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Jane Moore Houghton

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On my desk

Updates from my desk


Project in the works

March 2025

I’m starting early this year to work on products to sell at the holiday buying time. Some very lovely customers have been asking me for a new calendar. I haven’t done one in quite a while and it is time. My original idea, started last year, was too fussy and complicated. This kept me from getting it out in time. So, I’m back to the drawing board (ba dum dum) and have new ideas and new art.

Also, I’m reenergized about actually putting out a newsletter! Please sign up if you’d like ot be the first to know when I release the 2026 calander! Promises to be packed with funky friends of the two and four legged kind.

 

Family Ties

I have begun a series of studies based on journal entries and dreams I have had. The theme is a meditation on some family-of-origin relationships and history that I have begun to unpack these past few years. I longed to write a book about it all but don’t consider myself an effective writer. When I asked myself how I might process all the complicated feelings and beliefs I have, I landed on what comes naturally, painting.

I am a trained grief counselor and am well aware of the power of telling your story, your way. My truth matters. It’s something I often have to remind myself as the middle-kid, bandaid sibling who has always seen my role as the peacekeeper, the one who was responsible for bringing everyone together even if it meant I had to hide my truth and my feelings in the process. My parents are deceased and the remainder of my family have essentially abandoned me for a deranged story they have conjured about me that apparently makes them feel less shame, less embarrassment for their own perceived shortcomings and abuse. It’s one of the most complicated and painful grief experiences I have had to grapple with and I have experienced quite a bit of loss. Mental illness can destroy families and the souls of those who are fighting to preserve what is good in a family.

I hope this series will evolve slowly and thoughtfully for me. My intention is to take my time and allow the imagery and feelings to spill out in their own way and time. I want to respect this process in order to honor my parents who worked so hard to create a family based on shared memories, some roads that had no road maps and love. It will be an intensely private process and outcome but I hope the imagery that emerges will have some universal messages for people as well.

Some studies from my sketchbooks:


New Traditions

This past Christmas as I watched my three adult children and their partners take in traditional items that mean ALOT to me didn’t seem to hit them in the same way. It got me thinking, what will their traditions be? What sorts of things will they collect to refelct this season? Their partners have different traditions of course as well as religious traditions. What imagery will they want to surround themselves with (if any)?

I asked them some questions about this - even asked about the traditional red and green color palette and if that was important to them. Their answers were informative and inspiring to me.

I’ve been developing ideas for Christmas tree toppers for the 25 - 35 audience. They are shaking up our ideas of the old world order and their future trditions and imagery/color palette choices will reflect this.

Here are some of my ideas I’ve been creating with paper maches and acrylic gouache. They are prototypes but the bug will go to my son Parker and the owl to my son Simon. I made my daughter and her husband a felt Santa developed from an illustration I did as part of my 50 figures series.

 

Dung Beetle - to roll away the crap from the year before and clear the energy for the new year.

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Owl - gazing over the family to bring greater connectedness and wisdom

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Santa flying over a village to bless the communities around the world - this one is the most in process of the three paper mache tree toppers.

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Felt Santa created from my illustration:

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Word Daily

An ode to ignored emails…

Does anyone else get emails on a daily that they do not unsubscribe to because they think they’ll get to them at some point but actually rarely do?

For me, one of these is Word Daily. I want to have better vocabulary. I thought I would play with some lettering and spot illustrations/doodles from my sketchbooks for a bit. The lettering is not fussy, just helps me learn the word.

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Five Art Films worth seeing

March 18, 2015

Sometimes when I am working in the studio I like to watch Netflix tv shows or movies. I recently watched five art-related movies that were insightful and thought provoking. I can recommend all of them and here is why: 

  • "Frida"   - this Oscar winning film focuses on Frida Kahlo's relationship with her husband, artist Diago Rivera. What I found most compelling about this film was the relationship she had with her art and her insatiable appetite to create art for herself. I learned so much about this incredibly strong and inspirational woman. It's a gorgeous film to boot.
  • "Miss Potter" (I think I actually watched this one on Amazon). This is a great movie to watch if you have a child (particularly a female child) who is interested in making art. This movie plays out the story of Beatrix Potter, the creator of the beloved children's series of books that include "The Tale of Pater Rabbit" and gave us such characters as Squirrel Nutkin, Miss Tittlemouse, etc... Miss Potter is played by Renee Zellweger, who I think does a beautiful job. I got lost in this film as it reminded me of being a young girl dreaming of being an illustrator and children's book writer as I sketched away in the little studio I had made myself in an empty closet in my bedroom. The gorgeous shots of the Lake District and English countryside were an eye-candy bonus. My husband sat through this movie and seemed to enjoy it - this is my pick for a great family movie night flick. 

  • "Marina Abromovic: The Artist is Present"  This film, along with the next two, are documentaries and not necessarily appropriate for young viewers. This film follows the Serbian performance artist, Marina Abramovic as she prepares for her retrospective show at the MOMA in 2010. What struck me about this documentary was how very true it is that the story of why and how an artist makes art truly does "sell" the work. I have long struggled to connect with some of the performance and more avant guard modern art I have seen and always wished I could know more about the "why" motivation of an artist. The insight into this artist's vision and personal story made the experience of her art incredibly moving for me. I grew to admire and adore her. The throngs of people who came to sit with her during her very real and powerful personal installation did as well. It is a powerful insight into the modern art world and the hero-worship it can often create around  artists. It's a thought-provoking movie worth watching and paying attention to. 

  • "Wasteland" This film follows revered artist Vik Muniz as he documents the work of Brazilian recyclable materials/trash pickers in the trash dumps of Rio De Janeiro's Jardim Gramacho landfill. This is a gem of a film that sucks you in to a world one could never imagine. The beauty and power of Muniz's vision and the relationship he forges with this inspired and resilient community is something to witness. The lives of all who were involved in this project are changed in ways you just cannot predict when he first begins his project in this ... well, wasteland and with the people who have made it their livelihood and community. This film is a powerful one for preteens and teenagers. 

  • "Cutie and the Boxer"  This film was nominated in 2014 for an Oscar for Best Documentary Feature. It focuses on the complicated relationship between married artists Ushio and Noriko Shinohara. I found their relationship depressing at times as well as endearing in moments. It is a tension-filled marriage between two artists who happened to be married. Much like Frida Kahlo, Noriko Shinohara creates art that is both autobiographical and painful as it maps her struggle to assert her own personal voice.  Noriko is belittled by her better-known artist husband. The emotional abuse she endures during their long marriage was hard for me to watch at times. It is a poignant portrait of a woman who is struggling to defend an identity she has long ago lost to her over-bearing and dysfunctional husband. I was reminded by watching the "boxing artist", Ushio, that when you create art for the sole purpose of making money it often falls flat. I watched as he frantically attempted to make images that would sell rather than ones that truly spoke to him.  Meanwhile, his wife  was quietly and clandestinely creating work that was truth-filled and intensely personal. The contrast between their two creative muses was palpable. This film is worth watching but be prepared to feel a little deflated and frustrated. 

Some final thoughts about these films as a group: 

      I continue to reflect on the woman in these films as a female artist, wife and mother. All of these films gave me a view of woman that helped me better understand myself. I feel inspired by all the woman (both artists and the trash pickers in Wasteland) featured in these films and would welcome discussion about what others felt about them. Please share your thoughts with me and my audience here on the blog!

Be well and enjoy! 

Tags art related films, art movies, Frida Khalo, Beatrix Potter, Marina Abromovic, Vick Muniz, Ushio Shinohara, Cutie and the Boxer, Noriko
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About Jane

Every time I start a new series of works I start with a sense of wonder, a speeding up of my pulse, a feeling like I can’t catch up to the things I want to express and the places I want the work to take me.

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