Showing posts with label Fate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fate. Show all posts

Monday, June 18, 2012

There is nothing wrong with having your head in the clouds!





A year ago today I opened the doors to what has proven to be a life long dream.

When asked as a child what my plans were for my future I shook my head "no" to ideas of being a nurse, teacher or secretary and proudly proclaimed I was going to be an artist!






Over the winter I decided to learn how to make stained
glass so I could recycle my broken glassware collection.

These pendants are now available in the shop along with
my Woodland Wool critters and the wonderful creations
of 30 other talented Nova Scotian artists and artisans!
Everyone warned me about the difficulties... and I admit that at various times over the years I've fallen down in complete defeat and accepted that supporting myself by working in the arts might be an impossibility.... but then I'd have a big bright vision of some sort of vibrant art community or I'd fall into a job surrounded by other creative folks... so that whenever I felt I was going to have to make due with a life that was a little less creative, well then life would take over and let me know that it didn't have to be so.
 




New in the shop this year, monsters by Sewn by Blythe.
I'm honoured to have Blythe's work in the shop, it was 
Blythe's felted vintage cameras that inspired me
to create my line of recycled wool critters.




I've always been a firm believer in fate, and because of this I play very close attention to my dreams - especially when my grandfather is involved. When I first started playing with the idea of applying for the government funded Self Employment Benefits program I was a bit nervous about the possible risk I would be taking. The night before my very first meeting to begin the application process I dreamt that I was working on a fast paced assembly line which produced food, print and television (combining all my many years spent in production). As I worked away I realized that I was just a cog in a wheel and that I was working my ass off with no satisfaction because I was not the one reaping the rewards of my hard labour - someone else was!

I sat down frustrated and watched the chaos. My grampy sat beside me and asked why I had stopped - this was my job, I had better get back to it. I told him that I just didn't want to do it anymore. "Well", he said, "why don't you do what you want to do then? Why don't you go to the meeting tomorrow and start your own business?"    

The next morning I made the trip into the city, met with an employment officer and told them of my dreams of an artist run creative community centre. I started the application process. After much confusion I later found out that I couldn't be served through Halifax and I had to start the process all over again, this time though Hants County. With an extra 4 months to think over my business plan it evolved. I knew my creative community centre would one day come... but I had to figure out what the first step would be to getting there. Perhaps a retail space!

Over the years I've been fortunate to meet many creative people, whether it was through my time spent working in print and animated production or as a crafter myself, traveling from show to show. I've come across many interesting people who all make very interesting products and I wanted to introduce them, or at least their work, to everyone that I met! Okay... now I was starting to get a bit more of an idea...

Next I began my hunt for the prime retail space. Since I was a resident of Hants County, and being funded through Hants County, my business had to also be in Hants County. The closest most populated nearby town is Windsor, so I began my search there.


It wasn't long before I was once again facing defeat. The cost to rent or lease in Windsor is practically as expensive as Halifax - there was no way I could dish out that kind of cash! I'm no fool, I may love my work and that of my colleagues - but I wasn't foolish enough to take on the financial risk that setting up a shop in Windsor would mean.

As my brain spun trying to figure out how to evolve my dream into something more feasible, Bryan came up with the idea of buying a trailer, gutting it and then having a shop I could set up anywhere. At first I was completely opposed... "oh that's so tacky", I thought. Then we started to look into how much work it would be to gut and renovate an older camper.... we could probably do something for under $5000.... maybe this could be possible?
 

As I laid in bed that night I thought to myself.... "nope, this was all just a silly dream... I'm still nowhere near making it a reality... I might as well go back to the job hunt tomorrow."

As I slept I dreamt I was packing up my studio space in the garage along with the help of my mom and my step father. As we packed artist Kelly Mitchelmore and her husband arrived with a bottle of red to cheers me and my new future. As we chatted I became distracted by a rhythmic beat and went down to the edge of the water to see if I could find the source.

As I looked across the water I felt a familiar warm fuzziness pass over my leg and looked down to see Mister Fluff... only Mister still had his glorious long plume of a tail intact. I watched Mister as he manoeuvred his way from tree to tree across the pond until he met up with the source of the beat... a young native, seated beside a fire, patting out the rhythm on his drum.

As I watched I once again felt that familiar fuzz pass across my ankle, only this time it was Mister as he is now, post critter attack, with his short little nub of a tail. As I looked back and forth confused over my twin cats I realized I had been joined by a much older native chief. He explained to me that I was experiencing a fold in time and that young man on the other side of the river was he himself as a young man.

He went on to explain that what we were witnessing was the very first time he took on the position of beating out the rhythm that kept the river running, something that he had done every spring since and something that had been done every spring beforehand for all of time. If this rhythm was not started again each spring then the earth would stop functioning properly and all hell would break loose.

Suddenly my mother informed me it was time to leave and I loaded myself into a van full to the brim with all my possessions. I waved my goodbyes and headed towards my future. As we passed through the North End of Halifax I saw my best friend from high school, Tanja, and her younger sister. We stopped at a light and the two came over to the van, Tanja asked where I was going and I answered honestly - "I have no idea?"

She then went on to ask  "well aren't you starting your own business? Don't you want to follow your dreams?"

Yes - yes I do!

Now I began to panic! She was right, I needed to follow my dreams, I needed to go back home! I opened the door, got out and started running for home, I ran and ran until I woke myself up.

I promptly went downstairs, opened up my computer and went to Kijiji and typed in camper. The first image that came up was a 1955 Flying Cloud Airstream and she had been completely gutted and was just waiting to be rebuilt. My eye then caught the date in the bottom corner... it was January 11th.... what would have been my Grampy's birthday. Tears started running down my face because I knew that once again I was being sent a sign, I was on that right path - keep following that dream!

I admit that my current business plan has evolved a great deal from when I first opened my doors last spring. Initially I planned to take advantage of the fact that Flying Cloud is a mobile shop and I intended to travel the province from event to event. A lovely and romantic idea indeed, and had I been independently wealthy then perhaps I could have made it happen... but the reality is that once you crunch the numbers traveling has a multitude of risks involved. It took me a while to admit that traveling wasn't all that it was cracked up to be, but as soon as I did the true nature of my business started to unfold.

Here we are a year and a half later, Sylvia is now transformed into a beautiful little Nova Scotian art and artisan boutique, I have a new big and bright studio space where I'm surrounded by all my treasures and supplies and I am just weeks away from hosting our first workshops and starting our weekly open studio day where anyone is welcome to come and create and dream their own little dream :)









Join us July 14th at noon for our first workshop hosted here on the pond together with the HCAC! Ottawa artist Andrea Warren joins us for an afternoon painting picnic! A sandwich lunch will be provided by the HCAC along with a goodie bag of Golden Paint products to take home.

Email us at info@flyingcloudboutique.com to book your seat!

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Believe



Thank you stranger for the sweet little poem you threw away on our lawn... thankfully I can't help but read lost notes when I see them on the ground. This was a pleasant surprise, normally I find grocery lists and crumpled failed tests. This little rhyming message of hope and faith was a perfect summary of how I try to live my life.

Apparently "Believe" is a very popular piece by poet Emily Matthews, so I can't give credit to my anonymous litterbug for it's creation, but still it was a nice cherry on the top of a very awesome day! A day that was spent in meetings with vibrant folks like painter Kelly Mitchelmore and April Griffin from the new Vaughn Shand Wellness Centre, as we prepare to celebrate our local arts community with this year's Festival of Art. An easy flowing day spent following my dreams and listening to my intuition, letting it lead me to where I am meant to go.

Bryan sometimes walks around singing a little tune and ever ever since I first had my "Flying Cloud" dream (which I promise I will share with you all one day) it has become my motto. When ever things start to stray from my "plan" I repeat these words and remind myself that this is my path and that "everything works if you let it, if you let it all work out!"

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Fulka: you have to marvel at the beauty of fate!

Fate is a funny thing... can you even call fate a thing? 


Fate is a ironic, humorous, romantic and knowing reality. Today's gift from fate was brought to me by the universal language of the interweb! 


Many months ago when my life long dreams were finally jumping full step into fruition - it seems so were someone else's. 


Initially when I had finally narrowed down exactly what the shop was going to be, and found Sylvia to serve as the store front, I had to come up with a name for the business... which is easier said than done!


A long time favorite was "Birds of a Feather" - but that was already out there in multiple forms. "Local Yokels" was Bryan's choice;  boy oh boy was he defeated when we found this killer local site already in existence http://www.localyokel.ca  home to a Canadian Maritime collection of earth-friendly small-scale businesses. (*note to self, I must make friends). 


Our friend Lee took the name to the next step with "Locals Only". We thought that perhaps this name was a little too edgy... we didn't want to come off as elitist or anything. I went online and tried out various language converters... for days I typed in adjectives until it hit me - the perfect name of course would be Fulka Art!


Now according to good ol' wiki fulka means:

The English word Folk is derived from a Germanic noun, *fulka meaning "people" or "army". The word became colloquialized (usually in the plural folks) in English in the sense "people", and was considered unelegant by the beginning of the 19th century. It re-entered academic English through the invention of the word folklore in 1846 by the antiquarian William J. Thoms (1803–85) as an Anglo-Saxonism. This word revived folk in a modern sense of "of the common people, whose culture is handed down orally", and opened up a flood of compound formations, e.g. folk art (1921), folk-hero (1899), folk-medicine (1898),folk-tale (1891), folk-song (1847), folk-dance (1912). Folk-music is from 1889; in reference to the branch of modern popular music (associated with Greenwich Village in New York City) here it dates from 1958. It is also regional music.



Fulka Art! It makes sense right? 

Brilliant I thought... then I googled it and nothing came up... at first... but a few weeks later I thought I should check again and this time sure enough I found a "Coming Soon - Fulka" page - a really freakin' awesome page at that! 

It was the graphic of a woodgrain patterned deer that hit me in the gut with  "I don't know you but I already love you!"

But... damn it... now I was back at the drawing board... plus my business counselor added that "fulka" might sound too close to something else (drop an "a" and you get the f-word in a  Nova Scotian accent) it would no doubt be rejected  by the powers that be in the good ol' government offices. 

After a while I realized I had known the name all along. Ever since my prolific dream the night before I found Silver Sue (now that's a story for another day), I began recalling it as the "Flying Cloud" dream. One day I stopped short  with a  "duh!"  and I knew I had my name... Flying Cloud Boutique!

This morning I decided to check back in on the Fulka site and find out just who they were? 

Wow, what  a very nice surprise! 

Here's a snip-it from the Fulka Website and Facebook pages:

Fulka is the stage and recording name of folktronica singer-song writer Ola Kobak from Pretoria, South Africa. 

Fulka have been performing live since the 25th of February 2010 when the band was invited to play their first live show as the opening act for Dear Reader at the Rustic Theatre in Lonehill, JHB. 

Alongside Ola is a very veritable army of talent that includes her husband, well known electro maestro Jacob Israel, layering the drum beats, vintage synthesizers and production; multi- instrumentalist CornĂ© Roodt, playing anything from piano to bass, drums, accordion and banjo; Christian Henn, whom the group describe as a kind of ‘song construction engineer’ and Jean-Louise Nel whom captivates with her backing vocals and viola. 

Other artist featured on the album include progressive trumpeter Marcus Wyatt and Janus van der Merweand Ola’s father, Speedy Kobak, who has been sessioning as a trombone player for many bands including Lucky Dube, Natalie Cole and Johnny Clegg.


Pretty freaking awesome right? The tune "Dancing in our Darkest Days" is definitely now on the soundtrack to my life - absolutely! 

If you're interested to find out what all this fuss is about and want to learn more about Ola and her tribe of musicians then check out http://fulka.co.za and dance your afternoon away to the goodness of her streaming audio!

Oh fate, thank you once again for being wonderful you, always bringing me sunshine, even on the grayest days.