Monthly Mental Meanderings from our Chairperson

  • Longevity, for Art’s Sake!

    Longevity, for Art’s Sake! When creating art, many of us are driven by inspiration, emotion, and the immediate joy of expression. We reach for our materials (canvas, paper, charcoal, pastel, or paint) without necessarily thinking beyond the moment. Yet every artist, consciously or not, contributes to the continuum of creative heritage. The question then arises:…

  • Dusting Off The Soul

    Dusting Off the Soul For some time now I’ve realised that, like it or not, Artificial Intelligence (AI) is here to stay. Recently, after being bombarded with numerous social media advertisements, each pressing upon me the importance of learning how to use AI through them, or be left completely behind, I decided to embark upon…

  • Forgetting Wonder

    Forgetting Wonder Helen E. Buckley’s poem The Little Boy is a deceptively simple parable. A small child enters school, wide-eyed and brimming with imagination. He draws with bright colours, shapes that twist and turn, images that pour out as freely as breath. Yet he quickly learns that in the classroom, his creativity is not entirely welcome. “‘Wait,’…

  • The Shape of Light

    The Shape of Light When I work outdoors, I travel light. Charcoal, soft pastels, pastel pencils, a sketchbook, drawing board, and enough awareness to catch what might otherwise go unseen. I don’t take paints. They’ve never felt necessary. For me, it’s charcoal and pastel that respond best to what I’m drawn to: the shifting light,…

  • Seeing through Tools: How Medium Changes the Artist’s Eye

    Seeing through Tools: How Medium Changes the Artist’s Eye Artists do not merely look at the world; they learn to see it — with attention, with purpose, and often, with evolving sensitivity. What we rarely consider is how the very tools we use to make art shape this act of seeing. Each medium — from…

  • The Artist’s Gaze

    The Artist’s Gaze I’ve often found, when I’m deeply immersed in creating art, that I enter a space similar to the mindset I’ve experienced in Japanese martial arts. A phrase from Kenjutsu always comes to mind: enzan no metsuke — “gazing at the far mountain.” It’s about seeing without staring, taking everything in without focusing on any…

  • Imagine…

    Imagine… In recent North Coast Artists “Think-Factory” get-togethers, we’ve begun to look at how we as artists value our work (how we price our art), and, as we begin to grow in terms of exposure and marketing reach, we’ve had cause to reflect on the quality of work we are putting out there, both as…

  • Just Start!

    Just Start! I have to chuckle to myself. Yesterday (or was it the day before?), I had the perfect idea for an article, yet because I had a million-and-one other things on the go simultaneously, when it came to actually drafting it, the aforementioned ‘perfect idea’ had vanished into the ethers. Today, as I reach…

  • Flawed Perfection 

    Flawed Perfection  A recent barefoot hike with friends through the lush indigenous forest of Everton Conservancy, in Durban’s Upper Highway area, offered up, just as I had hoped, the topic for this month’s article. After recent rainfall, the earth underfoot was cool and energizing, although slippery in places, as our path took us alongside the…

  • The Magical Wonder of Mark Making 

    The Magical Wonder of Mark Making  I’ve known a great many creatives over the years, of varying levels of expertise and talent, some more well-known than others, either locally or abroad, yet to me, each and every one are equally representative of that infinite creative essence I refer to as Source*. When using the term…

  • Remembrance

    Remembrance As I pen this article on the 11th of November 2024, it’s been two days since yet another glorious North Coast Artists’ gathering — always a coming-together of friends for the love of visual art, from all walks of life and spanning perhaps three generations. As always, it’s a wonderful source of inspiration and…

  • The Limitless Self

    The Limitless Self Creating en plein air allows us to discard reference imagery gleaned off any other of the plethora of online image resources out there; it’s a living, limitless, three-dimensional image bank, and it’s all right there in front of us, waiting for us to zoom in or zoom out to our heart’s content. I was…

  • Going the Distance 

    Going the Distance  In last month’s blog post, I probed the question of how we determine the value of our art. It’s a very pertinent subject, particularly for us at North Coast Artists, as we slowly begin delving into the potential of gaining international exposure for our work — so for this article I’d like…

  • What’s your Worth?

    What’s your Worth? Each and every single one of us has an unwritten, unconscious, yet nevertheless indelible value, and we are continuously exhibiting our value through our thoughts and deeds. All too often, however, we allow others to define that value. When it comes to art, many of us artists have great difficulty in placing…

  • Of Ocean and Art

    Of Ocean and Art And I have loved thee, Ocean! and my joy Of youthful sports was on thy breast to be Borne like thy bubbles, onward: from a boy I wantoned with thy breakers — they to me Were a delight; and if the freshening sea Made them a terror — ’twas a pleasing…

  • AI Rethink! (Part Two — still thinking…)

    AI Rethink! (Part Two — still thinking…) In last month’s blog, I spoke of a personal journey with Artificial Intelligence (AI) and how it had proved to be a great time saver in my creative process. In essence, AI is the science of making machines that can think like humans. One thing is for certain: AI…

  • AI Rethink! (Part 1)

    AI Rethink! (Part 1) Last year, I wrote an article about the burgeoning realm of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and its negative effects on the human factor in perceiving art and imagery. Not that I wish to recant the claims I’d made, but I have had cause to reflect on my standpoint and shift perspective somewhat over…

  • Plagiarism

    Plagiarism From time to time, the subject of plagiarism comes up on my scope, and I feel it begs addressing — so I hope to shed a little light on the matter.  The definition of plagiarism is, according to Oxford Dictionary: “the practice of taking someone else’s work or ideas and passing them off as…

  • My Artsy Musings: how YouTube brought purpose and perspective to my life. 

    My Artsy Musings: How YouTube brought purpose and perspective to my life.  Since I was a child I was artistic — I loved painting, drawing and colouring in, and during my junior primary years I was always taking artworks to school and receiving “Well Done” stamps on my wrists and gold stars on my artworks…

  • AI-AI-oh!

    AI-AI-oh! A friend’s post on Facebook the other day brought to mind a gripe I’ve been chewing on of late: the burgeoning effects of AI (artificial intelligence) upon the world we live in and the implications it holds for the future as human beings.  I find it such a shame that, due to the proliferation…