I've been working away on my book,
Artmaking as Playful Prayer: A 12-Week Guide to Developing Your Creativity as a Spiritual Practice, and finally got a draft out to my marvelous test readers earlier today. Now, I'm waiting to hear what they have to say and working on the hands-on explorations that will appear in the book! And you know, I'm going to need some people to test out the art stuff (hint, hint).
One of the things I mention in passing in the book (and may need to explore in more depth - perhaps in my own basement)
is the idea of drawing on the walls. It's basic, right? It's exactly how our ancestors got started, and it's a straight-forward form of artmaking. You have an object that makes marks, and something to make marks on, and the nearest, easiest thing to make marks on is . . . well, the walls. And then I remembered seeing something on-line about people doing just that . . .
A few hours of Googling later, and I have found some cool goodies to share with you. If you're a bit shy of messing up your walls, there is
paint-by-numbers wallpaper (found via
casasugar), like this from
Jenny Wilkinson:


If you're ready to just dive in, but like a little structure, you might try something like this frames wallpaper by Taylor & Wood (found via the
droolicious blog on babble.com) and available in the US via the
Graham & Brown website. I really want this for my office, and it would be super fun in a bathroom or kid's room! It also has the advantage that you can steam it off and perhaps take it with you - avoiding the whole "I'm moving and I have to paint over my artwork" trauma.


Or, you can just grab your permanent marker and go to town! I found two brave souls who have done just that via
compactbydesign.com. The first is Charlie Kratzer from Kentucky who grabbed a Sharpie and decorated his basement - you can even see a video of the whole thing on the
Kentucky Sun website, but here's a taste:

Or, if you have a gold pen and steady hand, you can check out
Kellie's blog and see what she got herself up to in the hallway:

Yup, I'm looking at the office in the basement in a whole new light . . .