January 3, 2018
Bringing us a different and much needed type of workshop this year will be multi-disciplinary artist, KathyAnne White. From July 8-14, 2018 – KathyAnne will work with students to develop their own voice as an artist in whatever they’re medium of choice (within facility parameters of course!). The workshop will include an advanced consultation of KathyAnne, so she can tailor the workshop to the participating artists. Learn more about her workshop on our website and read on to learn more about KathyAnne!
Q: When did art first enter your life?
KAW: Art first entered my life when I was seven. My grandfather was a tailor  so we had several sewing machines. He gave me a 50’s style (it was the  50’s 🙂 Good Housekeeping Book on sewing. There was nothing free style  about any of it, but I made my first skirt after learning some of the  basics of a machine and joining seams. The skirt had a waistband and  gathered bottom. 
Crocheting came later that same year in the style of a ripple afghan.  Today most of my crochet work is with wire, but I also have an insane  collection of my crochet ponchos I can’t seem to stop making.
Q: Do you have certain themes in your work or subjects that reappear?
KAW: The stark trees here in the southwest have long influenced my work.  Their skeletons remain growing out of rocks and off the sides of hills.  Burnished and twisted roots of a bristlecone pine become a sculpture of  wind and tenacity. My depiction of these elements have traveled through  various mediums throughout the years. Their shape and form is evident in  my sculpture.
Q: If you could give only one piece of advice to a beginning artist, what would it be?
KAW: Find a medium you are drawn to and would like to explore. Get in touch  with what moves you about it and what you might want to do with it —and  then dive in. Learn about the media create, create, create. Don’t worry  about anything just work it. The more you work the better you get.  Express yourself with the media — make a piece and do another and  another and another….. 
Develop an active art practice and don’t look  back just keep going. All the artists that inspired you started  somewhere. Don’t be afraid to make mistakes, these can be happy  accidents. Just keep working and enjoy the ride.
Q: What drives you to produce new art?
KAW: Not sure there is one thing that drives me–driven seems to be my natural  state. Maybe I could say curiosity and pushing my media. Making art is  part of me. My art practice leads me to what is next intuitively. I  explore and play with new ideas on construction or added elements  constantly. If I have something that I am considering creating— I start  actual construction on the ideas running around in my head. This way I  know how they could influence the work. I would say I am more inspired  than driven to produce art.
Q: What show, project, or event are you most looking forward to in 2018?
KAW: Well there are two – one is related to teaching and the other to an art  project. 
Coming back to teach at Hudson River Valley Art Workshops is one of the  events I look forward to the most –for 2018. I love teaching there and  meshing with the students who participate. The classroom is available  for learners to work as much as they want—so the entire stay at HRVAW  becomes a retreat. My class will be an exciting, exploratory experience  as artists come together and learn to show their voice with their work  in any media. Everyone is different and that is a good thing. The  facility is great for this workshop. 
The second is I am starting work on a new project to expand my current  body of work. There is a bit of a learning curve so most of what am  doing is in the early stages. Once it gets past that I will be  publishing videos on my youtube channel on my ideas and how it is  working. 
