Creative Environment
In the Studio
A studio, an atelier – what does it need? How do you design a room for free thought and creativity? Can we suggest general guidelines? Maybe not. After all, everyone does it their own way. Some fill it with interesting objects, leftover materials, and random clutter, while others delight in the exact opposite: orderly, tidy spaces with clean lines, angles, and sharpened pencils, waiting in silent readiness.
This is a schoolroom, comfortably worn and lightly maintained. A forgiving environment that bears the unmistakable traces of many years of creative efforts. Sometimes it hosts a group of creators. Sometimes, if you’re lucky, you can have the run of the whole room, spreading out however you like.
But the process itself, what’s it all about? It might begin in a kind of chaos, a collection of materials. Moving on pure intuition in broad circles around a subject still not fully formulated. Searching and finding – a feather perhaps, or a wrinkled bag in a tempting shade of lemon-yellow. Posting old sketches and notes to the wall. A word, a sentence that pops into your head – best to jot it down on a writing board before you lose it! Slowly a collage of words, images, and little drawings emerges in the room. A miniature universe, this, that, and the other in physical form. In the best case, you begin to understand which way you’re going.
Viola’s paintings spring from childhood situations – experienced, dreamed, or imagined, all with a palpable emotional charge. Like an archaeologist of feelings, she joins together fragments, creating snapshots of particular moments. A blanket, a glimpse of wallpaper, or the way the light falls on a shag rug; details excavated from the mines of memory. It hits the viewer right in the solar plexus and they think, yes, it was like that for me, too!
Writing and bulletin boards are filled and erased as the work progresses. It’s as analogue a process as could be. Compositions emerge and evolve, sometimes so fine they demand to be documented.
Photography: Pia Ulin Styling and text: Cilla Ramnek Artist: Viola Sparre