The Power of Unity: Successful Collaborative Art Work Projects from Painting Around is Fun!

The Power of Unity: Successful Collaborative Art Work Projects…

A collaborative art work called "Find Your Confidence" created by teenage girls as part of a social mural and social artwork project, showing swirling pinks, reds, peaches and yellows over a blue and aqua background.
Collaborative Art Work Project created by Primary School Children - Swirling blues, greens and aquas called "Aspiring to Success"
A collaborative art work painted by adult women who are carers of children with special educational needs, showing multi coloured circles, spirals and dots in overlapping patterns, called "Parents Time Out" Social artwork.

Discover the Thrill of Creating Collaborative Art Work!

Collaborative art work is awesome. Creating a painting with a group of people unites you in a shared creative experience. You grow in confidence as you paint with others. You move from place to place and interact with what each other is doing. You layer and overlap. You build your skills and confidence without comparison anxiety. You also avoid the performance pressure that we all feel painting our own individual artwork.

Let’s have a look at three collaborative art works from my own collection of social art projects:

A collaborative art work called "Find Your Confidence" created by teenage girls as part of a social mural and social artwork project, showing swirling pinks, reds, peaches and yellows over a blue and aqua background.
Collaborative Art Work: “Find Your Confidence”

Find Your Confidence in Creating the Layers of a Vibrant School Mural!

This collaborative art work, “Find Your Confidence”, was the ‘mobile mural’ of a public mural at their school. Aberfoyle Park High School is located in South Australia. It takes the mural inside on a canvas. It was painted alongside the large wall mural. This collaborative art work was created in a freeform style. The process involved a guided spontaneous form. The girls were directed to start painting circles, spirals, and dots of different sizes and colors. They then added to each other’s elements, layering patterns and marks. This process built on the visual complexity over several weeks.

Reflection:

This collaborative art work was created by a group of teenage girls. They painted out in public and built their confidence. They realised they can do more than they thought possible. People walking past who watched them paint were ‘zoned out’. In fact, those people were highly complimentary about what they were creating!

Collaborative Art Work: “Aspire to Success”

Aspire to Success by Using the ‘Success Strategies’ of Collaborative Art Projects.

This collaborative art work “Aspire to Success” was created by 120 junior primary students over three sessions. It connects to the school logo of IQRA College in South Australia. The kids had a great time in several rotating groups. Each level of kids did a different stage. The reception kids did ‘Messy Playing’ with sponging, stencilling, and scraping. The grade ones did ‘Exploring’ with medium and small brushes. The grade twos did ‘Bling!’ with paint pens, stickers, and glitter glue. SO many kids! This is a detail from 2 collaborative art projects created over three sessions.

Reflection:

This is one of two large canvases – needed with this many children, that’s for sure! The teachers told me some children accomplished more in this novel situation than they would in the regular classroom. It’s the novelty and the ‘group painting’ that allow shy children to be more adventurous. They can hide in some ways as they create with each other, moving around and being free to explore. They build their creative confidence and can then feel more capable to create in their individual art.

A collaborative art work painted by adult women who are carers of children with special educational needs, showing multi coloured circles, spirals and dots in overlapping patterns, called "Parents Time Out" Social artwork.
“Parents Time Out” Collaborative art work.

In this collaborative artwork, created in only one session, we used brushwork, stamping, layering and overlapping. It has a mixed colour palette. These days I would have a coloured background (the underpainting) and then layer cool then warm colours. Really, a background that is not stark white is a game changer! There are many ways to approach this. You can use one colour, an ombre, spray paint, or blotches of colours. All these techniques impact the final artwork. Most importantly, an underpainting frees people to start! That white canvas is very much a visual block.

Reflection:

This was my first collaborative art work. I worked with a group of fellow parent carers. This was part of our “Parents Time Out” activity for Mums of children with special educational needs. This is when I first felt the thrill of collaborative art. It led to the hundreds of artworks created with over two thousand people so far.

3 Collaborative Art Works – Conclusion:

These three collaborative art works show how different groups collaborate in art creation. Young children, teenagers, and adults enjoy creating together. In doing so, they paint truly unique artworks. These are developed from the dynamics of their group. This may involve ten ladies. It might also include 120 little kids just starting school. They have fun!


Discover how to create collaborative art works like these. Join my Inner Circle email list. I will give you “Starting Your First Social Art Project at Home”. It is my free 7-page step-by-step guide. You can easily paint a unique artwork. Use my three fun stages. Do this with a group of people in your life.

– Charndra, Your Inclusive Social Art Guide.


Let’s Chat:  

I love spirals. Circles turn into spirals. Big, small, open or tight spirals look great on an artwork – they are my favourite shape.

Are you keen to try this form of collaborative social art? It’s called ‘Pattern Play Collaborative Art’ because we layer approachable and accessible patterns from my ‘Pattern Play’ visual resources. These resources are tools. They help you create unique and beautiful collaborative art projects. You can paint with groups of people in your life!

Want to join the conversation? Head to my Facebook | Instagram | Threads to find the featured image. Share your thoughts on collaborative art.

Our Autumn Banner – an exciting collaborative art project for primary schools. from Painting Around is Fun!

Our Autumn Banner – an Exciting Collaborative Art Project for Primary Schools.

a collaborative art project for primary schools.

A collaborative art project for primary schools: ‘Our Autumn Banner’

This painted canvas banner was created with children in a vacation or holiday care program. It was my first circle painting project with kids. I Loved it. I’d done many murals and other group projects when I was a high school art teacher, but this type of collaborative art was just so terribly exciting for me – I love the energy I get from watching the thrill, enjoyment and peace of the kids when creating this way. There’s nothing like it!

Start With a Circle!

The canvas banner had a russet colour, so we used pre-mixed autumn colours for our limited colour scheme. Limited colour schemes are key! Colours such as dusky pinks, browns, oranges, warm reds, ochres, golds, as well as silver and some black. Far more options than I would use at any one time these days, with so many projects completed. To create this collaborative art project the primary school aged kids began with a circle, as this is how all circle painting begins.  We add another circle, perhaps a bigger one, then another. We go from there, outlining someone else’s circle, changing to a different colour, doing some dots or interesting patterns around a circle. We move to the other side of the canvas and see where our circles might be needed. We add some dots. Dots are found in the earliest art of so many cultures around the world. We used glitter paint for our BLING stage!

Embracing Overlap!

One focus of creating this artwork was to accept layering – that partially covering the work of each other really builds up the richness of the surface and looks GREAT! It gives interesting shapes, new shapes to interact with, new ideas to repeat. A little bit of the layer below always shows through, giving us glimpses of the earlier layers as we become more confident in playing with the paint and the shapes.

No Mistakes – Just Differences…

Another focus was that there are no mistakes – just differences that will look great as a whole. The first hour was almost silent as the kids focused so intently on exploring their visual creativity while ‘in the zone’… Then they got to chatting as they moved around, experimented, trying different colours, brushes and shapes as I encouraged them to overlap, copy each other and try ideas from the set of colourful circle- based artworks we looked over before starting to paint.

A Collaborative Art Project for Primary Schools – Conclusion:

This project resulted in a beautifully autumn flavoured banner that still catches the eye of anyone entering the OSHC space. It’s warm and busy and has so many areas for your eyes to wander around. This was my first collaborative art project in a primary school. It is quite simple. I have now done over 60 projects with more than 2000 people. WOW. Today, I would add more layers – in fact at my next visit to the school we will be doing that, adding a new layer with the mostly different collection of children, and calling the project “Autumn Banner Redux”. I’ll be sure to show the results in a future post.

Our Collaborative Art Project Was a Success!


Discover how to create collaborative art projects like these for your primary school – Join my Inner Circle email list so I can give you “Starting Your First Social Art Project at Home”, my free 7 page step by step guide making it effortless for you to paint a unique artwork using my three fun stages with a group of people in your life. I love collaborative social art and want to share it with you!

– Charndra, Your Inclusive Social Art Guide.


Let’s chat:

Are you keen to try this form of collaborative social art? It’s called ‘Pattern Play Collaborative Art’ because we layer approachable and accessible patterns from my ‘Pattern Play’ visual resources. These resources are tools. They help you create unique and beautiful collaborative art projects. You can paint with groups of people in your life!

Want to join the conversation? Head to my Facebook | Instagram | Threads to find the featured image. Share your thoughts on collaborative art.

Four Inspiring Collaborative Art Projects to Spark Your Creativity (Created with Groups) from Painting Around is Fun!

Exploring Collaborative Art Projects for All Ages

Let’s check out these four inspiring collaborative art projects. They were created with a range of people, including kids, children and teens. Adults and people living with disabilities also participated. Everyone is creative and always enjoy the thrill of painting around each other! All these social artworks were painted by groups of people.

The Magic of Collaborative Art Projects

Collaborative art has a unique energy. When many people (even a couple of us) come together, each brings their own flair and creativity. The outcome is a rich, layered blend of ideas. It extends beyond what one person achieves alone. This process fosters a unique shared vision. I call my form of collaborative art inclusive social art.

In this blog post, I’ll introduce you to four examples of these collaborative art projects. These artworks were created with myself as the social art guide. They were collectively painted by more than 450 people.

“Growing Together” – A Collaborative Art Project Created With Children.

This collaborative art project involved 30 primary school children aged 4-13. They participated in a summer holiday or vacation care program over three sessions. This was he first time they had done such a project, and wow, were they proud of the result!

A collaborative art project showing a swirling artwork of cool blues, greens and purples.
“Growing Together’ Collaborative Art Projects are Fun to Create!

Reflection: This painting taught us the importance of sharing space together. Thirty kids painted around each other during the sessions called Messy Playing, Exploring, and BLING! It all came together in this beautiful cooperative piece of art.

Mia’s Rose” – One of the Collaborative Art Projects Created with My Daughter.

This collaborative art project was created by my daughter and I from when she was about 18 months old. Each 5 minute session we used either a blue or a pink, with some white. I’d offer her different sized brushes and stamps like balloons and other items to transfer paint on the canvas. Ten years later, this door-sized canvas hangs on her bedroom wall. We periodically add new layers. Purple is her new favourite colour, so that will be added next. We’ve painted through toddler, to preschooler, to primary school!

An abstract collaborative art project with blues and pinks created by a mother and daughter team.
“Mia’s Rose” a 2 person collaborative art project

Reflection: This artwork showcases how much fun collaborative art projects are for children. Even a five minute session was enough for a toddler. She enjoyed the creative control of choosing the colour each time, the equipment used (balloons, stencils, stamps, brushes…) Can you see our cat?

“Safety” – One Of A Set Of Two Collaborative Art Projects Created With Teenagers.

"Safety', an artwork of swirling light and dark blues, greens and purples.
“Safety” An inclusive Social Artwork created by teenagers.

Reflection: This artwork showcases how a group of teenagers who had never met each other can create something extraordinary. They did this in only a few hours. They key is a limited colour scheme and closed choices – simple “Pattern Play” ideas to copy. I have MANY Pattern Play visual resources to help you create beautiful layers!

“Community” – From A Set of Three Collaborative Art Projects Created With Members of the Public.

During the inaugural Art Story Artist in Residence program at Westfield Marion in 2022, I engaged with the public. I spent two weeks painting with over 600 members. We worked on three collaborative art projects. We worked on this one every day. One was in cool colours and another in warm colours. This one had both. On any day, we added layers of patterns in either warm or cool colours. This ensured that we had no muddy colours blotching up our artworks.

Colourful collaborative art project created by a large group of people
‘Community’, an inclusive social art project

Reflection: This project was a testament to the power of community, with everybody working together to create something beautiful. Hundreds of people added their marks to this piece over the two week program.

Conclusion:

Collaborative art projects are fun and look best when they turn out well. No one wants to end up with muddy colors. To keep it eye-catching, use a limited color palette. Layer warm and cool colors separately when dry to avoid mixing them. This way, everyone can be proud of their unique creation and eager to share it!


Discover how to create collaborative art projects like these. Join my Inner Circle email list to get “Starting Your First Social Art Project at Home”. This is my free 7 page step by step guide. Creating a unique artwork is effortless. Use my three fun stages with a group of people in your life. I love collaborative social art and want to share it with you!


Let’s Chat!

Trends in colour palettes change all the time. My favourite is called “Utopia”. I’ve based it on the series of that name. This inspired a series of collaborative artworks. I’m painting these artworks with my kids.

Are you keen to try this form of collaborative social art? It’s called ‘Pattern Play Collaborative Art’ because we layer approachable and accessible patterns from my ‘Pattern Play’ visual resources. These resources are tools. They help you create unique and beautiful collaborative art projects. You can paint with groups of people in your life!

Want to join the conversation? Head to my Facebook | Instagram | Threads to find the featured image. Share your thoughts on collaborative art!

Discover how to do collaborative art. Welcome to Painting Around is Fun!

Hello World! Welcome to Painting Around is FUN!

Painting Around is Fun is where I share my collaborative, inclusive social art projects created with groups of people. Anyone, of any age or ability, can join in—like YOU!

Here’s how Pattern Play Collaborative Art works:

Messy Playing:

Start with a coloured canvas. Use big brushes to create circles, spirals, and arches along the edges. Add clusters of marks like dots, dashes, and simple swirls.

Exploring:

Use medium, then smaller brushes to layer patterns from my unique ‘Pattern Play’ resources over the artwork. You’ll interact with what other painters are adding, embracing overlapping and building up the piece together.

Bling!:

Add the finishing touches with patterns and decorative elements using paint pens. You can add some sparkle with gems. Glitter works great too. Use gold leaf to finish the artwork with a touch of bling.

Here are several of the many collaborative group artworks I have created since 2017. I did my first collaborative art project, Our Autumn Banner, with a group of twelve primary school kids. I was hooked!

Colourful collaborative art project created by a large group of people

My Name is Charndra. (Like ‘Sandra’ with a ‘Ch’)

I’m a high school art teacher, and I’m also a behaviour therapist for my son, who has special needs. As a parent and carer, I now focus on being an Inclusive Social Artist. I share the fun of making art together in groups. This is done one project at a time. All my experiences have led to developing a style of collaborative art. I call this style ‘Pattern Play Collaborative Art’ based on the inclusive patterns we layer.

You’ll love my unique way of creating art together!

Painting with a group of friends is so much fun. You can watch the artwork grow as everyone adds their touch. My ‘Pattern Play’ resources make it easy to be creative. Just enjoy the process—no pressure. Don’t worry about comparing your work to others. You’ll be amazed at what a group can achieve together, and the approach I’ve developed always leads to success!

The artworks start out blank, but they will turn out GREAT!

I have an email group called my ‘Inner Circle’ because we always start with circles in our projects. Each week, I share a peek into the 60+ projects I’ve created with over 2,200 people across South Australia.

I invite you to join my Inner Circle today! You’ll get “Starting Your First Social Art Project at Home.” It’s a free 7-page step-by-step guide. It makes it easy to create a unique artwork with a group of friends or family. I’m passionate about collaborative social art and excited to share this experience with you!

Starting Your First Social Art Project at Home - a simple step by step guide to creating your unique and beautiful artwork!

– Charndra, Your Inclusive Social Art Guide.

Let’s Chat.

Are you keen to try this form of collaborative social art? It’s called ‘Pattern Play Collaborative Art’ because we layer approachable and accessible patterns from my ‘Pattern Play’ visual resources. These resources are tools. They help you create unique and beautiful collaborative art projects. You can collaborate with groups of people in your life!

Want to join the conversation? Head to my Facebook | Instagram | Threads to find the featured image. Share your thoughts on collaborative art!