Posts filed under Creativity

Shrine Leaves His Mark on Ann Arbor

By Hilary Nichols

Most of us here in Ann Arbor did not have any idea what to expect when the tall, thin man placed his ladder up York’s blank brick wall on May 20th. The artist known as Shrine is a painter, muralist, and sculptor, creating outdoor art installations all over the world for the last few decades. Originally from Pasadena, California, Brent Allen Spears, aka Shrine, has been an artist his whole life. At his grandmothers’ tables he was praised for his talents while everything else in his young world wasn’t so pretty—so he identified as an artist from a very early age. His colorful style and steady hand grew over time from realism to his current style of modern folk art mastery. Now his exaggerated, colorful, overlapping geometric designs stretch ten stories up in New York and wrap countless corner tattoo parlors and salons in Portland, San Francisco, Austin, LA, and throughout the festival circuit worldwide. 

But what put him on the map as one of the truly great artists of our time is the more meaningful work that he has dedicated himself to lately. Beautiful offerings in conflict zones and refugee camps are the passion that has Shrine painting whole villages in Uganda, and a hospital in Tanzania, and a center for autistic adults in Kenya. He is ready and willing to collaborate with local artisans and everyday neighbors in areas that have no galleries. “Taking art somewhere that it has value, it is a different function. It is a personal preference, to choose to make art that will actually improve real lives.”

You can measure such actual impact by the number of people that gather at the Great Oven. While he was painting in Beirut, conflict broke out, leaving thousands in unstable conditions. Along with international chef James Gomez Thompson, Shrine painted and installed the initial Great Oven to fuel a common kitchen and the community that grew up around it. The ongoing Great Oven Project places communal ovens into refugee camps and conflict zones to provide sustainable food relief and creative community building with the great forces of food, music, and art. You can see Shrine’s cheerfully painted altar of an oven as it shines as a beacon of love on the Great Oven website.

These efforts not only add beauty where there is so much strife, but they leave this infectious discovery behind: that anyone and everyone can be an artist. “I just show people how I do it. It is simple, here are the tools and the time. Just getting that simple information out to everybody is the real gift in what I leave behind.”

In Tripoli, Lebanon, Shrine was invited to join courageous youth from two sides of a conflict as they finally abandoned hate and fear and picked up paint brushes, applying new hope and a pretty color palette to a set of stairs that divided them. «It is amazing what a common project can do.»

Shrine doesn’t take requests, and he doesn’t prepare beforehand. He arrives and surveys the scene to  engage the vision as it comes. I met Shrine in 2005 when he returned from crafting trash temples in Bali on our common friend’s film project. He has been a friend and favorite artist since, but I was surprised when he responded favorably to my Instagram query so quickly. He found the few days to squeeze in the YORK commission in an instant. Between designing a five-story tower for Google and an industrial sculpture in Mexico, before a month in Lebanon, he agreed to a week in Ann Arbor. That first day, travelling through town, Shrine noted how much blue we wave, so his eye went the opposite direction to pink. No sketches or templates because that would take all the fun out of it. Making the art is his whole driving force, and he reserves that drive to inspire his 6 a.m. arrivals and long hours on the ladder in the hot sun. Eight gallons of the best paint later, he stands back to ponder the yellow, orange, and pink triangled pattern that came to life at his hand, and quickly began to cut in the scalloped edges of white along the stripes. “Some soft rounds, an organic element is called for to add some more gentle shapes for the play of pathos in this piece,” Shrine assessed.

He won’t be done until he’s totally content. Even if that means he will be painting in the dark. Shrine does intend for us to feel these patterns and colors and to imbibe on the delicious color palette as we take in food and drink. And in much the same way, we will ingest the impact of this bright addition to our favorite courtyard and be moved. There is so much glowing warmth and open heart on this wall, we can taste it as we relish in the worldly addition to our town. More Shrine to come. Stay tuned.

See Shrine’s new art at York at 1928 Packard Street in Ann Arbor. Learn more about Shrine on his Instagram. 

Related Content:

Posted on May 8, 2023 and filed under Art, community, Creativity, Local Businesses.

Angels on Her Mind

I was hesitant to share my latest painting as my ingrained skepticism rears its head whenever angels appear, making me feel childish that I paint them. I grew up in a household where rationality ruled; the fantastical was accepted as part of the arts, but not necessarily respected. The intelligence of people of faith was questioned in principle, and my innocent curiosity was frequently ridiculed. I think it is rather miraculous that my spiritual interests and seeker tendencies weren’t wiped out altogether. In some of us, the yearning for a relationship with the Divine is strong—no different than a love of the arts or a passion for music is in others—and therefore hard to extinguish.

Embracing Uncertainty

We have all experienced how the work environment has changed over the last fourteen plus months. Things that would have taken us 5 to 10 years to set in motion have accelerated, virtually overnight. Our ability to connect with others all over the globe has been transformed with the click of a single button. The ability to make a living through technology has made more progress in these last few years than the last 100. Our world has changed in the blink of an eye.

Posted on June 4, 2021 and filed under Creativity, mindfulness, Psychology.

Everything Has a Voice, Even Tattoos!

Recently I bought a book on tattoos at an estate sale, which I intended to sell on eBay. Back at home, I was looking through the book and suddenly heard: "Each tattoo has its own energy, as an expression of creativity." To my surprise, the tattoos themselves started to chatter, and I was writing as fast as I could to record their comments.

Posted on February 26, 2021 and filed under Creativity, Intuition, Metaphysical.

Natural Dyes Tell The Story of Where you Live

"The story within any natural dye can take you to a place in time, a history lesson of warriors, of antiquity, or harken to your favorite local hiking trail.  The Crazy Wisdom journal story highlighting our organization, Color Wheel, ends on a note that makes for a great starting point for this blog:

Posted on November 22, 2019 and filed under Art, Creativity, Environment, Green Living, Nature.

The Song of the Phoenix

I realized only later that I had great expectations around how wonderful it would all be in a way that wasn’t compatible with real life. I try to help my clients understand the many myths around mindfulness practices, especially the one that suggests that regular practice will lead to steady calm, happiness, or bliss. What mindfulness cultivates is an increased capacity to be present with all states of being rather then favoring the good over the bad and the ugly. One of the biggest takeaways of the retreat for me personally was that the same applies to retreats or vacations.

Posted on August 2, 2019 and filed under Art, Creativity, mindfulness.

Thinking Outside the Box

I was pretty convinced that my wild woman would be of the earth, probably covered with some dirt, have long un-styled hair, and maybe, bit of a crazed gaze that warned the beholder that she is not to be messed with. That she is to be feared even. Western society has burned even the tamest of wild women (wise women and healers) for centuries to make sure there is no question that our psyches equate wild with dangerous. In fact I am bewildered more than anything that this archetype has survived and is coming through in our imagery at all given how long and hard mankind worked to eradicate it.

Posted on January 8, 2019 and filed under Art, Creativity, Goddesses, Intuition, Nature, Spirituality.

In the Heart of a Dragon

 

This is the third time a dragon has showed up in one of my paintings and it continues to make me uncomfortable. The best way I can explain the discomfort is that the value of rational, scientific thinking as the only valid type of information gathering was such a central part of my upbringing that the consideration of the mythic is often accompanied by shame.

Posted on November 9, 2018 and filed under Art, Creativity, Therapy.

Black Music Matters...Jazz and It's Impact On Society

I always get a kick out of seeing how startled individuals outside of music studies are when they learn that the vast majority of music majors in America graduate with little, or more often, no skills in the primary creative processes of improvisation and composition, nor in the African American musical heritage that is arguably America’s primary cultural contribution to the world.

Posted on October 11, 2018 and filed under Art, Creativity, Guest Blogger, Music, Education.

Setting Stories in Motion (and Movies to See!)

With the kind of work I do through my creative company — 7 Cylinders Studio — I get to interact with an ever-evolving cross section of our community.

I want to highlight a handful of those criss-crossing clients to survey our local landscape through the lens of video and provide some of the more compelling projects I’ve been fortunate to produce these past few years.

The Zen of Ballet

I am encouraged and inspired by the number of adults enrolling in ballet who have never studied before, or may have only had a year or two of lessons. A common thread among these different personalities seems to be a “beginner mind set”, an openness to trying something new, willingness to persist as difficulties arise and the sense of satisfaction that comes from finally getting it. 

Posted on September 27, 2018 and filed under Art, Creativity, Health and Wellness, Excercise.

Big Magic Indeed

Some magic is small, like how the laugh of a baby can melt your heart regardless of your state of mind. Some magic is big, like when you run into an old friend in a city of 15 million people you are only visiting for a week. When the likelihood of something happening is way smaller then it not happening, it is called synchronicity.

Posted on June 26, 2018 and filed under Art, Magic, Creativity.