Aubin says, “Doing a project where you dedicate time to it; having the funding forces you to actually sit down and do the work. Before these ideas were tumbling around in my head, and probably would have taken a lot longer to make happen. The funding gives you the freedom away from your income driven work to get on and explore, and it gives a goal focus so makes you knuckle down and do it. “
She says of the funding, “The VACMA funding has really helped motivate me to develop my skills and my practice. I found that dedicating time to simply play and experiment without the pressure of results has been really liberating and exciting. It has given me confidence to try new skills that are outside my discipline and that my creative practice can perhaps extend outside jewellery making. It has challenged me to think about the materials I use and connected me with other makers.”
“The impact has been that I’m still printing – I’m still on the journey!”
Since this project Aubin then applied for further Creative Funding which allowed her to take on a second leg of her VACMA project:
“I’m moving on from block printing onto leather, but since I really enjoyed the textile element, I decided to try other new textile techniques without it being outcome led. So now I’m exploring screen printing onto fabric, and I don’t quite know where it’s going to lead, but I’m into my second year of the journey and don’t know where it’s going to end, but that’s what’s exciting about it!”
Although Aubin sees it as being separate from her jewellery practice, she can see a possibility of it crossing over. She says, “It’s a case of giving it some time to percolate. I’ve been doing stitch classes alongside the textile printing, and although it wasn’t my initial intention, I can see things naturally evolving. It isn’t needing to generate income, instead I’m allowing it as time for professional development and not forcing outcomes. It’s so beneficial to allow yourself that time.”