ArtWalk 2025, a Recap

It was ArtWalk this weekend, and as per usual, it was fabulous. I got an excellent spot, on a tall counter (the top of a bank of lockers) in the hallway in front of one of the gyms. It meant that the thousands(!) of visitors all walked by my display TWICE, once going into the gym to look at everyone else’s amazing art, and once coming out again – up one side of the display and down the other on the return trip, and having the counter so high meant that my tiny detail work was right at people’s eye level.

The setup on The Night Before ArtWalk (when all through the school/Not a creature was stirring,/ they’re all much too cool…)

The night before it started, I was lying awake at 3am, worrying (as one does), and I came to the conclusion that I probably wouldn’t get a lot of sales – people would just walk past my display instead of stopping to linger and look. It was a hallway, after all. Fine, I thought, so be it. It is what it is.

Hah! I couldn’t have been more wrong. People stopped, they looked, they lingered, they oooh’d and aaah’d. And they bought. And bought!

“On Top of the Mattress” – the newest in the Fairy Tales Bookends series. And you see that red dot on the card? That means SOLD!

I’d brought a little group of mice (apparently that’s called a mischief?), sitting on cheeses. Last year, I had a cat with a companion cheesymouse, and people kept trying to buy just the mouse, so I thought I’ll try a few mice on their own this time. They flew off the shelf – the first one sold within ten minutes of the opening!

The Cheesymice

Hilariously, the flock of Tiny Gnomes that were so popular last year were, to begin with, completely overshadowed by the Cheesymice – they only started selling once all the mice were gone. They got lots of attention, though (“Look at the tiny gnomes, Mommy!”, “Oh my gosh, so cute!”), so it’s all good.

The 2025 Flock of Tiny Gnomes

The theme this year was “Colour Unleashed”. If you’ve met me in person, you know that that’s right up my alley. I would have worn my rainbow Ali Baba pants anyway, but as is, I looked like I dressed on theme! And it gave me an opportunity to bring my super-bright splashy abstract pieces (I call some of them “Kandinsky cups”), and to my surprise they were really popular.

Sporting my colours and chatting up the customers

Not much more to say. It was a fun weekend, quite exhausting, quite exhilerating. Now to go into hibernation for a couple of weeks, and then back into the studio to replenish the stock!

Life, the Universe, and my third time at ArtWalk. If you’re interested in adopting a Tiny Gnome or getting your very own Mousepresso cup, give me a shout. I’ll be over here on the couch, having a nap.

Mousepresso cups
Kandinsky Cups

ArtWalk, a Retrospective

I know you’ve all been eagerly waiting for the verdict, and here it is: ArtWalk was fantastic. (If you can’t see a video above this paragraph because you’re getting this as an email, click on the title and it’ll take you to the post in your browser, where it should show the video properly.)

Just to catch you up on what this Lake Country ArtWalk thing is, it’s a giant art festival that has been held in our community on the second weekend in September for the last thirty years. Two days, three school gyms/halls/hallways full of art by close to two hundred local artists, live music, food, performances, visitors by the thousands. Complete sensory overload, inspiration, exhileration.

I had the best location – full sunlight on my sculptures for most of the morning.

So this year I finally got to take part, showing my ceramics. And sell my books! Book selling isn’t normally part of this, but this year there was an exception, because the theme was “Art and Story Bound Together“. I mean, that’s me! As I was telling everyone, I write books with potters in them, and make pottery sculptures with books in them. “Telling Stories in Clay and Words”, that’s my new motto.

Books about a potter…

I sold pieces! A friend who is an ArtWalk veteran told me to bring some small pieces, things that don’t cost the earth so visitors can go home with their very own piece of art without breaking the bank. So I took a whole lot of mugs – well, they’re honest-to-goodness stoneware mugs you can drink your coffee out of, but really, they’re paintings that happen to be on a mug instead of a canvas. And people liked them, and bought them!

Doors and towers (mostly SOLD, but there’s more where they came from)

Selling things was exciting. But the best part was the reactions I got from the show visitors. Over and over, someone would come around the corner, catch sight of my display, stop, come closer – and get a big smile on their face.

“This is so cute!”, “These are delightful!” “I want to live in that little house!” Several times, someone came back, towing a friend behind them: “You’ve got to see this! Look, isn’t it amazing?”

I can’t tell you how much that meant to me. My art makes people happy. It creates pleasure and delight; it brings joy.

That is what I wanted to achieve with my work. I have a lot of fun making my bookends and fairy houses and gnomes, but it was amazing to see how that joy transmitted itself to the viewers.

What I saw coming back from my lunch…

One of the things I had the most fun with at the show was introducing the gnomes to the kids that came by. Art shows can be rather overwhelming, and for children, maybe a bit boring.

So a family with young kids would wander by. One of them would catch sight of my booth.

“Oh, look! Look at the fairy house!” And they would zoom in on my table, their eyes lighting up. “It’s got a little bathtub! And look at the tiny mugs!”

I’d let them look for a minute, then I’d say, “Have you met the gnomes?” They’d shake their heads, and I’d point to the gnomes at the front of the long table, right at their eye level.

Gordon G’nome, 6″, stoneware

“Well, here’s Gordon,” I’d say. “His bug went to sleep, so he’s just hanging out. This one is Goldie. She just caught sight of a butterfly! Her bug isn’t so sure about this, I think he’s a bit jealous…”

The kids loved it. Over the course of the two days, the stories of Gordon and Goldie and Garth and Gabby kept growing in the telling. Goldie’s butterfly appeared fairly early – at first I didn’t know what she was looking at, but now it’s obviously a butterfly.

Gaeli’s G’nomes, and the bookends holding up my books

One young visitor wanted to know who lives in the little bookend rooms, and then she decided that it must be the gnomes, because they stood right in front of them. She was right, of course. So that became part of their stories.

Goldie, we thought, must belong to the room with the knitting – she looks like the kind of person who likes to keep busy. And Gordon obviously likes food, so he’d be at home in the tea party room. Garth the Dreamer got the library with all the books, and his sister Gabby, who is telling her bug a story, belongs in the writer’s study.

What, me, having fun? Naaah…

I knew I wouldn’t get any sales out of the kids. But that’s not what it’s about. I wanted the kids to have fun looking at my sculptures, as much fun as I had making them. And not just the kids, either.

For those thirty seconds that you look at one of my pieces, I want you to be drawn in. I want you to feel that you can live in one of the fairy houses, that the little bookend room is your own cozy corner, that Gordon and Goldie are your friends. I want you to come into my little ceramic world and be happy, safe, and warm.

And I saw that reaction on the faces of the ArtWalk visitors that came by my booth, over and over. See what I mean when I say ArtWalk was fantastic?

Life, the Universe, and ArtWalk 2023. I’m already planning for the next show.

Bathtime at G’nome Cottage, 9″ high. It’s all ceramics, i.e. safe to put in your flowerbed. You never know, someone might move in…