South Coast Prime Times - November/December 2021

Page 20

GOOD TIMES

Creating

a life raft Sometimes the simplest things require the most explanation. So, before I get going about art journaling, let’s clear up a couple of things. Ron Fortier

A journal and a diary are two different things! And the main difference is that a diary is usually a bound book with lined pages that is used to record your day. In fact, the word diary comes from the Latin word for day. So, it is a blank book where you record your daily events as they happened. A journal, on the other hand, is also a blank book where thoughts, impressions, and ideas are not only noted, but they are also explored further and developed. It’s a combination of doodles, sketches, and diagrams explained by detailed

notes which sometimes turn into reality. Journals and diaries have been around for quite some time and those of the past have offered a glimpse into the lives of historic figures. One of the most wellknown is The Diary of Anne Frank. But what is the difference between a journal and an art journal? Well, the journal may contain words and sketches, but an art journal is a bit more robust. It’s a journal that focuses on images, whether drawn or clipped out of a magazine and pasted, patterns, materials, and colors. Yes, art journals do have writing in them but sometimes, it’s just a combination of found or created images. Most recently, art journals have been engaged as a form of creative self-care. The global pandemic seems to have increased the interest in art journaling among artists and non-artists alike. One of the South Coast creative community’s most enterprising “artrepreneurs” is Alison Wells.

Finding a connection Wells is originally from Trinidad and Tobago and relocated to the South Coast in 2004 to pursue a master’s degree in Fine Art Painting at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. Through her hard work and persistence, she has joined the ranks of busy and successful artists. One of her pandemic passions has been art journaling. She also teaches it! And although others may think that

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N ov ember /D ecember 2021

artists are having fun all day long in their studios, it’s work! For Alison, art journaling is therapeutic. According to Wells, art journaling provides an outlet where you can either get ideas down or get emotions and feelings out of your head, or both! Art journaling, she says, “is self-betterment that offers peace of mind, a release, a way to download thoughts and emotions while getting a better understanding of yourself.” It has been quite a journey for Wells from her Caribbean homeland of Trinidad and Tobago to her arrival on the South Coast. Art journaling has provided her with an epiphany. The pandemic provided “a fitting time to express gratitude and uninhibited creativity.” She refers to her art journals as her “mixed media gratitude journals.” She says that back in the beginning of the quarantine in 2020, “my gratitude journals comforted me during a time of uncertainty, anxiety, and fear, and it also got me out of my creative rut.”


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