One of his current collaborations involves creating paint and paintings from iron oxide extracted in the process of remediating polluted streams.: เฉลยแบบประเมินผลตนเองก่อนเรียนหลังเรียนวิชา15337หน่วย13 และ15 No, this isn’t a pipe dream, this actually happed with John’s efforts to collaborate with scientists on many projects. Imagine visiting a community ravished by the scourge of industrial waste and environmental destruction and finding in that mess and contamination a way to create sustainable paint colors.
John didn’t back down, he just decided to change his approach - this launched him on the path to his work with sustainability and activism. The result was a fierce backlash that made John rethink his approach and if he wanted to make a stand that would continue to incur this type of reaction from people. How does your truth, your authenticity show up in your artwork? Do you try to embrace it or do you try to go in a different direction? As the United States was gearing up for the Iraq war in 2003, John felt like he needed to speak out and share his conviction that war was not the answer with his art. When he returned, what he saw changed the course of his career - his teacher had entered him into a contest and he had won! John’s journey wasn’t all smooth sailing from there - he faced setbacks and challenges but this initial success helped see the talent he had honed. He took all his artwork that he had completed in his high school art class and tossed it in the dumpster and then took off for a week.
Sounds crazy, right? It actually happened to John Sabraw!Īs he struggled in high school and tried to decipher the way he wanted his life to go, John reached a breaking point where he just had to walk away. You know those days where you feel like tossing everything in your studio in the garbage? Imagine doing that and then getting an invitation to Washington DC to meet members of Congress because your art was selected as the winner of a competition.
Trust me, you’ll find John’s perspective refreshing and engaging - I know I did! Throwing it all away In our conversation, John opens up about his time working with Kerry James Marshall and how he got involved with Gamblin and producing their reclaimed earth colors. That’s where my guest and talented artist, John Sabraw comes in! Hailing from Lakenheath, England, John is an activist and environmentalist - his paintings, drawings, and collaborative installations are produced in an eco-conscious manner, and he continually works toward a fully sustainable practice. Have you ever felt like you just don’t “fit in” at non-artist gatherings? What do you do with that feeling? Do you shrink back and retreat to the safety of your peers and insulate? Or do you press into the discomfort and forge your path? Everyone’s story is going to be different and that’s the beauty of our corner of society, we embrace the mosaic of diversity - but what would it look like if we were to integrate our creative outlook with other areas?