Tulip Tapestry

Tulip Tapestry

By Wendy Peters

The Importance of Arts, Culture & The Creative Process
The arts/the creative process is important because it allows for self-expression and provides a unique channel for artists/creatives to express their emotions, perspectives, and interpretations of the world.
It fosters connection, the act of creating and sharing art allows us to connect with ourselves, with other creatives, and those who view our work and in my own case appreciate the natural world.
What stands out most to me about this project is the profound belief in the transformative power of the arts. It's not just about showcasing creativity; it's about championing it as a force for good. The emphasis on fostering a vibrant and inclusive ecosystem is truly inspiring.
I am particularly drawn to the focus on cross-cultural understanding. In a world that often feels increasingly divided, this project provides a vital platform for dialogue, empathy, and shared experiences through art. It celebrates the richness and diversity of human expression, bringing together voices from over 70 countries. This global perspective enriches the creative process and expands our understanding of what it means to be human.
I believe this initiative has the potential to be a truly impactful force for good, nurturing creativity in all its forms and fostering a more interconnected and understanding world.

What was the inspiration for your artwork?
My inspiration behind Tulip Tapestry is how complex and beautiful fallen petals can be, the juxtaposition of the delicate, still vibrant tulip petals in their curled and withered state, with the mould dust adding a layer of complexity, is representative of nature’s cyclical rhythm, offering a deep appreciation for the beauty in decay. How hidden beauty can be found in unexpected places.


Wendy Peters is a self-taught artist, having followed a winding path to arrive at her true calling. From owning a women’s clothing business to restoring historic homes to practicing cosmetic tattooing, her experiences in the creative industries have all led her to this moment.
In 2019, Wendy took a break from her beauty business and rediscovered her love of nature. Wendy picked up a paintbrush for the first time and hasn’t looked back since. Wendy’s art is an extension of her passion for the natural world and her desire to promote positivity, wellbeing and vitality.
Whether she is working in a realistic style or using lots of texture to create abstract pieces, Wendy’s goal is always the same: to capture the beauty and magic of our world and bring it into people’s homes.
Through her art, Wendy seeks to inspire joy, wonder, and meaningfulness. Wendy is constantly experimenting with different mediums to capture the organic forms, textures, and fragility of the natural world, her hope is that her art brings a sense of peace and connection to all who encounter it.

The Creative Process is created with kind support from the Jan Michalski Foundation.

TAKEN BY JOY

TAKEN BY JOY

Expanding and contracting like a nova
To a nebula of red alarm,
A blinding point of unstable giants—oxygen and gas—
The anointing molecules,
A cross of ash
And chrism of lips
I can press to my forehead, now, imagining it.
And—Isn’t that a kind of joy,
When you hold it
To your mind like that?
That sad, beautiful star
Falling through the universe, flashing
Before it dies—bright stroke
That once spit you, human,
From its convoluted core
And lit a torch to the future
Like lovers rapturing do, licking
The lap of death, flaming
Oblivion with burst light,
A final streak, a slash
Of seed against the black
Before they disappear completely?

Desert Spring

Desert Spring

By Larry Graeber

The Importance of Arts, Culture & The Creative Process. We’d love to hear your thoughts on the importance of the arts and humanities and how this project resonates with you. Are there other areas you think we should explore to further celebrate the arts, culture, and the human experience? (required)
Artist identify things that are being experienced consciously or unconsciously by their audience, like putting a melody or face to it.

What was the inspiration for your creative work? (optional)
For the painting (Desert Spring 72 x 58 x 1.5" o/c) I've submitted, my inspiration comes from my experience in West Texas, at a place I visit frequently. A place where I used to consider the edge of the desert I now consider a desert.
My second image, a painting titled Fire 30 x 40 x 1.5", was inspired by my concern for the forest fires of the western part of the United States.

Larry Graeber is a mid-career painter and sculptor with studios in San Antonio and Marfa, Texas. His San Antonio studio is a place where he makes both paintings and sculptures, along with works on paper. In Marfa, he primarily paints. He studied both painting and sculpture in school and finds them a nice reprieve from one another as he digests the world and his life in it.

The Creative Process is created with kind support from the Jan Michalski Foundation.

Raza

Raza

By Raza

Short Film / Performing Arts Submissions
https://www.instagram.com/p/C-ygYL9IVfG/?igsh=MXdjMTJ5MDR2ejAwYg==

The Importance of Arts, Culture & The Creative Process
Art in any of its manifestations is the form of the human being in which he shows his soul. It shows its legacy, the interior and it is the art and the observation of art that makes you prepetuen ideas, concepts, illusions. The creativity of being is the ultimate expression of what we are capable of doing.

What was the inspiration for your creative work?
my inspiration comes from the world around me, the details, the faces, the tradition, the cultures, what we are and were, I borrow resources from the classics and redefine my art according to my feelings, thoughts or needs

Raza, born in Madrid, Spain, grew up surrounded by a rich artistic and cultural history that deeply influenced their creative journey. From an early age, Raza developed a profound connection to the arts in all its forms, viewing it as a powerful vehicle to explore emotions, colors, and personal experiences. For Raza, art has always been a refuge—a therapeutic process that brought solace and taught them the power of creation. They describe the act of facing a blank canvas as a fascinating challenge, one that intertwines the conceptualization and creation of a painting. These two stages, crucial to Raza's artistic process, are driven by a desire to evoke emotion, stirring spectators to journey through memories, places, and moments of beauty. Raza’s influences are vast, rooted in frequent visits to the iconic Museo del Prado and years of studying the masters of classical art. Drawing inspiration from the sumptuous colors of Venetian painters to the dramatic techniques of the Baroque, Raza integrates these elements into their own work. Their art emphasizes the dominance of color over line, with geometry orchestrating the composition and color breathing life into light and volume. Dynamic and expressive by nature, Raza's personality is evident in the swift execution of their acrylic works, though they remain open to exploring oil as a medium. Their motivation lies in reinterpreting the classics, infusing them with personal perspective and contemporary relevance. Artists such as Titian and Sofonisba Anguissola serve as sources of inspiration, alongside the natural world: family, love, friendship, animals, landscapes, and raw emotion. Through their art, Raza seeks to inspire others, demonstrating that new beginnings are always possible, and that dreams and goals can be achieved. While the artistic path may be long, Raza firmly believes that the journey itself holds immense value. Dedicated to constant research, experimentation, and the development of innovative compositions, Raza continues to evolve their artistic practice, offering work that reflects both personal exploration and a deep reverence for the timeless beauty of the classics.

The Creative Process is created with kind support from the Jan Michalski Foundation.

ORPHANS OF HOMELAND" Refugee Children II

ORPHANS OF HOMELAND" Refugee Children II

By Zafiro Storm

  1. Choose Your Genre
    Essay / Creative Non-Fiction

  2. Essay / Creative Writing Submissions
    The War Diary Series was conceived as an artistic project during the War Crisis in Ukraine.
    The brief writing, which is detailed here, belongs to the events that occurred at that time, in real time.

    Exactly, I'm talking about March 18, 2022.
    It says like this:

    Exactly, I'm talking about March 18, 2022. It says like this:

    "Refugee Children II"

    Refugee children from the invasion of Ukraine arrive in different parts of Europe

    In Spain they are alredy being schooled, and attended in educational centers, linguistically and psychologically

    How will the adaptation be after the trauma experienced that still echoes in their little heads?

    What will be the sense of identity, lost after fleeing from their homeland?

    Returning to the discourse from then, the development of the work and its derivatives. Understanding that at that moment we were in the midst of warlike horror.
    Something unheard of for old Europe. 

    She, who still alleviated the reminiscences of the Second World War, and united the different cultures that coexisted in her territory. He was assisting, once again, the design forged by the geopolitical condition of the strip on its eastern flank.

    Called “proxy wars”, they are known, in this way, as war conflicts that are provoked at a distance by both sides to generate an imbalance in the environment, apart from the conquest of territory.

    The US government was not only interested in Ukraine as a “possible member” of NATO, a fallacious and future promise that served to stimulate Ukraine's desire for independence from Russia. 

    At the same time, they exploited the wealth of the “second breadbasket of the world” (cereals) and of course, crude oil (black gold, oil).
    It is well known about the business of the US presidency on Ukrainian territory.

    Even so, the network is more extensive.
    Just as Russia has sponsored independence parties in Europe to cause schisms and erosion. An example of this is Catalonia compared to Spain.
    The US did exactly the same with Ukraine, with respect to Russia.

    At first glance it seems like the same geopolitical move. But, both extremes “have played”, perpetrating a massacre, a war. I explain it.

    Proxy wars are mousetraps. Bottlenecks.
    Involving and undermining the rest of the European territory.

    Let us remember that fossil fuels and emerging renewable energies are the antipodes of a new paradigm that was voraciously disputed.

    Bordered by Spain as an “energy island” and closed by Russia and the war in Ukraine to protect the still existing crude oil reserve in its territory. Being, in turn, a border crossing with the Arab countries and its current strip between Palestine and Israel.

    They tried, very subtly, very coldly. Only suitable for European sensibilities. Debating Europe, as is happening with the disputed strips in Arab territory.

    Let us remember how the German gas pipelines were canceled and even partially devastated, so that the geopolitical head of Europe, Germany, had to give in to Russia, and in this way, the United States could offer alternatives to the rest of a power-hungry Europe.

    In Spain there was a great commitment to green energy.
    In France, a boycott of the gas pipeline corridor that supplies Spain to the rest of Europe, demanding its pink energy, French nuclear energy.

    Each tried to lead the new paradigm and geopolitically the distribution of power in Europe was forced to erode its hegemony.

    As always, children have served as war propaganda and have been and will be the greatest victims.
    In fact. Wars are power games. 

    They are agreed upon and calibrated games, which displace true games, and these are the heritage of children.
    In this way, usurping their identity and their development. Generating conflicts of such intensity, and that being the ability to play perversely, and thus be able to call it War.

    When I speak of children, I speak of the innocent and incipient vision of a world that represents exoduses of lives that drift towards interests that are outlined, long before they are even born.

    Well, geopolitics is a design with many layers and smoke curtains, which clothe the will and mentality of the society that builds its security, in diapers. Like orphaned children who contemplate how the identity of the world does not exist. Not just for them, for everyone. Because in reality, they have discovered, it is a CONSTRUCT.

  3. Short Film / Performing Arts Submissions

  4. The Importance of the Arts and Humanities? (required)
    To be honest. My main impulse related to art has come from a need to know others. Of psychological uptake. I love the portrait. It's powerful. It's direct. It doesn't deceive.

    But, in the last four years, I decided to go further, and I put it aside to address emotions that I needed to express.

    After the Covid pandemic, I lived it in a very analytical way, my interest in going deeper was not so much psychological, but rather emotional. Existential.

    The war in Ukraine had a huge impact on me. The threat continued, and the escalation of violence against the population with apocalyptic messages, compelled me to seek relief. And it was art.

    Since then, I combine art with humanities.

    For me it was a discovery to talk about what worried me and affected me in order to cope with it. What I didn't know was that it was going to help me on a personal level.

    To know myself, to be more assertive and to put myself in the spotlight with uncomfortable topics that helped me trust in myself as another voice, that could help interpret and reveal the harsh reality, and at the same time, heal my wounds. .

    We are co-responsible for our existence and have the ability to build a multifaceted mirror in which to look at ourselves. It enables us to be stronger, not to lose our freedom and exercise our right of expression. Something that is constantly at play.

    The artist is an activist of reality. He is an alchemist of emotions. And in depth, the most liberating critic that society has.

  5. If you were to receive one of Mia Funk's artworks, which one resonates with you the most and why? How is your creative work in dialog with this artwork? (required)
    The Series of works with which I connect the most is The Memory of Water

    Perhaps you have more preference for central works. In which the only figure acquires the burden of the message.

    The larger and more detailed works, and elements, are of very special aesthetics and beauty. Ethereal. Subjugating. They create an atmosphere that connects the viewer without forcing them. It's very emotional.

    On the other hand, in the works from this same series, in which a single element or figure stands out, a mixture of dreaminess and tension that being there implies is created. Not to dive, not to get lost. To be an active part.

    I connect with his work because of its symbolism and emotion and because of its message.

    Among my works I talk about geopolitics, fossil fuels, the new energy paradigm, and climate change. 

    This last one, “Climate Change” has been a desperate cry for me. I have experienced it with great intensity because I was painting for four years in an area of ​​Spain where it is now impossible to spend the summer.
    I went to live on a lonely, natural beach

    I only painted and related to the sea, the wind, the sand. Their states and colors. With the simplicity of the same day to day.

    It has been the time in which I have received the most responses, the most I have connected with myself and the most I have suffered. But I melted down. I was wildly free.
    It is something I will always treasure.

    The worst thing was coming to live in the city again, where the heat is more tolerable. My health suffered so much that I had to flee from there and look for a colder area where I could get relief.

    It positions me to lead a more nomadic life, and with which I do not connect in the same way. Although I have learned to carry the sea within me. And somehow, it soothes and calms me when the noise is unbearable. 

    My way of dealing with these topics is more acidic, more critical and torn. I create parallels of a comparative and critical nature, such as prehistoric climatic periods.
    Comparing the limitation at the level of intellectual faculties of the current human being, more focused on the ephemeral and peremptory than on what sustains him. There is not so much difference with prehistoric man if we think about the lack of consistency in knowing where he is going and safeguarding what is essential. What sustains us in life.

  6. Brief Biography (required)
    ABOUT THE ARTIST

    My relationship with art is given by the education and passion that I received from my mother's side. It was, has been and always will be the engine of my life. My childhood and adolescence were spent in a very complicated environment. After a major depression, at the age of 17, I decided to enter The School of Art. I graduated in 2001 with honors from the EADT of Catalonia in the specialty of Jewelry Design (1996-2001) Obtaining Honors in the Final Degree Project for "La Escuela Llotja de Barcelona" (School that evaluates all artistic careers in Catalonia, Spain) That same year, in which I finished my career as a Jewelry Designer, I was selected by the "Sebime" Contest to represent my school EADT as the best student of my class at the "EUROBIJOUX 2001 International Jewelry Fair" in Menorca, Spain. The same year, 2001, I was the winner of the Illustrious "FAD JEWELRY AWARD" in Barcelona. After obtaining the FAD award, I was selected by BARNAJOYA and the FAD Awards to exhibit at "The BARNAJOYA International Jewelry Fair" 2001 Two years later, in 2003, the DDI (Department of Design and Innovation) of the Ministry of Science and Technology of Spain selected me and included it in its database, among the best designers in Spain. My collaborations with artists began to take shape years before, as was the case with the international sculptor Rufino Mesa, with whom I collaborated from 1997 to 2006. I spent a few years away from art in general, and from my career as a jewelry designer, when my mother fell ill with cancer in 2004. I dropped everything to be with her, we got over it, but she relapsed and died in 2008 It was in 2010 when I returned, internationally, with my first painting exhibition “LA HUELLA IMPRESA" at "Art House Gallery and Studios", Brooklyn, NY In 2013 it was my turn to go through cancer, it was a moment that marked me forever, I lived it alone, and art, once again, was my strength I resumed my collaborations as a visual artist in 2015, this time, participating in "El Milagro" by international artist Abel Azcona at "The Gray Square Gallery", Spain Once again, I was summoned, the same year, to participate in "DES-ENTERRADOS" Performance and Exhibition by Abel Azcona and, curated by Marisol Salanova at the "Conde de Rodezno" Art Gallery, Spain. In 2015, I participated in "The 30th Anniversary of the BMW Painting Awards" in Madrid, with the portrait exhibition "FOUR ROOMS" I was interviewed by the Cultural Magazine "ACENTO CULTURAL" in Madrid the same year, 2015, about my international artistic career Interview echoed by Revista Fahrenheit, México D.F, publishing my painting series "Anthropomorphe" in the press. IN 2017 I was selected by the Department of Culture of Cádiz to reside for 3 months and exhibit "LA QUE NO TIENE NOMBRE I" in the Castle of SANTA CATALINA I was selected again with the exhibition of the Painting Cycle, "LA QUE NO TIEA NOMBRE II", the same year, and I exhibited at the PÓPULO Gallery in Cádiz. Both exhibitions dealt with the world of flamenco and its most influential representatives. Upon my return, I suffered a stroke as a result of the chemotherapy I received years before and the treatments I continued to take to prevent relapses. I kept clinging to art, and I overcame that setback on my own, as I also did with breast cancer at the time. In 2018 I was selected to exhibit the artistic installation FEC (these are the initials of the chemotherapy I received) in the "REG-ARTE" Contest, with the collaboration and within the Malaga Film Festival -MAF-Málaga
    Two years later, Saatchi Gallery selected me as a featured artist in the "Saatchi Take Over" competition, London, UK in 2020. In 2021, I became part of the art gallery "Maison Contemporain Gallery" in Paris with my works of "War Diary" art. "In 2022 I was part of the Perdomo Gallery in Miami with my works "La Triada Combustible." I was part of the group exhibition CON Spring Edition'23 at the Circle of None art gallery, London. And that same year I was selected by Gemma Peppe to be part of the Art on a Postcard Summer Auction 2023 group exhibition, London.
    Exhibition in which I felt honored to participate, due to its vital importance and the great help to the community that is dealing with Hepatitis C.

    Currently, after health problems that I have managed to overcome.
    I have returned to resume my artistic career.

Photo credit: NAME via Unsplash

Zafiro Storm is an artist whose work is deeply rooted in personal resilience and a passion for creativity, inspired by her mother’s influence. Born and raised in Spain, she pursued her artistic education at The School of Art in Catalonia, graduating in 2001 with honors in Jewelry Design. Her final degree project received recognition from La Escuela Llotja de Barcelona, and she represented her school at the EUROBIJOUX International Jewelry Fair in Menorca. That same year, she was awarded the FAD Jewelry Award in Barcelona. After a successful start in jewelry design, Zafiro stepped away from her career to care for her mother during a prolonged illness. She returned to art in 2010 with a painting exhibition titled La Huella Impresa in Brooklyn, New York. Her work often draws on personal experiences and emotions, reflecting themes of perseverance and transformation.

In 2013, Zafiro faced her own battle with cancer, an experience that significantly influenced her creative journey. Since then, she has participated in several group and solo exhibitions, including projects in Spain and other locations. Notable exhibitions include La Que No Tiene Nombre I & II in Cádiz, inspired by flamenco culture, and her installation FEC, presented at a regional arts event in Málaga. Through her work, Zafiro explores themes of strength, identity, and connection. After overcoming health challenges, she remains committed to her artistic practice, focusing on creating thoughtful and evocative pieces that resonate with her personal story and creative vision.

The Creative Process is created with kind support from the Jan Michalski Foundation.

Jocelyn Fine

Jocelyn Fine

By Jocelyn Fine

Art photo credit: Roman Dean

Name: Jocelyn Fine

The Importance of Arts, Culture & The Creative Process
The creative process is important because it allows us time to look, take in, distill; and ingest the visual world. As an artist and art educator, above all, I want to inspire my students to understand what it means to notice and wonder. Whether I am sharing images of the magic of the sunset, or asking my students to notice the subtle bend of a flower’s stem, or the gentle spirals in a seashell, I am constantly taking the time to encourage my students to pause and take notice. Exploration is essential to art making and allows us to express ourselves and our individuality. I also believe that these skills are easily transferable to other aspects of life. By encouraging risk taking and exploration, we gain confidence and learn how to solve problems. Through the creative process we learn how to work through obstacles and find alternative solutions, and we can begin to understand that there is not one way to make art, just as there is not one way to approach a challenge

  • What was the inspiration for your creative work? (optional)
    Embedded in all of my work is my distinctive vocabulary of biomorphic shapes that I continue to explore and develop. Painting with the aspiration that my marks will guide me to discovery and significance, dreamlike imagery of mysterious environments and landscapes emerge; often suggestive of fantasy realms. I approach each canvas with this same curiosity—the sense of the unknown: What is going to happen? What will surface? The conscious and the unconscious are at play, striving to reach new thresholds of untapped and perhaps even unimagined creative expression. My work is grounded in the belief that there is a pulse in nature that unifies and connects everything. Guided by the energy around me, I exclusively work from memory, allowing my gestures to turn into marks on canvas. As I paint, my landscapes reveal themselves, and a story begins to emerge; often centering on the grandeur of the natural world; the power and strength of the earth, and the transience of human experience.


Jocelyn Fine holds a BFA from the University of Vermont and an MS from Columbia University. She studied Painting Conservation at the Istituto Per l’Arte e il Restauro in Florence, Italy, and completed painting conservation internships at the MoMa and the Guggenheim. Jocelyn’s work is held by private and institutional collectors throughout the USA and Canada. She comes from a multi-generational family of artists, filmmakers, and gallerists. You can see more of her work at

The Creative Process is created with kind support from the Jan Michalski Foundation.

 I Am Not the Ocean’s Daughter

I Am Not the Ocean’s Daughter

By Eva Sanborn

  1. Choose Your Genre
    Poetry

  2. Essay / Creative Writing Submissions
    When I was twelve, I walked along the sea
    As if a mermaid, not a lonely child
    The motion of the waves commanded me
    The changing of the tides could drive me wild

    I dreamed I was a damsel of the deep
    Desiring to be lost beneath the blue
    My siren call would sing poor souls to sleep
    A briney kiss could start my life anew

    For water can extinguish any flame
    And snuff the light out when it's just begun
    If I were gone would mortals mourn my name?
    And would I mourn the setting of my sun?

    Today, I know my heart belongs on land
    I walk along the sea but kiss the sand

  3. Short Film / Performing Arts Submissions

  4. The Importance of the Arts and Humanities? (required)
    I cannot overstate the importance of the arts and humanities. They allow us to understand ourselves, the people around us, and the broader world. They let us find joy in nature and in the small, simple things in life. They let us express ourselves and all of our ugliest and most beautiful emotions. I believe that the arts and humanities are what make life worth living.

  5. If you were to receive one of Mia Funk's artworks, which one resonates with you the most and why? How is your creative work in dialog with this artwork? (required)
    If I were to receive one of Mia Funk's artworks, the one that resonated me the most was The Memory of Water I. This painting inspired my poem because it conjured up memories of my own childhood growing up near the beach in Hampton, New Hampshire. My sonnet explores my childhood relationship with the ocean, and the way that I used my imagination to escape my feelings of loneliness. I strove to capture a sense of melancholy in my poem that I felt when I first looked at the Memory of Water painting series. As a young girl, I was always captivated by the vastness and power of water, and I associate water with a deep sense of pain and longing as well as with beauty and grandeur.

  6. Brief Biography (required)
    Eva Sanborn is a student at Brandeis University studying English and History. She is from Hampton, New Hampshire, and she loves classic literature, poetry, and theater.


Eva Sanborn is a student at Brandeis University studying English and History. She is from Hampton, New Hampshire, and she loves classic literature, poetry, and theater.

The Creative Process is created with kind support from the Jan Michalski Foundation.

Robert Houser

Robert Houser

By Robert Houser

  1. Choose Your Genre
    Visual Arts

  2. Essay / Creative Writing Submissions

  3. Short Film / Performing Arts Submissions

  4. Visual Artists - Upload 2nd Image (JPEG, under 50KB)

  5. Text

  6. The Importance of Arts, Culture & The Creative Process. We’d love to hear your thoughts on the importance of the arts and humanities and how this project resonates with you. Are there other areas you think we should explore to further celebrate the arts, culture, and the human experience? (required)
    I was going to upload images of my sculpture but I’m not certain if you deal with 3D works of art. I was curious to see your invite on Instagram because I have spoken on a handful or podcasts on the topic of creativity, so I was interested. Cheers.

  7. What was the inspiration for your creative work? (optional)


Robert Houser has photographed people for over 30 years for advertising and editorial clients worldwide.

The Creative Process is created with kind support from the Jan Michalski Foundation.

Heidi Lanino

Heidi Lanino

LaninoHeidi_Woman-Seated-2019-Wood-and-nails38x30x28inches.jpeg

  • Art photo credit: Heidi Lanino

  • Name: Heidi Lanino


Text
Heidi Lanino

Choose Your Genre
Visual Arts

Essay / Creative Writing Submissions

Short Film / Performing Arts Submissions

Visual Artists - Upload 2nd Image (JPEG, under 50KB)

Text
Heidi Lanino

The Importance of Arts, Culture & The Creative Process. We’d love to hear your thoughts on the importance of the arts and humanities and how this project resonates with you. Are there other areas you think we should explore to further celebrate the arts, culture, and the human experience? (required)
Thank you for the opportunity to share my perspective. The Creative Process' mission to celebrate the transformative power of the arts deeply resonates with my practice. As an artist, I strive to explore the boundaries between the real and the imagined, the visible and the hidden, fostering introspection and a connection to shared human experiences.
The arts and humanities are vital for cultivating empathy and understanding in a world that often feels fragmented. Through my work—whether it’s the fluidity and abstraction of the “Folded Female” series, community art projects, or teaching—I aim to create spaces where people can engage with universal themes such as identity, transformation, and connection. The arts provide a unique lens through which we can question, reflect, and celebrate our shared humanity.
Your interdisciplinary approach aligns with my belief in the fluid nature of creativity. The intersection of arts, sciences, and environmental awareness is an area I find particularly compelling. Exploring the relationship between art and sustainability, or the impact of creative expression on mental and emotional well-being, could further enrich the dialogue around the human experience. These connections could inspire new ways to address critical challenges while uplifting and engaging diverse communities.
Thank you for championing this important work. It’s inspiring to see an initiative that values and amplifies the role of the arts in shaping a more inclusive and thoughtful world.

What was the inspiration for your creative work?
My creative work is intuitively conceived, beginning with paper and evolving through materials such as wood, clay, and metal. Central to my process is the transformative act of folding, which becomes a metaphor for the cyclical nature of the human experience. Through folding and unfolding, my sculptures emerge as portraits of the female form, embodying a profound duality of strength and vulnerability while exploring themes of sensuality, societal ideals of beauty, and self-reflection.
The female form serves as a vessel, a vehicle, and a mirror of contemporary experiences, revealing how we continuously evolve and adapt. I am drawn to the cyclical process of renewal, using and reusing materials to bend, reflect, and reconstruct into new compositions. By depicting the female figure as a vessel—drawn, cut, folded, unfolded, and reassembled—I seek to uncover a universal portrait of the female experience, where beauty resides in both fragility and resilience.
I am particularly drawn to malleable materials that allow me to blend physicality with emotional depth. The act of folding creates an imagined emotional space inspired by the body in motion—its sensuality, transformation over time, and the inherent vulnerability of the unknown. This process gives voice to intimate narratives, illustrating how individuals reconcile their internal experiences with the external world.
As I navigate between drawing, painting, folding, and constructing, I explore the revelations that arise from negative space and the stories revealed through each turn of the figure. Working in repetition and sequence allows me to create rhythm and visual metaphors, emphasizing themes of transition, transformation, and chance. Each piece becomes a testament to the enduring process of mending, renewal, and self-discovery.


Heidi Lanino, a New York-born artist based in the Hudson Valley, explores figural abstraction through drawing, painting, and sculpture. Her work, including the 'Folded Female' series, reflects transformation, sensuality, and emotional depth. She creates intuitively, blending fluidity and rhythm to evoke memory, thought, and sensory experiences.

The Creative Process is created with kind support from the Jan Michalski Foundation.

Stream

Stream

By Eliot Schain

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Choose Your Genre
The Importance of the Arts and Humanities?
The arts and humanities allow us to develop our deeper, wiser selves through emotional connection, intuition, memory, and reason. In this way we can mature into beings that protect collective humanity, as well as nourish the individual.

If you were to receive one of Mia Funk's artworks, which one resonates with you the most and why? How is your creative work in dialog with this artwork? (required)
Anything from Memory of Water. The diaphanous presence of water reminds us of its ever-present nature--its significance as the prime element we came from, along with its ability to facilitate change and nourish growth.

Eliot Schain’s poetry has appeared in Ploughshares, American Poetry Review, and Santa Monica Review, among others, as well as in a number of anthologies, including America, We Call Your Name: Poems of Resistance and Resilience, and The Place That Inhabits Us: Poems of the San Francisco Bay Watershed. His newest collection, The Distant Sound was published by Sixteen Rivers Press, and selections have been released as an album in collaboration with guitarist Harrison Flynn, available on Apple Music and Spotify. A newer collaborative album, Drive, They Said, is also available on streaming services, and will soon be released on vinyl.

The Creative Process is created with kind support from the Jan Michalski Foundation.

J. Pennards-Sycz

J. Pennards-Sycz

Art photo credit: J. Pennards-Sycz

  • Name: Justyna Pennards-Sycz


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J. Pennards-Sycz

The Importance of Arts, Culture & The Creative Process
The creative process is deeply important to me because it is the very essence of humanity—an international language that transcends barriers of culture, age, and circumstance. I witness daily how creativity fosters joy, understanding, and connection in my workshops. Art has an incredible ability to heal, offering solace and expression where words often fail. It’s a process that reminds us of our shared humanity and innate ability to create beauty, even in the face of challenges.

I think that this project could be very valuable for teenagers. Adolescence is a time of identity exploration, emotional turbulence, and the search for belonging. Through art, I see a pathway to help them process these experiences, discover their voice, and build resilience. Engaging teenagers in the creative process is not just about teaching a skill—it’s about empowering them to understand themselves and the world around them.

For me, the creative process is more than making something tangible; it’s a transformative journey that fosters healing, self-awareness, and growth. Sharing this with others, especially young people, is both a privilege and a responsibility I embrace with passion.

What was the inspiration for your creative work?
My project, Visions of Paradise, is a celebration of the enduring force of nature—a force that surrounds us, inspires us, and perseveres despite the ecological challenges we impose upon it. Through fantasy landscapes and imagined flora, I explore how nature thrives, adapts, and reclaims its place, offering a glimpse of hope in the face of adversity.

Two key works embody this vision. "Botanical Garden" captures the resilience of plants flourishing in an uninspiring, human-dominated environment, a testament to nature's ability to endure and transform even the most neglected spaces. In "Spring at the Vesuvius", I depict the rebirth of life after disaster, with vibrant growth emerging from the ashes of destruction, symbolizing the unstoppable life force of the natural world.

Each piece in this series is a dialogue between reality and imagination, where organic forms and surreal elements merge to create spaces that feel both familiar and otherworldly. Visions of Paradise is both a call to action and an invitation to dream—a way to engage viewers in reflecting on humanity’s relationship with nature. Through these works, I aim to inspire appreciation, responsibility, and wonder for the ecosystems that sustain us all.

Justyna Pennards-Sycz studied at the Art Academy in Utrecht, Netherlands, and has lived across Europe. Artist painter and educational trainer, she gives workshops internationally. Inspired by travel, literature, and motherhood, her work has been shown in various museums, with an upcoming show at the Flower Art Museum Aalsmeer.

The Creative Process is created with kind support from the Jan Michalski Foundation.

WANDERER

WANDERER

By Stacy Gibboni


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UNTAMED oil painting by Stacy Gibboni

The Importance of Arts, Culture & The Creative Process.
The intuitive act of creating is as natural as breathing. Recognizing the aesthetics captured within a moment of our daily lives connects our being to that of the great fabric of existence.
As an artist I actively embrace this quest for beauty through the joy of each new day.

What was the inspiration for your creative work?
Navigating Eden
Stacy Gibboni
Artist Statement


Eden as an idea is woven into the fabric of human existence. The idea of home and sanctuary cross cultures. Navigating across seas, through forrest, over mountains, along sandy shores to collectively reside as a longing in our hearts. In my Eden , I walk the labyrinth of a unique place, a water world sparkling in nostalgia of her decadent past . Sunlight greets moonlight dancing along the tide, keeping me buoyed.

Each season I venture out of the studio into the city of two moons with my large scale works to share a moment with a passerby. I find joy in this act of living a shared moment . As the series evolves I find magic in the spontaneous blooming of foreign petals. Reflecting on the travel power of plants, the connectivity of Mother Nature and our individual relationships entwined with it.

Ever navigating these moments through painting, my soul finds what it seeks. Along this journey I’ve discovered peace here in my painted garden. - Stacy Gibboni Venice, Italy

Stacy Gibboni ( American b.1970) A graduate of New York University, NY, the Savannah College of Art & Design, GA and the Bach Centre, England. Gibboni’s colorful paintings are intuitively inspired by nature. Designed to poetically embrace the concept of joy in cohabitation with spaces we call home. The artist's international exhibition record spans over thirty years, with artworks held in private and public collections worldwide.

The Creative Process is created with kind support from the Jan Michalski Foundation.

 i imagine john ashbery reading my book instead of dying; inanimate stranger; since the world is war

i imagine john ashbery reading my book instead of dying; inanimate stranger; since the world is war

By John Compton

i imagine john ashbery reading my book instead of dying

john ashbery laid my book
on his desk, his face
aligned with the cover.

his fingers stitched neatly,
binding his hands.
his eyes extending their reach.

he sat, soundlessly,
listening to david, in the other room,
gather produce for a vegetable soup.

the pantry door creaked gently,
dropping a poem into the air.
he breathed, a subtle groan—

the sound of preparing.

john lingered at the title page,
letting the poems simmer:
a breath caught in his cheek.

he slid his finger across trainride,
met the corner of the page,
& turned to “felicity.”

he understood the mathematical equation
referencing a blowjob.
his smile creased like a dog-ear.

●●●●●

inanimate stranger

i scout a pocket
to inhabit. the room
renders listless. 

my mind distends with displeasure.

every second trickles. water
slurs through the glass.

air is soaking
with the smell. in the road

the dog is as heavy
as my pen.

he is a chattel
of my imagination. a meager
creature to the yellow

lines. the chatter behind me
becomes anonymous.

a girl shrieks. her flushed
face speaks
for her humane mouth.

//

a man
kisses a lady
in a photograph.

their white frowzy hair
speaks depths

about their happiness.

●●●●●

since the world is war

writing poetry
reincarnated
his country.

he records new cities
while watching
buildings
become rubble.

he sounds out
gunfire,
turns the music
of warheads
down.

he witnesses
children die—

he watches mothers
weep, ripped apart, then
die.

he scrutinizes men
with power,
wanting to be gods,
becoming gods.

//

he tries to ignore
the corpus mountain
that accumulates
outside his window

because in his nightmares
ominous stares
haunt him—

dead eyes
never close—

there, the deceased rise.

John Compton (b. 1987) has been writing poetry for over 22 years. He is a gay poet who lives in Kentucky with his husband, Josh, and their dogs and cats. His latest full-length book is my husband holds my hand because i may drift away & be lost forever in the vortex of a crowded store published with Flowersong Press (Dec 2024); his latest chapbook is melancholy arcadia published with Harbor Editions (April 2024).

The Creative Process is created with kind support from the Jan Michalski Foundation.

DIVING BELL SPIDER

DIVING BELL SPIDER

Living in a diving bell
how much can any creature know?
I watched minnows drift past.2
In their aluminum armor
saw my fangs, my four sets of eyes.
It was like being visited
by a stranger, my reflection a ghost
who appeared occasionally,
a bit lost, expectant.