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Keep up with the latest art and adventures from Rene Shoemaker Art!

New Uses for Old Stuff

New Year’s inspires a lot of talk about new ideas, plans, and aspirations, but what about old things? Our house is built out of mostly re-claimed materials, giving new use to old objects. Looking around my studio, you can see quite a bit of reusing, reducing, and recycling going on! Today I wanted to share a few of my favorite new/old combinations.  

A lot of people use pretty old cups and vases for pencil jars. I do too! I also use thrift store finds that might not otherwise get a lot of use, like this small pitcher, and cleaned-out food packaging that I find useful or pleasing to the eye, like these old gelato containers. What do you use as containers in your home? 

The shelf that I keep my supplies on was made out of heart pine planking from an old house. It has such a pleasant patina, a nice reminder of how much it’s been through its long life. Using this shelf is such a different experience from that of using the hand-me-down Ikea bookshelf in my closet. Both have their benefits, of course, but I love the character found in this shelf that my husband built for me with reclaimed wood.

 

This beautiful file cabinet was already down the stairs and out the door of my downtown studio building before I caught up with the cute boys carrying it. I ran after them, yelling ‘Wait, Wait! - Are you throwing that away?” I snagged this perfectly functional, very sturdy file cabinet that someone was just going to toss in the trash! It found its way into my studio, with the idea that it would corral the paperwork that seems to spread everywhere overnight. I try to remember that I can add file folders and papers to it in addition to the slides and disks and that I keep in there now!

My work table is one of my favorite pieces in my studio. The bottom section supported a food prep table that was used in this space before I moved in. Luckily, it wasn’t too difficult for Harvey to add my work surface to the base of the food prep table! It has the added benefit of being the perfect height for me to work on while standing. As I considered moving into my current small studio space, the one thing that was non-negotiable was the size of the tabletop work surface. I have to have a 4’x8’ surface! For too many years I worked on multiple smaller tables, in spaces that were much too cramped. Now that I have this 4’x8’ table, though, I find myself dreaming of someday having two tables to work on simultaneously!

 

This cute little table was made out of an old shelf and scrap white pine lumber. Originally, Harvey made it to use while camping at the beach. It was a perfect size and weight to throw on top of the car and set up next to the campfire for dinner and a bottle of wine. When we returned home, I realized the table was the perfect height for typing (accidentally ergonomically correct!) while sitting on our kitchen chairs. It made me realize that our kitchen table is a little too high for me to use for typing - this was much more comfortable, so I adopted it for my studio!

 

I’ve been having a lot of fun looking over the Design*Sponge at Home book this week. I  love it that others are even more creative with their reusing, reducing, and recycling than I am - repurposing items found on the sidewalks of Brooklyn or the thrift stores of Athens. And somehow, they make it look completely put together and intentional! It makes me view my studio with new eyes. Tell me, what neat re-use ideas have you had lately? 


Finding the Time for Art

Here I am, once again, planning for a new year - setting a schedule to guide my work. Last January, I posted my thoughts on the subject for 2011.

When I sat down this January 1st, I settled on what was basically the same schedule, but with new goals and opportunities in mind. 2011 was a transition year - and now, rather than building up a business centered on art, I have one to maintain and grow. So instead of working with an “I wish I was an artist” attitude like last year, I’m looking at an “I am an established artist and I have a lot of work to do” year!

This new perspective gives making out a schedule a renewed sense of importance. I have commissions to plan for, competitive exhibits to apply to, retail stores to communicate with, creative ideas to explore, and connections to be made. Focusing my goals and plans has affected my time management strategies as well; I have a new sense of well-being.

Every once in a while, when I’m in the middle of some project with a deadline, I ask myself: “Now, why are you working so hard, Rene?” I then answer myself: “It’s because I enjoy making art, creating items for home and body, and sharing a love of color and beauty with those around me.” The beauty intrinsic in the art keeps me motivated. Scheduling my time gives me a way to break down each goal into manageable steps. 

    

                                                                                                                 "Teal City"                                                                                                                             by Rene Shoemaker

This is the new schedule:

5 hours working in the studio on Mondays and Fridays, 5 hours working on communications, writing, blog, webpage on Tuesdays and Thursdays, which leaves, theoretically, Wednesday, Saturday, and Sunday to pay attention to tasks related to the home, relaxing, reading and exercising; walking in the woods.

Don’t believe that the week goes as smoothly as I’ve outlined - it rarely works out as planned! But that’s okay, at least I have a format to guide me through the week.

There, that’s enough about me - what have you learned over the past year about time management and creativity?

       

Athens, Ga

I love New Year’s almost as much as I love birthdays. That’s A LOT - if you know me, you know what I’m talking about! For the month of January I’ll have a number of New Year’s related blog posts, and for this one I wanted to share these words from my favorite editor-about-town, Pete McCommons. His weekly newspaper, the Flagpole, is my go-to for anything Athens related. As we began 2012, I was struck by his eloquence in describing how I feel about Athens and why I am so happy to live here. Here is what Pete has to say; I hope you enjoy it, too.

Happy New Year!

We’ve got a really good state university; we’ve got a really good public school system; we’ve got special assets like our extensive and well known music scene; we’ve got attractive architecture and liveable, walkable, bikable, drivable neighborhoods; we’ve got an affordable cost of living; we’ve got a beautiful natural environment nestled among hills and rivers with a moderate climate (okay–not in August); we have an interesting downtown; our suburbs are within easy reach; in addition to the music, we have lots of activity in the arts: theater, painting, writing, cinema, pottery; we’ve got a good bus system; we’ve got sports; we’re a short drive to the mountains and a not-as-short drive to the ocean; we can fly out of Atlanta but don’t have to live there.

Athens is not perfect, but we’ve got a lot going for us. Let’s make this new year the time when we really focus on understanding how to bring in the kinds of businesses that want to live in our kind of town and that will contribute to strengthening Athens without messing it up. Let’s also take a good, close look at how we can enhance what we have. We can insist that our economic development people understand what we have here and learn how to add to it, instead of chasing phantom industries that aren’t coming and wouldn’t fit.

Even if we can’t control what the university pays its custodial workers and graduate assistants, we can document what kind of impact those wage scales have here. We can also take a look at our local government and make sure it is not a part of the poorly paid job problem.

Let’s make this the year that we devise even better coordination and knowledge among the projects and agencies that are trying to ameliorate our endemic poverty. Let’s be sure our local government, our university and our state government are drawn even more closely into a focused examination of poverty here. There are many reasons for poverty in Athens, and the big one is that our county presently and historically offers jobs not available in the surrounding counties and also public housing and other forms of assistance not available in the outlying areas.

This is our big challenge in the new year: to find ways to extend our quality of life to those who are left out, while enhancing our community to realize that we all gain from lifting up our lowest members. We have had setbacks recently and in the past, but we must persevere, because we are all in this community together, and we are interdependent, whether we realize it or not. Let’s resolve to give special, local meaning to the salutation, “Happy New Year!”

Pete McCommons

editor@flagpole.com

                                                 ”College Ave. & Clayton St., Downtown Athens, Ga”
                                                   painting on silk by Rene Shoemaker

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Happy end-of-the-year holidays, y’all! 

It’s been an exciting and art-filled year since I posted my first blog post last January 1st. At that time I invited you all to share my explorations and discoveries with me. It’s been fun, and I find that you inspire me, challenge me, encourage me and reward me - greatly. Thanks!

For all of you who helped me work through the preparations for the holiday Athens Artist Market at Hotel Indigo in Athens, it was a grand success, and a fabulous learning opportunity. Once again, I faced what I hesitated to take on - and succeeded! 

Best wishes to you and yours for a happy and creative New Year!!