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Architecture Fringe Fest 2016

16/6/2016

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Exciting Times!! Urban Art Binge is taking part in Scotland's Architecture Fringe Festival this July, 2016. We'll be running two Binge Workshops in Edinburgh on Drawing the City. If you haven't binged before here's what to expect..

Two hours of exploring and drawing the city in inspiring company! We'll provide a binge bag including a  sketchbook and you bring along any pens and pencils you wish to draw with. The workshop is for sketchers of all levels of experience (15yrs+) so don't stress if it's been a while since you held a pencil. Likewise, if you're a drawing master, come and enjoy the atmosphere and the company. There's truly nothing like being surrounded by fellow drawing nerds.

Please visit our ENROL page for more info on the workshops and how to enrol. Places are limited to 15persons per session so get in quick and tell your pals!

Looking forward to drawing with you soon.

Emily
info@urbanartbinge.com 
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UAB Exhibition: Drawn to Place

23/11/2013

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2013 has been an amazing second year of Urban Art Binge in Brisbane! 

Over 30 artists have ventured to new sites with our eyes and hearts open and binge bags full of sketches. We have also travelled beyond the mainland of Australia to the beautiful island of Tasmania!!! We would love to share with you the fruits of our travels at our upcoming Exhibition: Drawn to Place.

UAB Exhibition: Drawn to Place 
6 -10 December 2013

Opening Friday 6 December 
Jugglers Art Space
103 Brunswick Street, Fortitude Valley
6-9pm.

Urban Art Binge creative expeditions are about so much more than just the drawing/painting. They are about opening yourself up to people, place, conversation, laughter, stories, good food, wine and history. We create a safe space for creatives to let go of inhibitions without judgment or fear of failure. What's exciting is that our artists have managed to capture these experiences in their sketchbooks full of marks and have developed a greater sense of confidence around expressing their creative thoughts and emotions through drawing and other mediums.

Many artists have joined UAB to ignite their passion for creativity and to add fuel to the fire of already established creative studio practice. This exhibition is a celebration of the core activity of urban sketching as well as the many outer layers of our thriving creative community.

There will be a banquet of artworks in various mediums to delight your palette. Just in time for Christmas, you will be able to spoil yourself and your loved ones with a unique gift by a local Brisbane Artist. We will have sketchbooks, drawings, paintings, etchings, art quilts, jewelry & silverwork and maybe even some interpretive dance.. 

Come along to see first hand what we’re all about! Jugglers will be opening their cash bar so we’d love to share a cold bevy with you and your friends as we celebrate an amazing year of UAB!


We'd also like to shout out to our awesome sponsors who have been pivotal in making our adventures possible..

  • Manny & Meg at Art Shed Brisbane for the contents of our Binge Bags!

  • Peter Breen and Jugglers Art Space for their unending support and venue for our exhibition.

  • Scotty at Gabba Screen Printing Supplies GSPS for our Binge Bag logos!

You guys RULE & we  you.

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UAB Tasmanian Adventure 2013

3/11/2013

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11 Brisbane artists + 1 Binge Bus in Tasmania = 5 days of creative bliss. 


Thank you to everyone who made this adventure such an enjoyable and fulfilling experience. See you all at the exhibition on the 6th of December! For more photos find us on facebook! 
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Drawing & Exploring Brisbane.

11/6/2013

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It's the end of another fabulous 6 weeks of UAB Site Sketching and I am proud to say that in our second year running it just keeps getting better. To sum up the experience I wanted to share a lovely message that I received from a first time sketcher last week... kind words that made my day!

[Hi Emily, Thanks so much for your teaching, encouragement and advice over the last 6 weeks. I have had a fantastic time and learnt so much. When i started i said i wanted to feel comfortable sketching on location and find a way to capture the essence of a place.  Well,  i am thrilled to say that i feel well on my way to doing just that. I love my sketches i feel like they are little jewels, that are uniquely me. What a thrill!!!!!

I had a 'moment' today, after doing some jobs in new farm i decided to stop for a short time at a park on the river- i had my sketch book with me- and just sat and did a little sketch. 20minutes later i realised i was so calm and at peace almost in a meditation. It was the BEST feeling.
At last sketching feels like just the best thing to do- i'm hooked.
Thank you so much for opening this wonderful world to me. What a gift!!!] 

June 2013

UAB is back with another sketching workshop from the 17 August - 21 September. Find more details here. 

In the mean time I am traveling in Europe & the UK for 5 weeks from tonight and will be attending the 4th International Urban Sketchers Symposium in Barcelona. I will do my best to blog some work from Spain! I can't wait to share my drawings with you. 

Happy Sketching
Emily
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Gorgeous panorama by Lisa De Re of the UAB group sketching City Hall. Click to enlarge.
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Art does not reproduce what we see; rather, it makes us see.
Paul Klee
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Architectural detail by Jeff Cowan
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Judy-Joy and Debbie - lovin'- it!
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Familiar junction between the Queen Street Mall and Albert Street. Dynamic sketch by Debbie McLachlan.
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Loni Mills captures the busker who kindly sat next to us in the Queen Street Mall.
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Angela Cowan's lovely lines from King George Square.
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Maureen Beasley capturing texture and detail in her panorama of King George Square.
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Intimacy of drawing

19/5/2013

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It always surprises me how intimate the act of drawing is. By putting your pen to paper you are making marks that come from within. They are yours. Learning to own them and work with them is a beautiful journey. It can be somewhat tumultuous at times as we can all be our worst enemy. For me, watching, encouraging and guiding others to love their own drawings is such a reward.

Take our morning view from Saturday for example. The group met on Dornoch Terrace to look down over Boundary Street. The view is a magnificent aspect for drawing in one point-perspective. Every sketch was so uniquely personal. When drawing you are the author. You take action and decide how the story is told. Drawing offers possibilities to imagine the alternative, the other, the future. 
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UAB Sketching from Dyke Bridge, Dornoch Terrace, Highgate Hill.
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Urban Art Binge Sketching Boundary Street. Clockwise from top left: Jeff Cowan, Angela Cowan, Judy-Joy Bell, Loni Mills, Lisa De Re, Emily Fong, Debbie McLachlan.
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UAB Group Sketching in front of Justice Products on Boundary Street by Lisa De Re.
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Jeff drawn by Judy-Joy. Loving the simplicity and confidence of this line. Jeff's second hand made man bag is imortalised in this contour drawing! Nice one JJ.
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Angela drawing Justice Products.
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Debbie rockin' the suburban street perspective!
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You just never know what you'll come across to draw in West End! We ♥ Boundary Street.
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one week to go!

28/4/2013

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What does a binger look like?

23/4/2013

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A binger has a face that is expressive.
Like a landscape of stories waiting to be shared.
We are of may shapes and sizes..
Be brave
Be there
My name is Emily and I am a binger. 
I have uncontrollable urges to draw.
My eyes are greedy.
I bite off more than I can chew.
Does this sound like you? Too?
Make a move.
Join my crew.
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UAB Site Sketching Map

23/4/2013

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We're excited to announce that UAB will be hosting a 6 week site sketching workshop from Saturday 4 March - 8 June! It's a beautifully crisp time of year in Brisbane and the weather is perrrfect for drawing outdoors. Below is a sketchmap of our chosen route. The locations include:

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Top 10 ways to Inspired Creativity

3/4/2013

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Having recently returned from a 6-week trip overseas and been distracted by one or two other life changing experiences around health (I took on a 5 week juice fast) and relationships (I fell in love and got engaged!), my 6 weeks out of regular studio practice, has turned to 2 or 3 months! 

It struck me that as I build my relationship with my studio practice once more, the tools, tips, tricks and self-talk I use to get me back into the studio are the same ones that I used at the very beginning of my practice and may well be of use to you.

If you are someone like me who is inspired but somehow finds the day passing without taking some action towards the expression of that inspiration then these top 10 tips for getting you back in the studio are for you:
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1. Cultivate Gratitude for Where You Are
Take stock of where you are and take a moment to appreciate what you have achieved in your learning and creativity so far.  Acknowledge whatever feelings are there whether it's excitement, regret, anticipation, disappointment or even pressure it is valid to feel all of these.  However, recognise that you don't need to honour, nurture or indulge any of these feelings.  What's important to remember is that you are a new creative being in each moment and in this moment you are choosing yourself exactly as your are.  This is the most empowering place to come from.
2. Gather Art Making Materials that Inspire You
Get hold of some materials that inspire you to create that you can't wait to work with.  Ask yourself while in an art store what the materials are that inspire you?  Is it colourful luscious paints or chunky sticks of charcoal; is it the textured grain of 600gsm watercolour paper or the inky promise of bottles of pure colour?  Whatever it is, treat yourself to one or reconnect with existing materials you have  - these are all signposts to your inner creative source.
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'Reflections', Ink on Paper, A3 by Jo Underhill
3. Build Some Sketching into Every Day Activities
Make a commitment to yourself to draw every day, even if just for 10 minutes - this could be taking a few minutes on your morning walk to capture something or maybe sketching your lunch before you eat it, perhaps even dashing off a few sketches of people passing on the street as you sip your morning coffee. 

The act of sketching or drawing reconnects you to what you like to draw, what you are good at drawing and what inspires you.  It is good to remember that just drawing alone can be the pathway to the inspiration for a whole body of work - stick to an exploration of something for long enough and something will come up.  Try a 7 or 30 day challenge to draw every day and see what emerges.  Even sketching ideas first thing in the morning upon waking or last thing at night can be very revealing.

If drawing is not your thing perhaps it's about taking a photograph each day that inspires you or even spending some time collecting images to collage.

4. Prepare your Creative Space
Whatever your space may be, whether it's a little desk in the corner of a room or a large purpose-built studio space make sure everything is where you need it so you don't spend time rummaging and searching for things. 

If you don't have a creative space, it helps to claim one and make it a dedicated creative place.  This adds value to what you are doing and stakes a claim for your creative energy to manifest.  It also means you can walk into that creative space at any time without being put off by having to set something up and then pack it all away which interferes with creative flow.
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5. Gather and Collect Inspiring Visual Stimulus
Books, photographs, images of other artist's work, your own sketches, magazine images and even inspiration from books about mixed media techniques and painting or sketching can all be rich sources of inspiration.  Whenever I am stuck I go to my bookshelf and pull out some books that appeal to me in that moment.  I flick through them and suddenly get an idea for what I want to play with or how I want to progress a canvas. 

Pay attention to what you are gathering too as these are signposts to inner creative voice and will be steering you toward manifesting it. 

Other magazines like Artist Profile, Frankie or even nature inspired magazines like National Geographic can be useful too in terms of what others are doing and can trigger ideas that form a launchpad for your own to catapult from.
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6. Set a Goal For Your Practice
Having a goal and something to aim for in your work is really helpful.  When I was first starting out, my goal was to discover who I was creatively and whether I really wanted to paint full-time.  This took the pressure off needing to produce something and shifted the focus onto a curious engagement with painting and drawing itself. 

It can help to also set smaller practical goals like finishing a canvas or to discover one new technique each week for a month.  You may want to to fill a diary with drawings and see what happens, what emerges or create an abstract painting or small study each day.  For a while I just painted a swatch of colour and doodled and out of those experiments, I had enough inspiration to keep me going for a couple of years! 

Whether it's working through a book on colour theory or just being gentle with yourself when creating - make sure it INSPIRES you.

7. Get Connected to Your Creative Uniqueness
It was Oscar Wilde who said, 'Be yourself; everyone else is already taken' and realising this about our creativity is probably the most powerful thing we can ever do for ourselves.  Recognise that you have a unique contribution for the world and that you are on a journey to uncover it and share it. 

My favorite video on creative genius is Elizabeth Gilbert's TED talk see below - it's about 20 minutes but really worth watching and very entertaining. 
8. Make a Creativity Date with Yourself
Taking time to be with ourselves in our creative space is as precious and nurturing to our creativity as date night with a partner.  Value yourself enough to block out some time in your diary regularly to focus on your creativity.  One of your goals may be to just show up in your creative space for 30 minutes a day or an hour 3 times a week.  It doesn't matter what the time is or how long, when you are starting from scratch it's getting in there that counts. 

Make a commitment to yourself to honour this and connect it back to what's important to you in relation to making your art.  What does it give you?  For me I get a sense of peace, it's like a meditation, I feel a sense of joy when I start painting with colour and a sense of being home, I just have to think about luscious thick oil paint in dusty pinks and greens to make me feel like I just want to get in there and start playing!
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9.  PLAY!
Once you have made it to your creative space, just play.  I often begin my studio session with some non-dominant hand drawing to music with no pressure on outcome.  If I am nurturing some new work, I just play.  Each surface layer is built up of layers of playful engagement that are spontaneous and easy.  It may help to remind yourself that if you don't like something you can always paint over it later.  By allowing this side of ourselves to be engaged we create space for wonder and joy and for new ideas to emerge.

10. Be Gentle and Avoid Self-Judgement
Gentleness in self talk is imperative at this playful stage.  Self-talk that is gentle, compassionate, kind and supportive will only nurture your creative practice.  Remember you are giving your inner creative child to play, they will not be able to come out and serve you if they feel like they are in trouble for something. 

Really notice if and when you are being self-critical.  Often we are more self-critical when we are stressed about something and give ourselves a hard time.  Drop the resistance, notice where it is in your body and breathe into it, see if in that moment you can bring something positive or gentle in.

Removing any judgementalism from your creations is especially important in the early stages of creating work as we have a tendency to self-censor ourselves and shut down our playful, creative exploration when we do this. 

By allowing ourselves to get into our creative space armed with all the things that inspire us and gently encourage ourselves to create, we allow possibility to enter and creativity to flourish.

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Darlington Park, Kerry Road.

24/3/2013

1 Comment

 
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Hello from Kerry Road! Thank you Jeff for the suggestion. This camp spot is definitely going to become a family fav. Dog friendly & beautiful fresh water creek, this spot is 1.5hours from brisbane following the Mt Lindsay Highway onto Kerry Road. $6per night per adult. Children even less. Note the awesome welding of star pickets to drum for fire pits.. very impressive.
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    'UAB Blocks have been the best art sessions I've undertaken'   C.E.

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