in sight and with the goal of full time art making was even less advisable. I was not impulsive about this change though and I had made a solid plan that continues to unfold. If I had stayed with teaching, I have no doubt that I would have developed stress related health issues, both mental and physical. Fortunately my partner Katherine, saw that clearly as well and was/ continues to be extremely supportive of my career transition. First and foremost, I could not do this without her. Secondly- I saved a ton of money. Every penny for two years went to savings for this huge transition. It allowed me to finance some education, pay for health insurance on the Exchange and maintain a semblance of financial independence. Third- I was already in good financial health. I own a home, have retirement savings and no debt. And we are pretty frugal by nature and now by necessity. But we both actually enjoy being cheap- so, good times! Finally, I am in good physical health so moving to a catastrophic insurance plan temporarily was not a problem. My dr gave me the thumbs up!

So everything lined up to make this opportunity possible and I am doing my best to make the most of my time and energy and talent. I work everyday as an artist and as a business owner. In many ways I think that everything I have done in life has prepared me to be exactly where I am right now.  I am very grateful and inspired!

I hope to share via this blog some of the behind the scenes of life as an artist. Challenges and success, inspirations and strategies. I am still moving my plan forward and seeing how it develops.So far, so good!

 

Thursday 08.09.18
Posted by Joanne Andrews
 

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