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  Mette Horning Rankin: I had attended several years before and made some felt collages. This time I decided to use the evening as an exercise in practicing a certain style of illustration. The only materials I brought with me were pencils & pens
  Katherine McDowell: I took the prompt “FIRE” literally and decided to paint a forest fire. As a visual artist who creates abstract seascapes, I found the prospect of painting an abstract landscape alit in flames an enticing one.   I used water
  Toni Tabora-Roberts: Going into SHARE, I knew I would start with creating a blackout poem aka erasure. It's recent practice I've taken up inspired by lots of makers on Instagram. Here's how my blackout poem turned out: help drive need som
  Alex Harris: I was a little nervous about this coming into it. Being a designer, I’m sort of a chameleon. I don’t have a particular style or technique, I just do whatever feels right for what’s trying to be solved. Without knowing what’s to be solv
  Dave Benz: Fire made me think of the ballet “Firebird,” which I have never seen, and Russian ballet dancer Vera Fokina’s crazy costume for it, which I have seen. I had brought a bunch of paper, glue, and cutting tools with me with the intention of
  I can’t remember my next door neighbor’s name. I remember the two yellow recycling bins heaped with wine bottles that appeared on his curb every Wednesday. I remember that I could hear him screaming at his girlfriend through closed doors and window
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