Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Inspiration of the Week

We have to constantly fuel ourselves with inspiration, joy and things that make us happy. The more we take in, the more we have to give back to the world. Abundance is a beautiful thing because it allows us to have enough to share with others… a collective energy that is exchanged and cultivated.

A sketchbook is a great place to record inspiring ideas and images, especially when you're on the go. Some of my best ideas come to me when I'm commuting on the train everyday. When you get home you can translate those ideas to vision boards. My studio is full of cork boards and cut out magazine photos taped to the walls around my workspace. It's a bit of organized chaos, but I enjoy the process of layering and changing the images around the room.

If you're in a bit of a rut (staring at a blank wall and blank canvas), building a vision board is a great way to get the creative juices flowing! 


Check this out for some inspiration!
Amazing Video of Flower Photography by Jon Singer

Friday, March 2, 2012

Tree of Souls (Pranayama) Screen Print





This print began as a series of sketches that were later refined into a pen and ink drawing. Rochelle uses a tiny .005 micron black pen to create the various lines and shaded dreamlike worlds. Each color separation is drawn by hand and printed one at a time to create the limited edition of prints. The process from sketch to final piece can take up to 2 months. 

Tree of Souls refers to the ancient connection with nature and generations past. Pranayama is a Sanskrit word meaning  extension of the prana, life force or breath, as portrayed in the central element of expanding, life-like lungs. This print is a culmination of the various flowers, plants, and architectural elements that have influenced and grown in my work for the past 3 and a half years. In 2009 I went to the Brooklyn Botanical Gardens and took a series of photographs, which inspired several drawings, prints and artist books. I was fascinated with the pointed cactus plants, tiny buds of botanical forms and the serenity of floating lotus ponds.

Last year I traveled to Italy, which became another breathtaking source of inspiration. I took in every little detail, from the hand-painted ceilings of the Sistine Chapel to the leaves of the gardens surrounding the Bourghese Museum. The smooth, marble-striped columns of the Duomo have transformed into twisting, tangled vines in "Tree of Souls."

My most recent work has evolved into purely imaginative worlds of hybrid flowers, ornate birdcages and abstract plant-like forms. I marry these natural figments of the imagination with symbols of Hindu and Buddhist deities, mandalas and Buddha himself.