Breaking out of my comfort zone!

Stacy and Greg Vanden HeuvelA good time was had by all at the Art Opening and the performance of “Chicago” at the Flat Rock Playhouse. As my first solo exhibit, it seemed like a herculean task to pull off—I was humbled. I wonder if most people feel that way. It’s one of those situations where it’s good that you do not know all of the logistics involved before you start. Details are key—it’s the details that add up to the final presentation.

The biggest thing I gained from this experience is a bit of wisdom and perspective. I ask myself: What were the successes of the event? What were the elements that can be improved upon? Was the opening helpful in attaining my short-term and long-term goals? This event was waaaaay out of my comfort zone but a step towards a dream, so it is important to look back and reflect. Writer Denis Waitley says:

“A dream is your creative vision for your life in the future. You must break out of your current comfort zone and become comfortable with the unfamiliar and the unknown.”

I suppose breaking out of my comfort zone should be first on the list of successes, even though I did not recognize it as a goal during the process.

I’m leading a double life. A web designer and mother by day…

I’m leading a double life. A web designer and mother by day—and an artist by night! Well, maybe that is a triple life, plus you add in the rock climbing…Well, you get the idea.

The degree I have in Fine art (specializing in graphic design) has been put to good use as a web designer. However, lately my inner artist has emerged and fine art has been my nightly passion. It’s such a pleasure to take out the old paint brushes and pottery tools, find the art books and just create. My focus has been on mixed media art and encaustic painting.

What is encaustic art, you ask? While I use a variety of materials, encaustic wax is the primary medium of each piece. Encaustic painting, also known as hot wax painting, is created by colored pigments added to hot beeswax. The liquid is then applied to a surface, usually prepared wood. The word encaustic comes  from Greek and means to burn in, which refers to the process of fusing the paint. Encaustic painting was practiced by Greek artists as far back as the 5th century B.C.the inspiration.

What do I love about it? Sharing a modern artistic vision with a centuries old medium. My orignial art, giclée prints and art journals can be found at Red Step Artworks and notecards of my art images are available at Fountainhead Bookstore in Hendersonville, NC.

Following is a glimpse at my portfolio. For more information, visit my fine art site: MtnArtist.com.

Hello, E-commerce Meet…Social Networking & Appointment Scheduling

Wow! It’s been awhile since I’ve blogged.

Stacy Vanden Heuvel, MtnWebs.com and MtnArtist.com

Stacy Vanden Heuvel

But that is OK because I’ve been  busy with family, web design (just finished The Oaks Bed and Breakfast) and launching my encaustic and mixed media art at MtnArtist.com.

More fine art has been entering my blog. The most interesting part is that the articles geared to small business are extremely relevant to the independent artist. I’ve been working on new small business e-commerce solutions and wanted to show you some of the other wonderful programs you can take advantage of.

Here is a list of “Ten Programs You Need to Check Out” to make your precious time more effective and efficient:

  • Adobe ConnectNow—Start web conferencing with one click. Share your screen. See the participants. Use a whiteboard, chat, and share notes. It’s almost like being there.
  • FreshBooks Online Invoicing—Focus on what you love to do by using this easy program to send email (or snail mail) estimates, invoices, accept payments online and it integrates with Quickbooks and lots of other software programs.
  • Mail Chimp Email Marketing—Email marketing that integrates with your social networking …and you can have a FREE account.
  • MatCutter.com—You create the art, they’ll cut the mats. Easy to navigate site for all artists who want to present their work in a very professional way.
  • Moo.com Creative Print—When they say ‘we love to print’, they really mean it. The most creative solutions for business cards, postcards and stickers. Especially for  people who think outside the box (or for people who wish they did.)
  • Screenr.com Screencasts—You can create web-based screencasts (no software to download), embed them on your site, post them to YouTube and more. (I’ve got one on MtnWebs.com for my clients, “WordPress Intro Screencast“. Getting ready to add one to MtnArtist.com about my work.
  • Setster—Amazing! Innovative calendar not only converts web traffic to appointments 24 hours a day, it accepts payments and promotes your services over every social media outlet. Just set your available hours and let site visitors/clients schedule appointments. *see below
  • Skype Video Calls and IM—In addition to instant messaging, I have it set up so my work number actually calls Skype on my computer. There is an email notification if you miss a call, voicemail, call forwarding and the ability to create a contact list.
  • Wise Stamp Email Signatures—No one listens to me on this one, but it’s fantastic. WiseStamp Email Appsenable users to bring functionality in every email they send. Check out the Apps gallery where you’ll find 14 social, fun and serious apps. Send all your social networking and even an rss feed of your blog through your email!
    Email Apps
  • Wufoo Online Form Builder—Not just any contact form for you! The form builder helps you create contact forms, online surveys, and invitations so you can collect the data, registrations and even online payments you need without writing a single line of code.

Many of these innovative small business solutions integrate with one another so you can import or export contacts to target new contacts or retain current clients.

I use EVERY ONE of these fantastic business solutions on my web design site, my fine art site or website’s that I design for clients. So, they have been personally tested and I only have rave reviews to report.

I’d also like to introduce you to a wonderful blog: ArtBizBlog: For the Business of Being an Artist by Alyson B. Stanfield. She’s got tons of great posts about the business side of art. Check out this one: 5 minute Self-Promotion Tasks. Great for anyone that gets totally overwhelmed and says “I just don’t have the time to deal with that Twitter thing.” Again, her blogs apply not only to artists but almost all small business owners.

*Psst…Hey, have you noticed the red button on our web page? Have you seen what happens when you click on it? Give it a try! We’ll have to warn you though, you may be in for a surprise! It’s my time wrapped up in a great package and presented to you for your ease and convenience to get a hold of me anytime. Give it a Setster a try :)

Web Design and the Geek Sensibility

It takes a special combination of computer geek sensibility and creative ability to be a web designer, web developer or graphic designer these days. In fact, there’s an article on a new website to be launched in February by Dave Abrams, TheMarySue.com, targeting the widely underserved: female geeks.

“TheMarySue.com will feature content on topics such as video games, comics and women in technology, and will be curated from a female geek perspective.

“A lot of it is going to be, ‘here are the cool things on the Internet,’ but it’s from the sensibility of women who are really knowledgeable about the tech and geek world,” MSNBC’s Abrams said in a phone interview.

OK…I’m NOT on board with this. Video games and comics? Come on.

Code and technical know-how as well as combining color, symmetry and balance on using cutting edge software are what it takes to be a great web developer or website designer. The ability to communicate while helping the viewer navigate the website is the end goal of every graphic element. Whether it is a male or female web developer does not factor in. While I appreciate the effort to provide the latest geek information for the nerdy requirements of my profession, I object to the rest of their perspective on the subject of female geeks.

Susana Polo (obviously a female) will be editor of TheMarySue.com. She has said she’s excited about carving out a new space for women on the Web. However, I see her as taking us a step backwards.

“One of the things you want to do as a girl geek is you just want to play with the boys; you want to be part of that culture,” said Polo, who currently writes for Geekosystem. “I think there’s value in having our own space.”

“She explained by phone that the name of the site is an ironic twist on the Mary Sue character in fan fiction. A Mary Sue is typically a beautiful female character who represents a standard of perfection that’s impossible to live up to.”

If that is not the most condescending, ridiculous statement toward female web designers, I don’t know what is. Ugh, the images of perfection girls are fed, even in jest. While I embrace my female geek sensibility, I do not feel excluded from any aspect of gathering design information, participating in web forums, or the geek community in general. Being a female in a male environment can be a plus and fascinating, as well.

Hopefully, as the vision for TheMarySue.com develops, it will become a valuable hub and community for techy women, nerdy web designers, geeky developers and more. One that contributes to a tech knowledge base as a whole and not devalue the role of us female geeks in an unintended, “humorous” way. I’m also interested in how much they comment on social networking and women in technology (Facebook, Twitter, etc.) in relation to the web and tech world.

I’d like to share the artistic side of this female tech geek. Here is a sample of some of my latest fine art. They are created with encaustic wax, acrylic paint, ink, Japanese paper and a few other things. Who knows— hopefully you may see them around Hendersonville or Asheville some day. Enjoy.

[portfolio_slideshow]

Fine Art and Web Design Inspiration

Took a break from MtnWebs, web design projects and WordPress (a rare occurrence). We went to the National Gallery of Art in DCand saw works by Renior, Picasso, Monet, Rodin (my favorite), Cassatt, Van Gogh, Degas and more. Also, walked through the Sculpture Garden and saw a Calder and Lichtenstein. It was breathtaking and I’m so glad my sons got to see the paintings and sculpture in person.

All media are inspirations for web design. Encaustic painting is my newest artistic endeavor. I have a Bachelor of Fine Art from Auburn University, but did not learn encaustic painting while there. It could be explained as painting with heated wax, yet the creative possibilities are endless. You can include unique Japanese paper, image transfers, text, texture and any mixed media you can come up with. Encaustic involves a good sense of design and a huge sense adventure. Can’t wait to get started!


Visit Encaustic Art

Two illustrators that are inspiring to me are James Noel Smith and Laura Coyle (who is also an amazing Jazz singer). They have very different techniques—individualism expressed through visual art. Check them out. Some of my other inspirations are: Savion Glover, Auguste Rodin, Édouard Vuillard, Vincent van Gogh, Daylilies, Isadora Duncan, W. H. Auden, Maya Angelou, Yo-Yo Ma, Donnie Hathaway, Stevie Wonder and Calexico.

Also, be sure to watch this following video, Boy with a Coin.” Stunning…

Design in art: Various elements in the creative flux…

“Design in art, is a recognition of the relation between various things, various elements in the creative flux. You can’t invent a design. You recognize it, in the fourth dimension. That is, with your blood and your bones, as well as with your eyes.”—D H Lawrence

Prague architectureDobry den (Good day in Czech)

Greg and I just returned to Hendersonville, NC from an incredible trip to Prague in the Czech Republic. Never could I have imagined the beauty that was constantly, almost nonchalantly displayed at every corner, in every building. It seemed like millions of cobblestones lead me to marvels that somehow survived what history had dealt them.

Saint VitusPeople have asked me what my favorite parts of the trip were. That’s a tough question. The very Gothic Saint Vitus Cathedral in Prague was an awe-inspiring place of worship and symbol of holiness and faith. Also, the majestic Charles Bridge that crosses Vltava river in Prague. It was commissioned by the Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV in 1357 and has seen the good and bad of eras of history in that area.

John Lennon Graffiti wallIn contrast, the The Lennon Wall is a totally different creative inspiration. Once a normal wall, since the 1980′s it has been filled with John Lennon-inspired graffiti and pieces of lyrics from Beatles songs. In 1988, the wall was a source of irritation for the communist regime. Young Czechs would write complaints on the wall and this led to a clash between hundreds of students and security police on the Charles Bridge (mentioned above). Now, the wall symbolize love and peace.

In the midst of all this history are remarkable contemporary bronze statues sprinkled throughout parks and courtyards in the city. The clean, rounded lines contrast with the intricate tangle of vines, patterns and seemingly hundreds of visual layers carved into the historic buildings (even each door, window, and every other structural element). Some of the contemporary works are comments on modern life.

Modern bronze art in PragueEnglish author, poet, playwright, essayist and critic, D H Lawrence created works that represent the dehumanizing effects of modernity and industrialization. In Prague, sculptures with the same theme are placed next to a building that was built before the 1500′s. And this contrast works. One gives you a rest from the other. Let’s you appreciate the properties of all with out personal saturation or having to “choose” which art you want to experience in such a large city.

There are artistic treats and surprises around each turn in Prague. These surprises and their contrasting styles have re-opened my eyes to the design possibilities in all medium. The chaos vs. balance even translates to web and graphic design. Contrast can create visual drama and an experience clients cannot turn away from. Why not take the risk?

Stacy from MtnWebs watching rock climbing in PragueP.S. No rock climbing pictures of Stacy this trip—foot still broken. Greg climbed in the Czech Republic near Poland, though. I’ll have to wait the broken foot heals and stick with the incredible climbing near Hendersonville and Asheville.

Nashledanou (Good bye..for now)