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[Emily Herr][1] and Moonie Tyler are artists from Virginia who have traveled across the country to engage with the Park City community. Their goal is to create four murals at the [China Bridge][2] parking lot with the public’s help. As the public show up - something they hear repeatedly is the denial of the inner artist. We all have it - just ask Picasso. He’s quoted as saying, “Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain an artist once he grows up.”
Part 2 of the interview with Emily and Moonie takes a couple of surprising twists and the ladies turn the table on me. Listen in as Moonie shares her journey into art, who and what Bumble Pack is as well as a little bit about me, courtesy of Emily and Moonie.
Instagram: @moonie.made and @bumblepack
Here is a [link][3] to one of many articles about the benefits of handwriting.
- I think I've gotten to a place that I don't want it to feel validating if other people think I'm an artist or not. It's kind of just like, play art time for me. - I had no book, and I had some pens...and I was driven to start drawing...it was very scary. - Nobody in my family thinks I'm an artist and my family is at least 60 people...[at least not] as the artist I think I am. - Start where you left off.
[1]: http://www.herrsuite.com/ [2]: http://www.kpcw.org/post/public-art-project-china-bridge-great-start#stream/0 [3]: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/memory-medic/201303/why-writing-hand-could-make-you-smarter |