What clients say:

3 client recommendations on LinkedIn ~ See below.

A client I worked with over 4 months time just posted this.  As of Feb. 2012 Annette will rent her first working studio ever!

Ula is tremendously gifted as a creativity coach. The results of our work together have been absolutely tangible: I have overcome a huge block and am now engaged in a creative process I literally contemplated for years. More importantly, I have learned to integrate artwork into my daily schedule as a practical, ongoing, step-by-step process that is fully compatible with the myriad responsibilities of a busy life. Ula brings deep life experience to her coaching, and a remarkable ability to intuit in the moment what is going on with you, what you need to hear and what you need to do. She is quick and articulate, devising brilliant exercises on a dime. She has a remarkable ability to re-frame a scenario, consistently offering clarity and a fresh perspective. She creates a framework for partnership that feels safe, committed, and loving. She has the highest integrity and seriousness of purpose, and she’s also a lot of fun. It has been my great honor to work with her.                    -A.Trivette, Graphic Designer – MA –

 

2) Worked for several months with a client longing to be reignited with her creative passions

Top qualities: Great Results, Expert, Creative

“”I worked with Ula as my creativity coach for a few months as I sought to explore and (re)connect with the creative aspects of my life and career. I found Ula extremely engaging, and thought provoking. Her sensitivity and deep listening were invaluable bringing much clarity in identifying my own blocks, and how I was stuck in old patterns of undervaluing myself and interests. Using her wisdom, insight, and experience to reframe my circumstances and approach, contributed to my opening up to more of what is possible. She stuck with me all the way, and was always encouraging. I am moving forward in my own practice now and valuing my self and creative interests. I admire that Ula also practices all she preaches as she is always stepping into the unknown in her own path and work. Her invention, playfulness, and even whimsy in her art are also unique and thoughtful.  A real Coach with a living present and vibrant testimony, Ula brings her own inspiration to the process. Thanks Ula, Samurai StimULAtor!   -Annabella Roig Vice President, Esperanza, Inc. Philadelphia, PA” -  January 16, 2012

 

3) A client so moved by a breakthrough session she got inspired to write…

As a theatre artist interested in continuously breaking through to new levels of creativity, I’ve found working with master coach Ula a great catalyst for action. Ula’s experience as a successful working artist has proven indispensable in getting me to the next requisite creative leap.

Finding myself at yet another crossroads with my EDEN project, I worked with Ula. and was amazed at her presence, intuition and capability. She quickly grounded the issues, and constructively cut through certain blocks to help me find the optimum path back to my own deepest knowing on how to move the vision forward into the world.

Ula’s wise reading of the blocks while framing and re-framing the issue, prompted an immediate shift that facilitated simple and direct actions in a new direction. Her recommendations, which included re-introducing a more playful, experimental, open approach to the process, resonated deeply, relieving months of being quite stuck at a critical juncture that felt like an either/or dilemma.

I highly recommend Ula Einstein as a master coach, to any individual, whether an artist or business professional, regardless of industry or discipline. Whether you find yourself at a difficult crossroads; wading in a complex and growing project; in need of a brainstorming session; or, finally very interested in developing your own creative emergence, I highly recommend availing yourself of Ula’s powerful intuitive sense of direction. Ula truly brings all of her experience and creativity as a practicing visual and performance artist to her coaching.
Alana Ruben Free, Beginner at Life, Playwright/Director

ONE – The Journal of Art, Ideas & Literature

Ula Einstein | /One/ onethejournal.com

These images are from THE UNWINDING DESTINY PROJECT, an ongoing installation and photography project initiated by artist Ula Einstein in 2008. The text on broken eggshells… (click here to read more)

addresses the disrupted and partial messages that language can convey …

Thinking with our Hands

Ula's hands having fun exfoliating outside, thinking about shaping, forming, manipulating, manifesting ©2011

This post is inspired by Tim Brown’s presentation about creativity on TedTalk.  When children create something, they readily, unself-consciously show it to anyone who will look.  Adults, on the other hand, are frequently overly concerned they will be judged by their peers and shudder at the thought of sharing, or resort to over-apologizing.  Two: He talks about an important way we can stimulate creativity is to think with our hands - which resonates with me!  Making it with my hands helps in the discovery of what works, that is how I explore the question, or what can unfold.   How do you do it?

I highly recommend watching this talk offering up ideas… click here.

 

Is There a Difference between Art & Craft?

Is There a Difference between Art and Craft?

Article by Virginia Fabbri Butera, Ph.D., Director of the Maloney Art Gallery, referencing the work of Judy Chicago, Lynne Allen, Kiki Smith, and Ula Einstein

Recent artistic encounters have once again raised issues of whether or not non-traditional materials make certain objects craft rather than art, and is there, or should there be, a difference? Do intellectual ideas suggested by an object, despite its material, make it an object of art? Or is it enough for an object to provoke an aesthetic, not necessarily an intellectual, response in a person for that object to be considered art?
For the Maloney Art Gallery show, Traditional Traces in Contemporary Native American Art (through May 24, 2010), Lynne Allen has lent several bags, moccasins and a knife sheath she has made. The bags and knife sheath are created out of 19th century land grant documents on vellum with porcupine quills, buttons, clasps and/or other materials. They reference earlier animal skin bags and knife sheaths that are part of Native American traditional arts. And the use of porcupine quills as a material for art and decoration has a long history as part of traditional native arts.
The moccasins in the exhibition allude to the functional shoes of animal skin that Native Americans made and wore. However, moccasins were often highly decorated with bead work, considered as art work and could be worn ceremonially. Allen’s moccasins are sculpture and not meant for wear. Writing and images of nature cover one 2005 pair, Moccasin #3 made from handmade paper, etching, linen thread and handwork. A second pair, Excuse me while I disappear (red moccasins), with the image of a Native American man on the top of the moccasins, is more metaphorically poignant, alluding to the decimation of Native American tribes, homelands, and culture when they were forced by the U.S. government to move, often by walking hundreds of miles, to reservations far from their original homelands. Here, the intersection of function, decoration, history, sewing, etching and sculpture amplifies the meaning of this art. For Native Americans, art and craft were/are completely intertwined and there was no hierarchy of art forms as had been established by Italian, French and English art academies beginning in the 16th century.
But those are exactly the hierarchies that have been at work for centuries suppressing the label of art for any objects made out of materials other than paint or ink on paper or canvas, or bronze, wood, or stone for sculpture. Traditionally and historically, in western culture, objects that were functional and/or made out of other materials, fell into the realm of craft and decorative, and therefore non-intellectual, arts. In other cultures around the world, this division did/does not exist. In the 1850s in England, William Morris began to challenge this hierarchy with his Arts and Crafts movement which tried to merge so-called fine and decorative arts onto the same object. Many movements and artistic groups have taken up this challenge. Beginning in the 1970s, with a push from the Feminist movement, women and men have been successfully trying to dispel these prejudices. Widespread knowledge and acceptance of world-wide aesthetic practices has also helped.

Materials such as balloons and thread, hair, tulle, used by Ula Einstein 
http://dvisible.com/2010/05/03/ula-einstein-builder-alchemist-artist/ ) in her mixed media sculptural installation, Pulse, and featured in the Maloney Art Gallery exhibition, Line, Gesture, Space, reveal that materials no longer define/confine art and creativity.  

During a recent trip to the Brooklyn Museum with the students in my American Art course, I was again able to study in detail Judy Chicago’s, The Dinner Party, a monumental sculpture from 1974-79, which celebrates the contribution of western women to the history of the world (www.judychicago.com). The triangular shaped sculpture, conceptualized and designed by Chicago, was created by hundreds of women volunteers in ceramic sculpture and woven, hand embroidered and sewn fabrics, all traditional “craft” materials. The work is a permanent installation in the Brooklyn Museum’s Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art. Also temporarily on view there is Kiki Smith’s (www.pbs.org/art21) multi room mixed media installation, Sojourn. Here large scale drawings of women are surrounded by fancifully decorated light bulbs, aluminum sculptures, wooden coffins with blown glass daisies, among other objects, which create a powerful meditation on Smith’s themes of birth, creativity and death in the life of a woman (http://www.brooklynmuseum.org/opencollection/exhibitions/3212/Kiki_Smith:_Sojourn).
In all of the above instances, these artists chose to use materials, some of which have references to the materials of women’s traditional craft work, to comment in a profound way about the human condition. These pieces are beautiful, stirring, disturbing and enlightening.

Virginia Fabbri Butera, Ph.D asks: What have your aesthetic experiences been with objects in various materials? How do you view “craft” materials used in art that asks us to consider many areas of aesthetic and intellectual thought?–

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Artist: Wikipedia’s Definition

Artist is a descriptive term applied to a person who engages in an activity deemed to be an art. An artist also may be defined unofficially as “a person who expresses him- or herself through a medium”. The word is also used in a qualitative sense of, a person creative in, innovative in, or adept at, an artistic practice. Most often, the term describes those who create within a context of the fine arts or ‘high culture’, activities such as drawing, painting, sculpture, acting, dancing, writing, filmmaking, photography, and music—people who use imagination, talent, or skill to create works that may be judged to have an aesthetic value. Art historians and critics define artists as those who produce art within a recognized or recognizable discipline. Contrasting terms for highly-skilled workers in media in the applied arts or decorative arts include artisan, craftsman, and specialized terms such as potter, goldsmith or glassblower. Fine arts artists such as painters succeeded in the Renaissance in raising their status, formerly similar to these workers, to a decisively higher level, but in the 20th century the distinction became rather less relevant[citation needed]. The term may be also used loosely or metaphorically to denote highly skilled people in any non-”art” activities, as well— law, medicine, mechanics, or mathematics, for example. — Wikipedia

Photo of Ula by Elaine S., at the coffee shop before heading over to the book launch party at Robert Miller Gallery 10/11. Her work is included in Infinite Instances: Studies and Images of Time, Mark Batty Publisher

Shadow of Ula in a painting in progress 2011, mixed media on canvas

 

 

Of Minerals, Powders, and Pigments

To think too long about a thing often becomes its undoing — Eva Young-
- So these “pigments” I discovered at Union Sq. Holiday Gift Mkt — I will go out to buy some.  It’s not that I really cook much;  they’re for the exploration in alchemy!  On Sunday most people seemed to be buying them as ingredients for their meal, to make a tea; to treat an ailment;   I was crazy for their colours, tones, and hues, imagining it might make gorgeous pigments. I will first try with paper and some medium.  Paper is so forgiving; that could be why I’m drawn to it.

Peggy Linden wrote me on FB that she loved how they reminded her of what she saw at markets in Korea this year.

The Lock or the Key?

Trust that still, small voice that says, “This might work and I’ll try it.” - Diane Mariechild

You don’t have to conform to a norm that is not your own..coaching will help you dismantle blocks
To begin to give yourself permission to create, to trust, to unleash your expression… to express it forward requires a key that fits the lock!

Or do you have the idea that if the key doesn’t work, one ought to change the lock?  interesting notion!

Magical

Last Saturday, I found myself detouring from where I Was going and got off the bus on 57th Street…many galleries were closed.  So instead I delighted in touristing in the town I live in thrilled I remembered to have my camera on me.    The ooooohs and aaaahhhhhs from the huge crowds were a symphony of a community OHM. Here’s my first window from Bergdorf’s in NYC ~~ MAGICALLLLLe!  I tried, like everyone to photograph their windows; lucky at least 2 came out well;) 
SO NOW, we take the camera with us almost everywhere we go!  Don’t wait for long sweeps of time to create…we often don’t always have that… so get in the half hour or twenty minutes and experiment;)  Let me know how that works for you…. ulaeinstein8@gmail.com

my otherworldly magic - shot taken from window at Bergdorf Goodman, NYC