What does it meant to ‘be an artist’ while also balancing so many other things, not least being a teacher?
Join us for make online: journeys, the next edition of our online event series dedicated to practical skill-sharing and knowledge exchange in artist-teacher practice.
Four artist-teachers share their unique journeys of continually making, unmaking and remaking their artist-teacher identities. In quick-fire presentations of 10 minutes or less, each reflects on their lived experience of negotiating the demands of being an artist, teacher and everything in between: from gradual shifts to radical changes, rejection, legitimacy and the tension between creativity and conformity.
make online: journeys
Presentations
Posé (Alex Bolshakova)
This presentation reimagines rejection as raw material rather than a verdict. Through embroidering rejection letters onto hand-dyed fabric or paint rags, Posé transforms these impersonal notices into tactile records of persistence and care. She will share how this practice has reshaped her sense of artistic legitimacy—and how reframing rejection can model resilience for students.
Karen Schaschwary Brinker
Being a Mom, teacher, and artist is consuming. And often the emphasis is on how well you serve others. How can one make one’s art practice practical? Karen’s current quest is to figure out how to braid and weave all aspects together into a regular practice. What does art look like when you are balancing so much? You have to make it all material.
Paul Raymond
This presentation will focus on Paul’s journey after completing the Freelands Foundation make residency in 2021. Paul will present aspects of his current body of work, which explores the tension between creativity and conformity within his role as artist-teacher. He will share insights into his “Blobby” methodology and discuss the ways in which the practices of creating art and teaching have become increasingly symbiotic and interdependent.
Laura Yuile
In this talk, Laura will trace her journey as an artist-teacher working across the UK and China, reflecting on her experience teaching Digital Media Arts at UCA’s campus – Institute for Creativity and Innovation, a partnership with Xiamen University – in China. She will reflect on what changes when your practice moves into another cultural context: how notions of “insider” and “outsider” shift, how you engage with local communities, what learning curves emerge and how these dynamics reshape both artmaking and teaching. She’ll share examples from her work that illustrate both challenges and opportunities in adapting to new audiences, infrastructure and expectations.
Event information
This event will take place online on Zoom on Wednesday 22 October, 6.30pm BST / 5.30pm UTC.
It is free and open to all. Please RSVP at this link.
About make online
make online is an international online forum for artist-teachers to share tools, skills and ideas. Every term, contributors showcase to their peers an innovative idea or approach from their practice; from resources that have sparked new responses in the classroom, to practical demonstrations of exercises and techniques, to snapshots of works-in-progress. Intended as a practical exchange of skills and knowledge, make online encourages playfulness and experimentation and prioritises process over outcome.
The series extends the work of the make residencies held in 2021 and 2022, which brought together artist-teachers working in different contexts across the UK to exchange ideas and practices through a series of process-driven workshops.