From the Compost Heap header. A pencil style illustration of a compost heap with flowers and plants growing around it. A bee buzzes by and a white rabbit hops by.
  • Papertowels with blueberry stains on a glass oven cooktop beside a bunch of bananas and a papertowel with a note that says, "Do not throw away!"

    Sometimes being an artist means preserving paper towels with blueberry stains.

    Read more: untitled post 156079119
  • I'm standing in the Local Color Gallery by my work The Mental Load. I am wearing blacks with a vest and hands in my pockets. I have pale skin, short hair and green glasses.

    I’ve exhibited my work across the country, but this is the first time I’ve been able to attend and see my art in a gallery setting. Thanks to Local Color Studio for including me in this group exhibition.

    You can see more photos of The Mental Load here.

    Read more: untitled post 156078881
  • A Very Merry Unbirthday 🎶

    I’m still celebrating!

    Last week, on my actual birthday, one of my favorite chapters from the Wheel of Time was adapted to screen. So I am having a great month.

    As my gift to you, anyone who joins the zine subscription this month, will get a bonus Wheel of Time mini zine. 🥰

    If you want to print any of these zines to hype the show you can download them here.

    The “I’m Fine” Zine

    This month I wrote about creating safe spaces and regulating nervous systems in “unprecedented times.”

    You can read the digitized version here.

    An embroidery frame holds a cross stitch that reads "I'm Fine". Back cover shows the reverse of embroidery hoop which is a tangled mess of navy blue thread. Text at bottom says March 2025. A Kindle Curiosity Zine.

    The work on the cover has been exhibited in several different galleries and is part of the My Brain on Motherhood collection as part of my ARIM.


    Sculpture

    I’ve also spent a substantial amount of time this month working on a sculpture called Bloom Where You’re Planted from a dead cherry tree.

    You can read about the process here.

    Here I am cleaning mud off the root.

    My hand using a Swedish washcloth to remove a final layer of mud off a twisty tree root.

    Time Blind Supports

    I’m making a concerted effort to spend more time creating and less time on admin this year. One of the tools I’m using for this is logging my time with spreadsheets and charts.

    As someone with time blindness I can very easily sink time into something without realizing.

    Seeing time visually has made a huge difference for me!

    Pie chart. Web 59%, Zines 21%, Other 10-%, Mawd 4%, Picture book 3%.

    If you’re curious about this process you can click here to read more about what I’m doing and what impact it’s having.

    Bar chart showing admin going down and create time going up from Jan to March
    time spent on admin vs. creating in jan, feb & march (so far)

    The LOST podcast episode.

    Last month, in all my excitement about The Wheel of Time, I completely forgot to tell you I published a ramble podcast. I’ll be doing these on an ad hoc basis moving forward. (If you enjoy listening let me know!)

    I haven’t managed to migrated podcast episodes off Substack yet.

    Listen here for now.

    This is essentially a brain dump I recorded in January reflecting on my creative ecosystem, closing loops, and my intentions for moving into a new year.

    When I migrate off Substack I’m thinking of calling this a “Brain Dump Podcast” to remind myself it’s okay to be messy. Here’s some possible podcast art. Not my normal color palette, but maybe my kid’s love of all things rainbow is rubbing off on me.

    Drawing of brain with colorful paint splatters over the top

    Wait, there’s more!

    Of everything I’m sharing I spent the most time and energy on this.

    If you’ve struggled to learn a second language later in life – it may not be for the reasons you think. I’d love to know what neurodivergent folks think of this post.

    I also wrote some thoughts about From Where You Dream. A book about storytelling from your unconscious.


    Time Travel banner. Hand drawn illustrtation of TARDIS in space surrounded by swirling lines and stars.

    Just two posts in the TARDIS time hop this month.

    If you have time to check out my 360 VR work I’d love to know what you think.


    This Time in 2023

    While I was at it I also created a landing page for free resources and printables.

    https://sarahshotts.com/free

    Ways to Support drawing of a white rabbit hopping into flowers

    The Compost Heap is handmade without the use of AI. 🐝

    Support doing things the old fashioned way by joining my Patrons ($5) and I’ll send paper copies of my zines with the coolest postage stamps I can find.

    Overhead shot of zine test prints and my green typewriter.
    Test PRINTS FOR MARCH’S “I’m Fine” ZINE

    Not into snail mail?

    Here are other ways you can support.

    • Share my blog with a friend. (It’s free!)
    • Buy a book or zine from my (new!) shop.
    • Link to me in your newsletter.
    • Art swap! Let me know if you’d like to swap your art for a zine.
    • Send me an email and let me know what resonates.

    Drawing of a tin can telephone and the words Let's chat

    If you’re reading this in your email inbox you can just hit reply to message me directly. I’d love to hear what you think. It makes it worth the time I put in.

    Thanks for being here.

    I appreciate you.

    Sarah signed with a swoopy S

    P.S. One downside to emailing each month instead of weekly is that there is SO MUCH to cover. I’ve almost given up on sharing links because I have too many to narrow down. But the 15 hours a month I’ve recovered to spend on other projects seems worth the trade off.

    If you want a suggestion… Watch the Wheel of Time. 😉

    A misty location with two figures suspended within three silver rings

    Read more: A Very Merry Unbirthday 🎶
  • I’m Fine

    SURVIVAL TIPS FOR UNPRECEDENTED TIMES 

Make time for things that regulate your nervous system.
1. Go for a walk.
2. Compose a photograph.
3. Write a letter.
4. Blow bubbles.
5. Paint.
6. Plant seeds.
7. Read a book.
8. Breathe slowly.
9. Bake.
10. Curl up in a blanket burrito.
11. Watch the clouds.
12. Hold hands.
13. Dance.
14. Watch a children's
15. Doodle.
film.
16. Start a compost heap.
17. Brew a pot of tea.
18. Write a poell.
19. Squeeze clay or dough or putty.
20. Build blocks.
21. Learn something new.
22. Text a friend.
23. Trace your hand.
24. Buy a box of crayons.
25. Go stargazing.
26. Make a collage.
27. Listen to music.
28. Draw a rainbow.
29. Watch a bird or an insect.
30. Take a hot bath.
    MAKE SAFE SPACES FOR YOUR NERVOUS SYSTEM
1. Choose a specific time & space (alternate account, RSS app, separate enails or devices) to consciously engage with current events.
2. Make another space (account, RSS, email or device) exclusively for interests that light you up.
3. Don't cross the streams.
This creates a space for your nervous system to reset. Social media has tricked us into muddying our own creative watering wells and we've forgotten what safe spaces feel like.
TAKE CARE OF YOURSELF
If you want to show up for causes you care about you need to look after yourself & to protect your capacity.
What is one small kindness you can show yourself today?
How can you weave kindnesses to yourself & others into your days?
    Back cover shows the reverse of embroidery hoop which is a tangled mess of navy blue thread. Text at bottom says March 2025. A Kindle Curiosity Zine.

    Subscribe for Monthly Zines

    via Snail Mail! 🐌 📬

    Open airmail envelope with blue and green stripes

    Browse the Zine Archive

    Want to see more? Click here to enter the zine archive.

    Photograph of two black and white zines. The top says "I'm a brand not a human" with a photo of a typewriter. The bottom has a collage with typewritten words and an image of a spiderweb.
    Read more: I’m Fine
  • Bloom Where You’re Planted

    A year or two before David was born my mom gifted me a weeping cherry tree for my birthday. It bloomed happily for a while and then a freeze split its bark and it became diseased and distressed.

    I did my best to save the tree, but last year it didn’t come back after winter. After a year of mentally preparing myself for this I decided to use the sinuous wood to make a sculpture and Nathan helped dig up as much of the root as possible.

    This month I’ve started stripping the bark.

    My title for this work is Bloom Where You’re Planted. As an autistic person this has always rankled because I am not always able to thrive in unsuitable environments.

    Here are some process photos.

    A time when the tree was happy.

    Photograph of cherry tree blossoms as screencaptured on Instagram stories.

    Before

    Sad tree half dead and half distressed.

    Dead tree in front of my studio.

    Shoutout to Nathan’s farm boy muscle. I never could have dug this up myself because of my connective tissue disorder.

    Progress

    After pruning and removing some branches I found it balanced nicely upside down.

    Dead tree sitting upside down on it's branches with it's root in the air. My gray green studio is seen behind.

    Cleaning

    David helped me clean the mud off the root. This project has been a family affair.

    My child and I are using a bucket of water to clean mud off the tree roots.
    Gloved hand washing mud off tree root with a scrub brush.
    Small blonde child cleaning muddy root with a toothbrush.
    My hand using a Swedish washcloth to remove a final layer of mud off a twisty tree root.

    Stripping Bark

    Closeup of cherry tree bark
    Closeup of cherry tree bark during removable process showing wood and cambium beneath.

    Removing the bark has been a very satisfying (if incredibly slow) process. Because of all the twists and turns in this particular tree I think I’m going to need some finer carving tools soon.

    Update: March 2025

    I am seated outdoors holding a mallet and hammer and chipping away at my sculpture. There is a bright blue sky behind me.
    Weeping cherry tree stands upside down with root in the air. The bark has begun to be stripped away.

    Read more: Bloom Where You’re Planted
  • Time, Time, Time ⌛

    It feels like years since I’ve written.*

    Since then…

    the Wheel of Time Season 3 trailer dropped.

    Season 3 is airing in March – just in time for my birthday.

    If you love fantasy books like Lord of the Rings… I’d love for you to give this a watch next month and nerd out with me. Even if you haven’t read the books – the visual design and performances for this show are so stunning I’d really recommend watching first and then diving into the books.

    This season is based on my favorite book in the series!

    The Shadow Rising is when Wheel of Time steps away from Tolkien and starts being it’s own thing.

    Half the characters travel to the desert and meet a complex warrior culture. The others go hunting down some very dangerous women. The layers build from there! I can’t even mention my two favorite parts because they are too spoilerific, but check this image out:

    A misty location with two figures suspended within three silver rings

    Don’t you want to know what’s happening there?

    I’m dying to see this scene. It happens “off page” in the books. 👀

    [This Clip Contains Spoilers]

    If you’re a book reader (or just don’t care about spoilers) here is the first scene of Season 3. We are starting out with a bang!


    What else happened this month?

    Well… I completely redesigned my website. 😂

    It’s still “under construction” so pardon my dust (and broken links) as you’re poking around. I hope to “unveil” the new site properly next month.

    I wrote a few posts including this one about website design as worldmaking. My old website was a minimalist website (which lives on as a virtual art gallery.) But I’m letting the rest of my site be weirder and more me.

    I hope it will sprawl and grow into a proper labyrinth.

    I’ve been having a lot of fun with visuals and texture. But my favorite detail so far is this “page not found” design, which feels very me.

    Screencap of Sarahshotts.com 404 page. "You've fallen down a rabbit hole" and Tenniel illustration of White Knight from Alice in Wonderland stuck upside down with his legs poking out of the ground. "What you're looking for is no longer at this location."

    If you want to read the boring reasons about why I’m switching web & newsletter platforms I’ve written about my online ecosystem here.


    I’m leveling up my zines!

    This month I used a printing press to make the February zine.

    You can see the process (including a timelapse video) here. You can also see a mini Wheel of Time zine I made. I’m going to print them up and leave them around town as guerrilla fan marketing. (Let me know if you’d like to do the same and I’ll share the file.)

    Now that I have a printing press I’ve added a $10 tier where you can subscribe for quarterly prints as well as zines.

    I’ve also realized that the time I’m spending on these zines has been growing each month. (Especially in contrast to the simple letters I started with.) So I’m phasing out pledges below $5. This means I have more freedom to play with color and multiple page zines if I’m so inspired.

    I’m also stepping away from Patreon and Substack to host subscriptions on my own website.†

    Everything in one spot. (Finally!)


    Works in Progress

    Here’s a peek at what else I’ve been working on this month.

    Soft sculpture of a brain made from baby clothes. One hemisphere is sewn from baby socks, onesies and washclothes. Scraps sit on a wooden table to the side.
    SOFT SCULPTURE BRAIN

    Nearly done with my soft sculpture brain sewn from baby clothes. I have two hemispheres complete and need to spend some time refining them and doing finishing work. (They’re a little unbalanced at the moment.)

    Nested rainbow hearts drawn with crayons. Rainbow sorted colored pencils and art supplies to the left.
    home education rhythm

    The transition from holiday chaos back to a normal routine is hard for neurodivergents. Here is how we’re finding our feet again and freedom within structure.


    Now that I’m integrating my various blogs into one location my archive is much larger than I realized.

    Here are a few highlights.


    This time in 2015

    This time in 2021

    This time in 2024

    February seems to be a big month for me!

    It’s all that energy from surviving the holidays and getting back into a rhythm.

    (You can browse the February archive here.)

    I’m planning to move the archives month by month. Motivated in part by sharing this time hop with you. Which means (if all goes to plan) I’ll be done by next February.


    The Compost Heap is handmade without the use of AI. 🐝

    Support doing things the old fashioned way by joining my Patrons ($5) and I’ll send paper copies of my zines with the coolest postage stamps I can find.

    Not About TETRIS zine on a wooden table. The title is letterpress printed and three printed blocks in purple pink and yellow are arranged as if to pile up.

    Not into snail mail?

    Here are other ways you can support.

    • Share with a friend. (It’s free!)
    • Art swap! Let me know if you’d like to swap your art for a zine.
    • Buy a book or zine from my (new!) shop.
    • Link to me in your newsletter.
    • Send me a recommendation for something (book, blog post, movie, recipe, you name it!)

    Drawing of a tin can telephone and the words Let's chat

    I’d love to hear from you.

    Hit reply to email me directly.

    Let’s talk web design, printmaking, or Wheel of Time. 🥰

    Thanks for being here.

    I appreciate you.

    Sarah signed with a swoopy S

    Compost Heap Illustrations by

    Gracie Klumpp of Leave the Fingerprints. 🐞


    Footnotes

    * To share the Neuro Nest Retreat. The workshops were all recorded so you can still join in here. I’d love to have a weaving from you. (Yes, you!)

    † Substack supporters will continue to be charged through Stripe. Patreon has been shut down so anyone supporting there will need to resubscribe. (You should already have emails from those platforms, but if you have any questions at all just ask.)

    ‡ Something I’ve learned by moving blogging platforms a couple of times is that something always goes funky. Formatting is strange. Photos are hotlinked. Multimedia elements (audio, video, embeds) are missing or broken. And hardly anything has alt text. I’m using this chance to dust all the cobwebs before making posts public.

    Read more: Time, Time, Time ⌛
  • Soft Sculpture Brain

    I’m working toward a solo art show for my fine art collection My Brain on Motherhood.

    I’m nearly done with a soft sculpture of a brain made from baby clothes. Both hemispheres are formed now and I’m (finally) at the refining stage.

    (They’re a little unbalanced at the moment.)

    Soft sculpture of a brain made from baby clothes. One hemisphere is sewn from baby socks, onesies and washclothes. Scraps sit on a wooden table to the side.
    Read more: Soft Sculpture Brain
  • Bright Spots for Your Day

    I’m still writing a novel so I’m keeping this short and sweet.


    In the Studio ✂️

    When I finish a big project (like crowdfunding Entwined) or have a lot of big feelings to process I like to make things with my hands.

    After my first book I started my first bricolage The Mental Load.

    This month I made The Mental Load II. This sculpture is roughly the size of my child and includes broken toys and the detritus of motherhood.

    Don’t worry. We have two Elmo figures for some reason and this one was all scratched up.

    More photos here.


    Exciting updates to Self Pub 101! 📖

    Just a reminder this course is completely free.

    This is not a funnel.

    It’s not a marketing tool.

    It’s just me paying it forward to help other indie authors.

    This month there are two new guest speakers!


    Many thanks to Nathaniel Roy of A Book Designer’s Notebook for generously recording How to Collaborate with a Book Designer.

    There is also a new indie author spotlight featuring fantasy novelist B. S. H. Garcia (Part One & Part Two.)


    Stop everything. 🍁

    Before you go back to the real world open a new tab and watch this short video of Mr. Rogers visiting Eric Carle’s art studio.

    (If you didn’t already know Eric Carle is the illustrator of many classic children’s books including The Very Hungry Caterpillar.)

    If you want to live in the warm and fuzzy for a bit longer hop over to Eric Carle’s blog and read what he wrote about the program in 1997.

    And drop by Mitchell Volk’s metaphorical seed swap. 🌱


    Profits to Charity ☕️

    Tis the season for gifting.

    Two of my favorite authors and educators (John & Hank Green) founded good.store which donates 100% of profits to charity.

    Over the past year they have donated 9 million dollars to support maternal mortality and tuberculosis treatment in impoverished countries.

    If you’d like to gift loose leaf tea, coffee, soap, or quirky socks, swing by good.store and use my affiliate code SARAHDSHOTTS for 25% off.

    I don’t do much affiliate marketing, but I really love good.store’s mission. And the Keats & Co. Breakfast Tea is my new favorite. ☕️


    The Compost Heap is free to all. Thanks for exchanging your time and energy. If you’re feeling particularly generous here are other ways you can lend your support.

    • Leave a comment (it’s free!)
    • Restack or recommend on Substack.
    • Buy my book.
    • Forward this email to a friend.
    • Or pledge support via Patreon ($3+) or Substack ($7+).

    Join during November to get this zine in your mailbox!

    If you missed my last post I’m planning to shapeshift this newsletter into a zine in 2025. This month was an experiment and I really loved making this. I’m definitely leaning into analogue in the new year.

    Meanwhile you are welcome to reach out, but I am unlikely to respond in a timely fashion. November is for noveling.

    Cheers,


    This newsletter is a curated collection of tidbits from my overgrown Compost Heap (or digital garden.) Rummage around, turn the heap, and see what you can find for yourself. 🪱🐛🌱

    Illustrations by Gracie Klumpp of Leave the Fingerprints. 🐞


    Originally published on Substack November 20, 2024

    Read more: Bright Spots for Your Day
  • From the kitchen table to NYC 🗽

    Flashback to four years ago…

    It was Christmas Day and I was sitting at the kitchen anxiously trying to finish a weaving to submit to an exhibition about motherhood.

    Here’s a video showing the weaving process. I made data weavings recording each time I was interrupted by tying a knot.

    I barely finished and photographed that work in time for the deadline. Looking back that first weaving (smaller and less textured than the one in this video) wasn’t a strong piece and I’m not surprised it was rejected.

    But the rejection stung because I was also told off for being unprofessional by photographing my work on a wall that wasn’t white. I felt like the art world was a secret club I didn’t have the passcode for. *

    The next year I submitted another weaving to another show. No snooty response, but it still didn’t connect.

    One submission a year clearly wasn’t working for me.

    So my 100 Submissions project was born.

    This was an energetic shift from holding each submission so closely to casting a wider net.

    I managed 11 submissions last year and the strangest thing happened…

    100 Submissions printable with 2 gold stars on a desk with a date stamp and two keys

    Grab yours here.


    Every submission connected.

    11 out of 11.

    There’s some bit of luck in submitting the right piece at the right time.

    But I think the real magic was putting myself out there without worrying if I had a “chance.”

    This led to…

    – exhibiting my art for the first time

    – speaking at my first author event

    – my first publication in an academic journal


    That’s a lot of firsts!

    I’m going to share this process – not to brag – but to encourage you to put your own work out into the world.

    I meant to share this process in real time, but I quickly became overwhelmed at the amount of admin work involved (emails, mailing art, etc.) and I couldn’t keep up with writing Substack posts too.

    Here goes!

    I kept track of everything in Notion. If you have the bandwidth I found this really useful because you can resuse / adapt submission materials instead of starting from scratch each time. This way you can build up some momentum.


    Submission #1 – NWA Book Fest

    Venue: NW Arkansas Book Festival

    Cost to Submit: None

    The first acceptance I had was to do a book reading and signing at a local book festival (NWA Book Fest). It was a great learning experience which I wrote about here.

    Takeaway: Author events are a massive energetic drain.

    What I learned was I simply I don’t have capacity for book festivals at this time. This was a very short appearance and it took me quite a long time to recover. So paying to be a vendor for a full day (or weekend) event would definitely push me past capacity.

    Here’s a clip of actual footage of me after the event. †

    “Success” isn’t worth it if it pushes you into burnout.


    Submission #2 – Carve Out Time for Art

    Venue: Instagram

    Cost to Submit: $25

    I considered this application to be a complete shot in the dark.

    I was stunned at the invitation to takeover Carve Out Time for Art on Instagram. This one gave me big imposter syndrome, but was actually a delight. This was one of the first acceptance emails that came in, but the takeover itself didn’t happen until much later in the year.

    Screenshot of Carve out time for art on Instagram

    The takeover is pinned to @carveouttimeforart’s highlights if you want to see.

    Takeaway: There are more people out there.

    Before I did this takeover I pretty much thought “everyone who wants my book already has it so I should stop talking about it.” It’s easy to fall into this trap when growth is slow or nonexistent. Reaching people beyond my normal subscribers brought a breath of fresh air. I made some new friends who followed me here! *waves* And sold a couple copies of my book. Not loads, but it broadened my horizons.


    Submission #3 – Stay Home Gallery

    Venue: Art Gallery (Paris, TN)

    Cost to Submit: $10

    Next, my textile piece Maternal Mental Health was accepted to an art exhibition about paradox in caregiving. Here’s a statement from the curator Tara Carpenter Estrada,

    “In Together/Alone, the paradox of emotions between “never alone” and “very lonely” felt by caregivers is given the spotlight. The societal devaluing of care-work places the responsibilities of care (and self-care) on individuals. Without structural support, a tension can arise between love and devotion, and resentment or anxiety— the need for alone time, and the need for togetherness.”

    An embroidery frame holds a cross stitch that reads "I'm Fine". A second image shows the reverse which is a tangled mess of navy blue thread.

    Maternal Mental Health / 2022 / textile / 11” x 15” 17”

    Stay Home Gallery is now closed, but you can see the show archived here.

    Takeaway: Try to align your expectations with reality.

    Because this was my first time exhibiting art outside university I really wanted to travel to the gallery opening. The whole situation was confusing because it was a hybrid show. On one hand it was a physical exhibition at an artist retreat – so I had to mail my work. But the main exhibition was on the Stay Home Gallery website. The physical location was not open to the public and was only seen by the artist residents. So there was no opportunity to visit and see the work in person. I was a bit heartbroken, to be honest, because my expectations weren’t aligned with reality. But it was my first tiny baby step into the fine art world.


    Submission #4 – Ought

    Venue: Ought: The Journal of Autistic Culture (Grand State University, MI)

    Cost to Submit: FREE

    The next thing I knew I was being published in an academic journal. My piece, The Benefits of Asynchronous Friendship, exploring my collaborative project with

    Claire Venus was accepted to Ought: Volume 4, Issue 2 (2023) The Internet.

    I wrote a short introduction to the article here.

    Black and white diptych shows two photographs. One shows feet on an oval rag rug with LEGO DUPLO and a grabber. The other shows feet in sandals beside a train track.

    I have a lot to say about this one that should probably live behind a paywall, but I found this process very challenging. I’m an academic – my day job is teaching university theatre courses – but I’m a theatre instructor. (Not an autism researcher.) And I’ve never written for an academic journal before.

    Takeaway: Academic writing = time consuming revision.

    The challenge came from writing a piece that was “too academic” to be creative and “too creative” to be academic. The editor didn’t quite know what to do with me. They literally said, “it is neither beast nor fowl.” 😂

    In the end, we decided to treat it as a creative piece, meaning I had to strip out the research I’d done and root the writing in my lived experience. It was a stronger piece afterward, but the timing couldn’t have been worse. Trying to edit this piece whilst also running a crowdfunder almost killed me.

    If I submit in the future it will be a visual artwork which wouldn’t require revision.


    Submission #5 – Cut, Torn & Mended

    Venue: Spilt Milk Gallery (Edinburgh, Scotland)

    Cost to Submit: Free to Members

    Cut, Torn & Mended was an open call for members of Spilt Milk Gallery including a virtual exhibition and printed zine. I submitted my bricolage, The Mental Load, which I created as a self regulation process after publishing my first book.

    A visual cacophony of broken toys and the detritus of motherhood fill a bamboo cutlery tray mounted on the wall. Most easily visible are a plastic snake, foam Pac Man, fishing pole, red tube, DUPLO train, caution tape, and bubble wands. There are also various candy wrappers, stickers, crayons, small toys, and broken objects throughout.

    The Mental Load / 2023 / broken toys, detritus of motherhood / 28” x 25” x 8”

    Takeaway: Virtual exhibitions are perfect for large or heavy works that are hard to mail.

    There’s no way I could afford to ship this piece due to it’s size and fragility so a virtual exhibit & zine was a perfect fit.

    View the virtual exhibition or purchase a copy of the Cut, Torn & Mended zine here.


    Submission #6 – Anthropology of Motherhood

    Venue: Three Rivers Art Festival (Pittsburgh, PA)

    Cost to Submit: FREE

    Anthropology of Motherhood Culture of Care was curated by Amy Bowman-McElhone, PhD and has traveled from Pittsburgh Three Rivers Art Festival to Dyer Art Center at National Institute for the Deaf.

    This is also the only exhibition I participated in that had funding to pay the artists.

    Still frame of 360 VR experience. A white play button floats over a nursery. Dark red yarn is strung around the room.

    Experience this work in 360 with the YouTube app.

    The work that was originally submitted was my 360 VR piece From Where I Stand. Once we started talking about the logistics of the VR headset the curators asked to show My Brain on Motherhood instead. It felt like a double acceptance because they considered both works worthy of exhibition.

    I also learned that this work was not the physical object itself, but the video. This makes sense in retrospect, but wasn’t obvious to me until they asked to exhibit the video. I changed the details in my portfolio to list this as a video piece.

    Takeaway: Video works are low cost. They don’t require framing or postage and are always “ready to hang” if a screen is available.

    I have a few other video WIPs I need to finish up and get into my portfolio. I’m also keeping an old iPad to display works as needed.


    Submission #7 – WoT Idol

    Venue: The Dusty Wheel, YouTube

    Cost to Submit: FREE

    This one was just for fun.

    Every submission was aired, but for me this submission was about putting myself out there and doing something for myself outside of my “professional” portfolio.

    If you’re new around here I’m passionately dedicated to the Wheel of Time and have recently reconnected to the community. Last April I submitted a WoT Idol parody video turning Wheel of Time characters into Sesame Street style puppets. I wrote about the experience here:

    Purple muppet style puppet with fluffy fur and ears


    Submission #8 – Spilt Milk Member Exhibition

    Venue: Spilt Milk Gallery (Edinburgh, Scotland)

    Cost to Submit: Free to Members

    Do you hear us… are you listening? was “curated through an open submission to members, without a defined theme, nor a selection process. All members were invited to have their work included. The process of removing the selection committee allowed for a more democratic way of exhibiting our artists’ works, free of judgement or censoring and for all voices to be heard with equal importance.”

    For this exhibition, members were invited to submit two works, and I submitted Meltdown and Meltdown Prevention. It felt like a nice opportunity to exhibit these works together and both were included.

    If you’d like to see this exhibition it is archived here.

    Takeaway: Exhibitions and open calls can come in many forms.

    The way Spilt Milk Gallery includes both curated and member exhibitions is a big inspiration in how I’ve decided to structureNeurokind.


    Submission #9 – Euphoria Quilt Project

    Venue: Instagram

    Cost to Submit: FREE

    When I saw this project by

    Euphoria Quilt Project I knew I wanted to submit a block, but I didn’t know if I had time to make one. Eventually I realized I could utilize the crazy quilting skills I’d developed while making my gleeman’s cloak and I made a quilt square from textured scraps.

    Crazy quilted square of textures like silk and velvet jewel tones sewn with golden thread and frayed edges

    This piece will be included in a quilt representing gender expansive joy organized by Eliot Anderberg. You can see some of the squares that have been submitted over on Instagram.

    I wrote the following about my square, “Embracing into my neuroqueer and nonbinary gender identity means leaning into the fact that I may appear eccentric. I explored that in this project by using the “wrong” side of several fabrics and improvising a “crazy quilted” design. Gender expression is also tied up in sensory experience for me so I also included some soft stimmy textures.”

    If you’re new here and didn’t know I was nonbinary maybe give this a read

    Sketchbook with hand drawn Pride flag surrounded by crayons

    Submission #10 – HNDL Magazine

    Venue: Instagram

    Cost to Submit: FREE

    HNDL stands for Highlighted Neurodivergent & Disabled Life and is a “magazine featuring the work of creatives who identify as neurodivergent, disabled &/or chronically ill”. Give them a follow over on Instagram.

    My piece Domestic Archaeology was included in HNDL Issue 2 (Fall 2023).

    Small toys arranged by color including red beads, marbles, bracelet, orange golf ball, carrots, beads, yellow spoon, cog, LEGO DUPLO, trophy, beads, K'nex, brown round DUPLO, wooden beads, drumstick, purple plastic shapes, k'nex, and beads.

    Domestic Archaeology / 2023 / lost items

    This was a piece I created with things we found under the couch. I wrote a bit about the process here.

    Takeaway: Virtual publications are a very accessible way to share work without printing and framing.

    I’m also noticing how this magazine has flexible deadlines which inspired the rolling deadline I implemented over at Neurokind.


    Submission #11 – Queer Anxiety

    Venue: All Street Gallery (New York City, NY)

    Cost to Submit: FREE

    After such a wild run of acceptance I was sure that this one was going to be my first rejection of the year. You’ll notice this is the second work I submitted to a queer space. I’m a baby queer – only openly identifying as nonbinary, ace, and neuroqueer as of last year. So I felt some imposter syndrome stepping into these communitites, but I’ve been embraced into these spaces with open arms.

    There’s something about exhibiting in NYC that feels like a right of passage. Even when I was packing up my work to mail it didn’t feel real. Luckily I had some friends who visited the exhibit on my behalf and documented that it was. (Thanks to everyone who sent me photographs and videos. You can see my work in situ here.)

    White child sized t shirt on a silver clothes hanger covered in clothing tags of various brands and sizes.

    Meltdown / 2023 / shirt & clothing tags / 16” x 20”

    QUEER ANXIETIES was curated by Blair Simmons, Eden Chinn, Sarah Hallacher, and Shuang Cai.

    “Through sculpture, the 13 exhibiting artists make objects that stand outside of normative interpretations of usefulness and conventionality, thereby expanding our worldview and possibilities for engagement. If queerness is an act of making things strange (or challenging norms), strangeness identifies potential points of rupture within social conditioning.”

    Takeaway: Submit the maximum amount of works possible (if you can.)

    I actually created a new piece specifically for this call, but when I saw that there was the opportunity to submit 3 works I also included Meltdown and Unravel. It’s always nice to give the curator choices.


    Some people have asked how I know about opens calls.

    The truth is by serendipity.

    Over the years I’ve connected with a variety of artists with similar overlapping interests. Many of them generously share opportunities (often on Instagram stories) which spark my interest.

    Huge shoutout to these lovelies who often share art exhibitions and residencies:

    Jocelyn Mathewes, Lauren Frances Evans, Catherine Reinhart, and Ashley Jane Lewis.

    And Tamzen Bryant who shared the local book festival.

    I’ve also really loved being a member of Spilt Milk Gallery who hosted 2 of these exhibits.

    I hope I’ve demystified the process and inspired you to submit your work.

    I wish you the best in making work and putting it out into the world. The next one I’m working on is a piece about roots for Motherlore Magazine. And if you’re neurodivergent I’d love to see your work submitted to Neurokind.

    It’s not scary. We’re all people making things happen.

    Cheers,

    Sarah signed with a swoopy S

    P.S. I’m rubbish at marketing, and this has been on my “to do” list for over a year. But I finally made a new footer to remind people I wrote a book / have courses / love comments. 🥰


    I’m a Renaissance Soul so I always have lots of irons in the fire. Here are just a few of the ways that we can connect. (Psst… comments and shares are my favorite. And they’re free!)

    1. Leave a comment!
    2. Share this post.
    3. Sign up for Self Publishing 101.
    4. Subscribe or submit work to Neurokind.
    5. Read my book Discover Your Creative Ecosystem (Curious what I mean by creative ecosystem? Start here.)

    Mockup of Discover Your Creative Ecosystem book by Sarah Shotts. A silhouette of bird in flight shows a landscape beyond.

    Footnotes

    * We don’t have white walls in our house so I purchased a large sheet of white hardboard from the hardware store. There is a small hole drilled that lines up with a nail in Davy’s nursery where I often hang works to photograph them. I also have a smaller board I can set up on an easel and photograph in the backyard. Light is almost always the problem so I tend to use a tripod for portfolio photos even though I hate them. I also have a small white IKEA table I use to photograph 3D works. Here’s a peek at my set up. It’s a relatively inexpensive solution. If your work is small and lightweight you could probably get away with a piece of foamcore and a pin stuck in, but my larger works have needed a nail to hang from.

    White hardboard leaned against a wall in my child's room propped up by a small wooden stool

    † (That’s Odo from Star Trek Deep Space Nine.) It took a lot out of me.

    Read more: From the kitchen table to NYC 🗽
  • More Reaching Than Rooting

    Gray green rabbit hopping over the text "down the rabbit hole" in a typewriter font

    First off, a quick update for local folks!

    I’ll be attending my very first book festival as a self published author this Saturday! I’ll be doing a reading and signing at NWA Book Fest and would love to see you there! It feels surreal and I’m not sure I quite believe it’s real yet.

    Find all the festival information here. (Catch me on the main stage at 2:30pm).


    in the studio header

    A peek into my creative process and current works in progress.

    This week I’ve had more “reaching” energy than “rooting.”

    Along with preparing for the festival I’ve also applied to two more art exhibitions at Spilt Milk Gallery and The Anthropology of Motherhood.

    You can download either of these printables (Reach & Root or 100 Submissions) here.

    100 Submissions printable has a willow tree on top and gold stars in the first three boxes. A date stamp and keys also sit on the desk.

    I recorded a podcast episode with Kiki from Heiter Magazine. (Coming your way in April.) Podcast interviews take a lot of energy so I am experimenting with quarterly guests this year. In the past I’ve tried weekly or monthly and that has been too much. This is part of my seasonal planning approach and slowing down to find my own pace.

    I’m also undertaking a just-for-fun puppet alteration project for a Wheel of Time parody contest. I haven’t done any crafting or fan art in a really long time so this has been fun.

    Also Davy is fascinated.

    Maybe I’ll share a peek at that next week.


    of shoes and ships and sealing wax header

    Other bits and bobs I’d like to recommend…

    Watch

    “I used to think that art had to begreat to be worthwhile. Now, I only think it has to be to be worthwhile.” John Green. Maybe Art Only Needs to Be. Feb 21, 2023.

    Me too, John, me too.

    Listen

    The On Being podcast is BACK and I am loving it! These two episodes were amazing.

    Janine Benyus Biomimicry, an Operating Manual for Earthlings on natural organisms as mentors and peers… learning from them rather than about them.

    And Rick Rubin Magic, Everyday Mystery, and Getting Creative. I have SO MANY quotes from this one because I listened while parked in the car while Davy napped:

    • “The real practice of the artist is a way of being in the world.”
    • “It’s hard for me to finish projects because I always see the possibilities of what else we could try and I want to try everything…”
    • “What I came to realize is that there is a time for this open play. And it’s in those first two parts of the process, the seed phase… and experimenting.”
    • “By working with sensitive artists, we resonate together in that we’re feeling things that not everybody else is feeling.”
    • “There is no connection between the amount of time invested and how good something is.”
    • “The sustainable part of the practice is: start with things that are easy to do.”

    Read

    Reflections on shapeshifting and reframing “scattered” by Cody Cook-Parrott


    That’s all for this week, but I’d love to know what you’re up to.

    Feel free to drop a link or comment below.

    Cheers,

    Sarah signed with a swoopy S
    Read more: More Reaching Than Rooting