As a kid growing up, birthdays were a double affair: one with friends and one with family. And as a summer birthday girl, my friend parties were often elaborate excuses to pull out the garden hose or kiddie pool on a hot and humid August day. The most memorable was a mermaid-themed party complete with starfish shaped cake, homemade rainbow fish piñata, and treat bag-filled treasure chest at the end of a scavenger hunt.
Today, my 30th birthday, I find myself thinking back to those languid summer days. Hard as I try though, it’s impossible to fully recapture that childhood sense of carefree fun… but I’ve come close.
Since May I’ve hosted four adult botanical watercolor workshops and four kids art camps covering story ideation and creation to under-the-sea critters crafted with crayons and salt!
While I enjoy teaching all ages, there is something extra special about making art with kids, especially when using my favorite medium: watercolor. Adults often become easily frustrated with the way the paint moves across the page as it dries, running into other colors and expanding beyond the bounds of their initial sketch. Kids on the other hand go at it with gusto, reveling in the unpredictable nature of water and pigment, creating tie-dyed designs and rainbows that run in rivulets down the page.
As a professional artist it’s a refreshing reminder for me too that I need not always be so controlling over my own work. The moment I allow myself to be a little less inhibited in my creative process is when the magic happens, it’s when I come close to that feeling of limitless possibility of a long summer day.
And if I needed a reminder as to why I’ve come to love teaching, I found it in my inbox earlier this summer after the first two sessions of my Kids Under the Sea Watercolor Workshops.
Teaching has become something of a symbiotic relationship for me, especially when I can instruct from my own studio. Often I learn a lesson or two from the kids I invite in as much as they learn from me. And to see in writing how much that work is appreciated, well, that’s just the icing on the cake!