Billie Hope Creations
Encaustic and other mixed mediums, utilized in unique ways to create one of a kind artwork.
facebook.com/billiehopeartwork instagram.com/billiehopecreations
Encaustic and other mixed mediums, utilized in unique ways to create one of a kind artwork.
facebook.com/billiehopeartwork instagram.com/billiehopecreations
Peruse gifts from local and independent artists while sipping on a local and independent beer at the Sunday version of the First Saturday Arts Market. The market showcases paintings, sculpture, photography, jewelry and handcrafted items.
Arepa Station a Venezuelan Food truck.
2000 Lyons Ave, Houston, TX 77020
DIRECTIONS HERE!
This is an extension of Mitch Cohen’s art column, Art Valet, from The Leader Newspaper. Read the column here. The theme was “Around the World.” Mitch invited artists from his mailing list to tell him their stories and where they are from.
Cathy Hookey
http://www.cathyhookey.com/grownupwork
How long have you been in the U.S./Houston?
So I’m from various parts of southern England; I was born in Hereford, raised in north London but spent my adult life in a small town in Cornwall. I’ve been in Houston since December 2016, so I’m still kinda new!
What kind of artist are you?
I graduated with an illustration degree in 2011, then worked freelance in kid’s illustration as well as on contract to BBC making art and props for a children’s art show. I quit and got rid of anything I couldn’t fit in a backpack to travel in 2013, and for the next few years I lived in and moved around Catalonia, Italy, Switzerland, and England couch-surfing, volunteering and drawing. During my time in Italy I fell for a pretty American who was staying at the hostel I was working at…then a few years later I moved to Houston to be with that American permanently!
My career currently is both as an illustrator and an artist, so I take commissions, write and illustrate comics and picture books as well produce paintings, drawings and small-run seriographs for galleries.
In my pictures, I use a lot of esoteric and natural symbolism, especially plants from England and symbolism from native Celtic witchcraft and folk stories. Most of my work is inspired by my inner experience, working through my ‘Self’ and past trauma…making a picture is sort of an attempt to explore or transform something inside me, so my work is very personal and quite varied! I also hope that by sharing the personal work I make that other people with similar temperaments might find something useful in them too. I like to juxtapose the esoteric symbolism and folky themes with bright colours and modern comic style, sort of folk magic for millennials. I work in Photoshop, mixed-media, laser-cut wood and acrylic, pen and ink as well as making screen and block prints.
Has living in the states, changed your art? How?
Living in the States has definitely changed my work…I think for me it was an expansion – suddenly I’m surrounded by so many people who are so different from what I’m used to, and Houston itself is predictably very different to living in a small town by the sea in rural England! Everything about being here has expanded both my repertoire of influences and my ideas of what I could possibly do with my artwork. Before moving to Houston I struggled to figure out where I ‘fit’ in the worlds of illustration and art, but since being here I’ve been able to expand what I imagine the boundaries are between the two, that is, I don’t see a boundary anymore, and I love working with a marriage of the two. I think letting go of the distinction between art and illustration has made my work more experimental and unique, and far more enjoyable to do!
I also run artist critique and support groups online because I love to interact with and support other artists, and I have a regular blog where I tackle sort of general philosophical and spiritual issues through the lens of art.
What would you recommend a visitor to your country try doing/seeing or tasting in your country?
I suppose if I were to recommend a visitor something to do in England it would be…to see more than just London! Cornwall is my most recommended place, especially if you love history or beautiful landscapes. Cornwall has a number of Neolithic sites, as well as ruins and castles (Tintagel, the ‘birthplace of King Arthur,’ is stunning!) a number of ‘magical’ Celtic sites, as well as beaches, cliffs and headlands, forests and little quaint towns by the sea, and great surf and music spots.
If you really want to experience an out of the way, old-school English experience, I know an alehouse for a pint on the quay in a little town that is perfect! “The ‘Front” in Falmouth (in southern Cornwall) won best ale house and best cider pub of the year in 2018 from the local ‘Campaign for Real Ale’ awards, and comes personally recommended by me, who drinks and knows a fair bit about English ale!
This is an extension of Mitch Cohen’s art column, Art Valet, from The Leader Newspaper. Read the column here. The theme was “Around the World.” Mitch invited artists from his mailing list to tell him their stories and where they are from.
Aysha Badat
Where are you from and how long have you been in the U.S./Houston
I am Pakistani/Indian and South African, I was born and raised in Houston Texas
What kind of artist are you?
I am a henna, makeup and lash artist.
Has living in the states, changed your art? How?
Although I was born and raised here, my art work has definitely changed because I live here. I learned henna when I was 15 and Pakistan didn’t have the concept of natural, vegan, and harmful chemical knowledge or concerns. If it worked it worked if it didn’t and caused harm there were hospitals to fix it was kind of their policy. However meeting different American artist through social media, I learned about natural, vegan and cruelty free henna and makeup products. Which changed my designs out come, the health of my clients skin and overall the quality of service I provided to my customers.
What would you recommend a visitor to your country try doing/seeing or tasting in your country?
If you ever visit India, South Africa or even Pakistan always try the local foods they are the best.
Advice i leaned from my grandfather what ever foreign country you travel to, eat a piece of raw onion. it will settle your stomach for the water and foods of that country since your immune system would not be used to that region.
The art of burning images onto wood. Facebook
“HERE’S THE FUTURE OF THE SINGER-SONGWRITER GENRE.” – TEX RENNER
Nationally touring singer-songwriter, guitarist, producer, and author Tommy Lewis is considered a Nova Beat, the group of creatives in the same vein as those at the heart of the mid-century cultural revolution. Alongside his sensei Radney Foster, Chad Elliott, Dana Cooper, Rod Picott, and Matt Harlan in the same spirit as Tom Russell, Jason Isbell, and Sturgill Simpson, Tommy is helping to redefine American roots music. www.tommylewis.net
His was hard rock and heavy metal. Hers was the classic sound of the East Texas piney woods. Theirs was a fiery collision, bearing forth a sound that was at once novel and instantly familiar–nodding to roots seated deep in high lonesome harmonies and back porch blues, while peering out at a scorched path bound by modern assertions and contemporary commentary.
This two-person, dozen-instrument act provides a show full of sound a fury, punctuated with raw, quiet vulnerability. Come welcome them as they bring you back home. www.griftersandshills.com
Paula Hawkins is a fine artist who combines realism with abstract impressionism to create works that are beautiful and symbolic, capturing color and light, imagination, time and mood while combining art and quantum physics. paulahawkinsart.com? instagram.com/paulahawkins10
by Ashley Hawkins
www.avmhawkins.com www.instagram.com/a.v.m.hawkins
I create abstract expressionistic paintings. They are vibrant, energetic and colorful. I create unconsciously, rarely creating with a preset concept or vision for each work of art. Instead, I create from inspiration, emotion, and the subconscious within specific moments in time. At the end, the painting, in many ways are “revealed” to me.
I began painting this way during my first year in law school by accident. Learning the law became my life, day and night, seven days a week. And when I was not achieving the results I desired, I became extremely frustrated. One day, I took all that frustration, seemingly negative energy, and released it onto blank canvases. My evolution as an artist, was conceived in that moment. Finally, I found a “space,” where I could create where there were no rules, no limitations, no judgment, and no fear. My art, is that save place, where I can do anything. There are only infinite possibilities.
I typically use Acrylic paint on canvas as my foundation. However, most of my painting experiment with several different mixed media, such as, candle wax, newspaper, magazine paper, bubble wrap, card stock, mailing labels, painters tape, charcoal, ink, and sharpie markers.