Creating Inclusive Art: Social Art Projects for Special Needs Adults from Painting Around is Fun!

Creating Inclusive Art: Social Art Projects for Special Needs Adults

Quick Takeaway

Creating inclusive art for special needs adults is about designing social, collaborative art projects where everyone can participate with confidence, choice, and ease.

In this post, you’ll find practical ways to support inclusive group painting, based on experience facilitating over 60 community and school-based collaborative art projects with more than 2,000 participants using the Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework.

This guide is written for teachers and facilitators who want clear, supportive ideas, along with a simple next step through the free Beginner’s Guide.


What is the easiest way to create a collaborative art project for adults with special needs?

The key is keeping it social, accessible, encouraging, and simple to implement.

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is designed for exactly this: social, accessible group art that everyone can join in with.

This process is simple, flexible, and accessible for all abilities.

Creative group art is a powerful way to bring people together and build a sense of connection and belonging.

Social art projects for special needs adults create an inclusive environment where participants can express themselves, collaborate with others, and contribute in meaningful ways.

Below, I’ll share three of my own collaborative art projects that show how powerful this approach can be in practice.

"Enhancing Voices" one of four collaborative artworks created by 97 people living with disability and special needs
“Enhancing Voices” one of a set of four collaborative artworks created by adults with special needs.

Enhancing Voices

The Enhancing Voices project was a creative collaboration with members of Our Voice SA across South Australia.

Participants attended four regional conferences in Adelaide, Whyalla, Mount Gambier, and the Riverland, where they took part in a series of shared art sessions.

The process began with simple circles and mark-making, using colours inspired by the Our Voice SA logo.

Each artwork then travelled with Ali, their regional Social Art Guide. Along the journey, layers of patterns and embellishments were gradually added, building richness and detail over time.

This approach resulted in four unique and highly detailed collaborative artworks. The final pieces will be displayed in meeting rooms at each location.

Together, they reflect the creativity, voices, and contributions of 96 participants, each adding their own personal expression.

This project is a strong example of how collaborative social art can connect people across distances, build pride, and create a shared sense of community.

It shows what becomes possible when everyone is included in the creative process.

"Peer Support" an artwork created by adults living with special needs and disability.
“Peer Support” an artwork created by adults living with special needs and disability.

Peer Support

The Peer Support project was created in collaboration with members of Our Voice SA, a peer-led self-advocacy community supporting people living with intellectual disabilities.

The project began with a Messy Play session, where participants used cool colours with sponges and scrapers to build a textured background layer.

From there, participants explored circles as a shared visual theme, painting and overlapping them to create a sense of unity and connection.

The artwork was then developed with intricate pattern work, adding detail and individuality across the shared surface.

Final touches in the Bling stage included paint pens, glitter glue, and sparkly nail polish to bring energy and emphasis to the piece.

The finished artwork is both beautiful and unique, symbolising the group’s inner strength and the supportive community they have built together.

It was created to support awareness for the International day of persons with disabilities, held each December, and was exhibited at the Myriad Exhibition at the State Library of South Australia.

The exhibition featured work from more than 70 artists and was presented by Community Living Australia.

Detail of a mural created by children and young adults living with special needs and disability.
Detail of a mural created by children and young adults living with special needs and disability.

Our Sensory Garden Mural

The Sensory Garden Mural at Suneden Specialist School was a large-scale collaborative project involving 68 students aged 5–21, alongside support staff, with around 100 people contributing across multiple small group sessions.

Each participant had the opportunity to contribute meaningfully. Over two sessions with each of the nine classes, students explored a range of tools including large brushes, rollers, extended handles, sponges, and stamps.

Together, they built a richly layered mural filled with colour, texture, and movement.

The project was strongly supported by dedicated staff and centred on a simple principle: every mark adds to the whole.

This approach helped break down barriers to participation and ensured everyone could take part in creating a shared artwork.

The mural forms the centrepiece of the Sensory Garden, accompanied by two mobile murals created using the same colours and techniques. These extend the artwork throughout the school, creating a consistent and inclusive visual environment.

Each child’s name is hidden within the mural, encouraging exploration and giving every participant a sense of ownership and connection to the final piece.

The Impact of Collaborative Social Art Projects

These projects highlight the benefits of social art projects for special needs adults and children.

In a supportive, inclusive environment, participants are able to explore creativity at their own level, develop new skills, and experience the value of contributing to a shared artwork.

These experiences foster a sense of accomplishment while also strengthening connection and community between participants.

This approach works best in mixed-ability settings where participation is flexible and inclusive.

You can explore the full collection of facilitation strategies and examples in the hub for facilitated collaborative art: Facilitated Collaborative Art for Mixed Ability Groups


FREE Guide + Mini Course: Learn the Easiest Way to Run a Collaborative Art Project

Sign up to get the Beginner’s Guide and a short email course that shows you how to plan, start, and guide your first Pattern Play project with confidence.

You’ll get weekly creative tips and group art ideas from me.

Bonus: You’ll also receive a special offer inside.

Your guide arrives instantly after you confirm your email.
Unsubscribe anytime.


How to make a collaborative artwork - 3 inspiring examples from Painting Around is Fun!

How to Make a Collaborative Artwork: 3 Inspiring Examples

Quick Takeaway

Curious about how to make a collaborative artwork? In this post, you’ll discover three real examples that show how groups of different ages and abilities can create together using my simple Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework.

I’ve facilitated more than 60 school and community projects with over 2,000 participants, and these examples demonstrate how a structured approach can help groups create meaningful artworks together.

How to Make a Collaborative Artwork

Collaborative artworks are created when a group of people work together to make a single piece of art. The process can be as simple or complex as you like, but the key is creating a structure that allows everyone to contribute.

My Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework uses three flexible stages: Messy Playing, Exploring, and BLING! to help groups of all ages and abilities create together. The process is simple enough for beginners, while still allowing plenty of room for creativity and personal expression.

In this post, you’ll see exactly how the process works through three real collaborative art projects. These examples show how children, carers, and community groups used the same framework to create unique artworks together.

how to make a collaborative artwork example painted by children

How to make a collaborative artwork: Group painted canvas by children

I worked with 30 children and staff at a primary school’s Vacation Care program on a social art project called “Growing Together.” The project embraced the energy and creativity of a multi-age group, giving everyone the chance to contribute in their own way.

The Process: We began with the Messy Playing stage, using greens, aqua, and white. The children created spontaneous circles, dots, ovals, and spirals on a large canvas, which helped them relax and get comfortable with the process.

Next came the Exploring phase. Using progressively smaller brushes, the children added patterns and details to the existing shapes, layering ideas on top of each other to bring the artwork to life.

Finally, the Bling! stage added sparkle and fun. Paint pens, gems, stickers, and glitter allowed the children to contribute playful, decorative touches, completing the collaborative piece.

The Result: The finished canvas, “Growing Together,” reflects the natural theme chosen for the project and symbolises the children growing up together during their time in the OSHC program. The 1m x 1m artwork now hangs in their rooms, serving as a joyful reminder of the project’s collaborative spirit.

Why It Worked: This project succeeded because it engaged children of different ages and abilities, giving everyone a chance to express themselves while contributing to a shared goal. The structured stages offered guidance, while the open-ended activities encouraged creativity, teamwork, and pride in the collective achievement.

This same approach can be adapted for classrooms, OSHC programs, holiday programs, and community groups.

How to make a collaborative artwork - shows an example of a Carer Support Collaborative artwork on canvas.

How to make a collaborative artwork: Carer Support collaborative acrylics on canvas

I worked with a Carer Support Centre’s “Parents Time Out” group to create a collaborative circle painting canvas. The aim was to give carers a chance to reconnect with their creative side – many of them hadn’t picked up a paintbrush since school.

The Process: We began with a blank canvas, inviting each participant to paint a circle. Those first circles became the starting point. From there, everyone explored freely – adding spirals, radial bursts, dots, and layers of colour. I encouraged participants to overlap and build on each other’s work, which helped release hesitation and made the artwork more dynamic.

The Result: In just two hours, eight painters came together to create a vibrant, eye-catching canvas bursting with colour and movement. The process was playful and relaxed, giving carers the freedom to express themselves while connecting with each other. The finished artwork was later displayed in an exhibition at Skylight, celebrating their collaborative effort.

Why It Worked: This project removed the pressure to create a “perfect” piece of art and instead emphasised enjoyment, connection, and shared ownership. The painters were especially proud to see their creation exhibited and recognised as part of a broader mental health initiative. This was also the very first collaborative canvas I facilitated with adults – a reminder that simple beginnings can grow into something lasting and inspiring.

Circle paintings are an easy starting point for adult groups because they remove the pressure of knowing what to paint.

How to make a collaborative artwork -painted paper collage example

How to make a collaborative artwork: Painted paper mixed media collage

I had fun painting with a local Mums Coffee Group (yes, I was one of them – another early project showing how my process has evolved). We embarked on a creative journey to make a collaborative collage using painted papers. The aim was simple: to have fun and explore creativity in a relaxed, supportive environment. We did!

The Process: We started with three large A2 sheets of cartridge paper, covering the surfaces with cool colours using various sponges. This stage was all about experimentation, and the mums enjoyed discovering the different textures and effects they could create. Simple paper is all you need.

Once the painted papers dried, (cuppa time!) we moved on to the collage work. Each participant selected plain, painted, and printed papers, cutting them into circles. I offered a basic starting strategy (cutting circles), and soon creativity took over. The group began pushing the boundaries, exploring shapes like snowflakes and other forms inspired by the papers themselves.

After the collage layers were in place, we added visual depth with warm colours and sponged stenciled designs for extra interest. The final stage involved adding decorations, outlines, doodles, and patterns with paint pens. The mums swapped pieces and added personal touches throughout, resulting in a truly collaborative artwork reflecting everyone’s contribution.

The Result: The final pieces were vibrant, layered, and full of personality. Each mum contributed to the project, creating a series of framed artworks that beautifully decorated the meeting area. Everyone also took home a piece, leaving with a tangible memory of their collaborative experience.

Why It Worked: This project succeeded because it combined structured guidance with room for creative freedom. The mix of techniques and materials kept the process engaging, while the collaborative approach fostered pride, ownership, and enjoyment among the participants.

Collaborative collage works well when participants are hesitant about painting directly onto a shared artwork.

How to Make a Collaborative Artwork: 5 Easy Tips

1. Set a Simple Starting Point

Begin with something easy, such as circles. I often suggest three circles in each colour, some large, some small. A simple starting point helps participants begin confidently without worrying about getting it “right.”

2. Build the Artwork in Layers

Once the first shapes are in place, add spirals, arches, dots, lines, or other patterns. Layering creates depth, interest, and opportunities for participants to respond to each other’s ideas.

3. Encourage Playfulness Over Perfection

Collaborative art works best when people feel free to experiment. Focus on participation, curiosity, and creativity rather than producing a perfect result. (That just happens!)

4. Celebrate Every Contribution

The finished artwork belongs to the group, not any one individual. Taking time to acknowledge each person’s contribution helps build connection, confidence, and shared ownership.

5. Follow a Simple Framework

Having a structure makes collaborative art easier to facilitate. My free Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art walks you through the Pattern Play process step by step, helping you confidently run a project with your own group.

Final Thoughts

Learning how to make a collaborative artwork doesn’t have to be complicated. With a simple starting point, a few harmonious colours, and a willingness to build on each other’s ideas, groups can create artworks that are vibrant, meaningful, and uniquely their own.

The three examples above show that the same core process can be adapted for children, adults, schools, and community groups. Every artwork will look different, but the shared experience of creating together remains the same. So gather your group, choose a few harmonious colours, and see where the process takes you.

Happy Painting!

Charndra,

Your Collaborative Art Guide

P.S. Looking for more collaborative art inspiration? Explore my collection of collaborative art ideas, browse real group mural projects, or discover collaborative art activities for specific groups, including preschoolers, teens, and special needs adults.


FREE Guide + Mini Course: Learn the Easiest Way to Run a Collaborative Art Project

Sign up to get the Beginner’s Guide and a short email course that shows you how to plan, start, and guide your first Pattern Play project with confidence.

You’ll get weekly creative tips and group art ideas from me in a simple newsletter.

Bonus: You’ll also receive a special offer inside.

Your guide arrives instantly after you confirm your email.
Unsubscribe anytime.

I’ve loved creating these projects with over 2,000 people using the endlessly adaptable Pattern Play Collaborative Art process:

  1. “Safety” detail of an artwork painted by a team of teenagers in a community group.
  2. “Find Your Confidence” detail from a mural painted with teenage girls in a high school.
  3. “Circles of Connection” artwork detail painted by adults in a community group.
  1. “Find Your Courage” mural detail painted by teenage girls in a high school.
  2. “Carer Support Garden Mural” detail painted by adults in a community group.
  3. “We Talk Together” painted by adults in a community group.

Collaborative Painting Examples: A Journey Through Cooperative Creativity from Painting Around is Fun!

Collaborative Painting Examples: A Journey Through Cooperative Creativity

Quick Takeaway

Collaborative Painting Examples show how groups can create art together, blending creativity, teamwork, and fun. I’ve facilitated over 60 community and school-based projects with more than 2,000 participants using my simple Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework. In this post, you’ll discover practical ideas and inspiration – and I want to help you do the same with my helpful digital resources.

What Can We Learn from Collaborative Painting Examples?

Collaborative painting has a unique energy. When people paint together, each participant brings their own ideas, experiences, and creativity. The result is a vibrant interaction that grows in real time, producing artworks rich in visual interest and group expression. Here are four collaborative painting examples that highlight the beauty and complexity of this simple yet powerful process. Each demonstrates the three stages: Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling!

Collaborative Painting Examples: Encouraging Excellence

Collaborative painting examples: Encouraging Excellence

Collaborative Painting Example 1: “Encouraging Excellence”

One of my favorite collaborative projects is “Encouraging Excellence.” In this project, 120 junior primary students in South Australia painted together over three sessions.

  • Messy Playing took place in the first week with the reception children.
  • Exploring happened in week two with the grade 1 students.
  • Bling was added in week three with the grade 2 students.

Two artworks were created, and this image shows a detail of one of them.

Reflection:

This project was an absolute joy. The children had a ball, working in smaller groups each week—sometimes boys, sometimes girls. They experimented with a variety of colours, brushes, and techniques. The resulting artworks were inspired by the school logo, with gold accents included to symbolize the inner strength that each child possesses—a bright reminder of their potential.

Every child received a print of one of the artworks to proudly display at home, and the full artworks now decorate the school halls, serving as a lasting celebration of creativity and collaboration.

Collaborative Painting Examples: Peer Support

Collaborative Painting Example 2: “Peer Support”

This detail shows the free expression of participants using a wide variety of approaches. Some contributors had low muscle tone, yet their marks are just as significant as those with stronger hand control. In fact, it’s this variety that makes the artwork so vibrant and engaging. As I always say, every mark adds to the whole! The scribbly lines, affectionately called “spaghetti,” become a signature element when the canvas is rotated periodically.

Reflection:

“Peer Support” was created with and by people living with disability in South Australia. Members of Our Voice SA, a peer support and advocacy network, worked together over three sessions to create this 1m x 1m collaborative artwork. The project was part of the celebration of the United Nations International Day of Persons with Disabilities (IDPD), held annually on 3 December.

Collaborative Painting Examples: “Safety”

Collaborative Painting Example 3: “Safety”

“Safety” is a collaborative painting created by teenagers in a Young Carer Collective in South Australia. Over the course of the day, they added layers of circles, spirals, and other marks on a cool-toned background. Each painter contributed their own flair using a few selected colours. Two paintings were completed on the day, and you can watch them being created here: Carers SA Young Carer Stories.

Reflection:

By giving the painters simple instructions, their creativity was fully unleashed. Examples of patterns and marks were available for them to copy, adapt, or combine. This approach frees people to be creative, as creativity often thrives within gentle constraints.

Collaborative Painting Examples: ‘Companionship’

Collaborative Painting Example 4: “Companionship”

“Companionship” was created over approximately eight sessions with hundreds of members of the public invited to join in. Participants used cool colours to add their own patterns and decorative elements, inspired by a variety of suggestions on display. This project was part of my ‘Art Story’ at Westfield Marion, and everyone had a wonderful time contributing. My Pattern Play visual resources are now available at My Collaborative Art Shop for those who want to try similar projects.

Reflection:

By using a limited colour scheme, this collaborative artwork remains cohesive. During each session, three colours were provided—for example, light blue, green, and aqua (made from blue, white, and a touch of green). In the next session, participants worked with purple, deep blue, and light green. Each participant was encouraged to experiment with the colours and explore different Pattern Play examples to create unique contributions while maintaining harmony across the artwork.


Final thoughts about these collaborative painting examples:

Collaborative painting is a rewarding experience that pushes the boundaries of individual creativity. It fosters collaboration, mutual respect, and a sense of community among the painters. The magic lies in the process. The experience of painting companionably is the fun part. The final artwork is a testament to what people can achieve painting together.

I hope these examples and insights inspire you to start your own collaborative painting journey.

Happy Painting!

Charndra,

Your Inclusive Social Art Guide.


FREE Guide + Mini Course: Learn the Easiest Way to Run a Collaborative Art Project

Sign up to get the Beginner’s Guide and a short email course that shows you how to plan, start, and guide your first Pattern Play project with confidence.

You’ll get weekly creative tips and group art ideas from me.

Bonus: You’ll also receive a special offer inside.

Your guide arrives instantly after you confirm your email.
Unsubscribe anytime.


Collaborative painting examples: A relaxing, cooperative way to paint together

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is designed to bring people together — no matter their experience, background, or confidence with art. It’s perfect for groups where connection and relaxation matter most, and it offers easy collaborative painting examples anyone can try.

  1. Messy Playing
    Start with big brushes and playful marks like circles, spirals, arches, and dots. Everyone relaxes as they explore colour and movement together.
  2. Exploring
    Layer in simple patterns using medium and smaller brushes. Use Pattern Play Cards or Pages to repeat shapes and build a sense of flow.
    Tip: Use smaller brushes as the layers rise to create depth and visual sophistication.
  3. Bling!
    Finish with joyful details like outlining with paint pens, glitter for sparkles, and stick on gem or dot stickers. This stage celebrates the group’s shared creation and shows how collaborative painting examples can be both fun and beautiful.
Four Collaborative Art Examples to Inspire You! from Painting Around is Fun!

Four Collaborative Art Examples to Inspire You!

Quick Takeaway

Collaborative art examples can help teachers confidently plan inclusive group projects that invite every student to take part, regardless of age or ability. In this post, you’ll explore four practical collaborative art examples, learn how they work in real classrooms, and see how they can be adapted for your own groups. These ideas are drawn from my experience facilitating over 60 community and school-based collaborative art projects with more than 2,000 participants, using my simple Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework.

Curious About Collaborative Art Examples? Take a Journey Through Cooperative Creativity!

Collaborative art is a lively, inspiring way to create—bringing together multiple artists to build one cohesive work. This shared process blends diverse styles and techniques, while fostering connection, community, and a unified vision. In this post, I’ll share some inspiring collaborative art examples drawn from my own projects, all created using my Pattern Play Collaborative Art method. This approach invites participants through three playful stages: Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling! — making creativity fun and accessible for everyone.

The magic of collaboration

Collaborative art has a unique energy. When multiple artists come together, each brings their own perspective, skills, and creativity. The result is a rich tapestry of ideas and techniques that often surpasses what any single artist could achieve alone. Here are some examples of cooperative paintings that showcase the beauty and complexity of this creative process.

Collaborative art examples  - circles of connection a multicoloured layered artwork on a yellow background featuring circles, spirals, dots and elaborately detailed stencils.
Collaborative Art Example: Circles of Connection

Collaborative art examples: “Circles of Connection”

One of my favorite collaborative art examples is “Circles of Connection.” In this piece, a group of adults—including myself—came together to create a vibrant artwork. We began with a cheerful yellow underpainting, then built up layers of stencils, large circles, dots, and spirals in various colors and sizes. Each participant was invited to paint “three circles” in each color to start, keeping the layers focused with a limited palette.

Reflection:

Painting as a group helps ease the pressure of performance and comparison. Often, someone will say, “I’m not creative,” nervous about making marks in front of others. I reassure them that every mark contributes to the whole. Once everyone has had a go, the atmosphere shifts—people start playing and experimenting freely. Clear, simple instructions like “Paint three circles in each color” give structure while also encouraging personal exploration.

Collaborative art examples - self advocacy - swirling warm spirals, circles and patterns in layers of yellow, coral, red, pink  with a flash of gold leaf.
Collaborative Art Example: Self Advocacy

Collaborative art examples: “Self Advocacy”

Self Advocacy is a meaningful collaborative art project that captures feelings of personal power and agency. Created by members of Our Voice SA, a peer-led self-advocacy and support group for adults living with intellectual disabilities, this artwork emerged from a series of fun, guided workshops. Working together as a community, the group expressed their shared experiences and strength through this vibrant piece, which now proudly decorates their meeting rooms as a symbol of their collective journey.

Reflection:

This project beautifully illustrates the impact of guided collaboration. Everyone involved felt a deep sense of pride in what they achieved together. Their artwork was even selected as a finalist in the 2024 Adelaide Fringe Festival Poster Competition—a wonderful recognition of their creativity and voice.

Collaborative art examples - community is a multi coloured layered artwork of patterns and flower-like decorative elements.
Collaborative Art Example: Community

Collaborative art examples: “Community”

Community was a vibrant collaboration involving several hundred members of the public during my Artist in Residence program at Westfield Marion in South Australia. Over 14 days, I guided participants as they added patterns and shapes using either cool or warm colors, depending on the day. Together, we created a lively, colorful artwork using the Pattern Play Pages—now available in my online shop!

Reflection:

This project offered participants the freedom to explore their own creative ideas while maintaining a smooth, cohesive result through cooperative collaboration. Everyone worked in harmony with and around each other’s contributions, following a guided freeform structure of Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling!

collaborative art examples - Conversation is a brightly warm coloured artwork of peaches, yellows, oranges, corals and reds with a flash of gold leaf in many layers.
Collaborative Art Examples: Conversation

Collaborative art examples: “Conversation”

Conversation was an exciting project that invited passersby from the general public to join in creating a beautiful collaborative artwork. Using a warm palette of pinks, peaches, corals, yellows, and soft tinted shades, participants added patterns and marks freely, contributing to a vibrant, collective piece.

Reflection:

This project beautifully demonstrates the magic of collaborative painting. The freedom to explore and respond to others’ marks naturally leads to a cohesive and dynamic artwork. It’s a simple yet powerful way to connect creatively—why not give it a try?

Collaborative art examples: Final thoughts

Collaborative painting is a deeply rewarding experience that expands the limits of individual creativity. It nurtures collaboration, mutual respect, and a strong sense of community—welcoming everyone, regardless of their creative background. Together, we can craft artworks that are rich, diverse, and truly impactful. It’s a joy to watch participants relax, connect, and make the artwork their own.

I hope these examples and reflections inspire you to start your own collaborative painting journey. Remember, the true magic lies not only in the finished piece but in the creative process itself. Happy painting!

Happy Painting!

Charndra

Your Inclusive Social Art Guide


FREE Guide + Mini Course: Learn the Easiest Way to Run a Collaborative Art Project

Sign up to get the Beginner’s Guide and a short email course that shows you how to plan, start, and guide your first Pattern Play project with confidence.

You’ll get weekly creative tips and group art ideas from me.

Bonus: You’ll also receive a special offer inside.

Your guide arrives instantly after you confirm your email.
Unsubscribe anytime.


Explore More Collaborative Art Resources:

If these examples of collaborative art have sparked some ideas, you might be wondering how to bring something similar to life with your own group. These simple guides will help you take the next step with confidence and keep the process fun and inclusive.

Four Collaborative Art Examples to Inspire You! from Painting Around is Fun!
Collaborative Art Examples
Discover Why Collaborative Art for Preschoolers is Essential for Early Learning from Painting Around is Fun!

Discover Why Collaborative Art for Preschoolers is Essential for Early Learning.

Quick takeaway: Collaborative art for preschoolers works best when it’s simple, layered, and playful.

Give children a large shared surface, introduce one colour or idea at a time, and let the artwork grow over multiple sessions. The goal isn’t individual finished pieces—it’s shared exploration.

As children watch and respond to each other’s marks, they naturally build communication, confidence, and early teamwork skills through play.

What Is Collaborative Art for Preschoolers?

These interactive, playful collaborative art projects for preschoolers engage children in hands-on activities that naturally build social skills. As they work alongside each other, they practise communication, compromise, and teamwork in a fun, adaptable way.

Simple, process-based art is especially effective at this age. Here are three collaborative art ideas preschoolers are sure to love.

Collaborative Art for Preschoolers - pink, blue and white process art abstract piece created socially by a preschooler and her mum using brushwork, stamping, stencilling, scraping, collage, marble painting and gravity.
Collaborative Art Created with a Preschooler

Mia’s Rose – Collaborative Art for Preschoolers

Mia’s Rose is a pink, blue, and white process art abstract project created collaboratively by a preschooler and her mum (me and my daughter).

The project included brushwork, stamping with balloons, sponges and objects, stencilling, scraping, collage, marble painting, and even gravity painting. We worked with a limited colour palette, focusing on one colour per session, and followed the child’s attention span rather than a fixed timeframe.

Mia was about 18 months old when we began. The finished artwork now hangs on her wall—a door-sized canvas that offers a large, inviting surface for exploration and play.

Collaborative Art for Preschoolers - Our Playgroup People Painting with 30+ layers of process art techniques done weekly with around 20 preschoolers and their parents and carers.
Collaborative Preschooler Painting

Collaborative Preschooler Painting – Layered Group Canvas

This large canvas developed over time with more than 30 joyful layers of process art techniques. Each week, a small group of preschoolers, parents, and carers added something new—paint, collage, stickers, chalk, gems, nail polish, paint pens and more.

Across the year, around 20 different painters contributed.

Preschoolers naturally build skills through repetition and observation. They learn by copying, so modelling is powerful. Simply demonstrate a mark, then pass the tool and celebrate every attempt:

✨ “Wow, you did it!”
✨ “You made some dots—dot, dot, dot!”
✨ “You’re painting! Add some over here too!” (point to a new area)

Help children reflect by asking, “Which is your favourite part?” Then affirm their choice and share your own. This shifts focus away from perfection and builds confidence, especially in quieter children.

Collaborative Art for Early Childhood

Collaborative Art for Early Childhood – Evolving Group Work

This collaborative painting grew through many layers of process art over several months. Around 20 preschoolers, along with parents and carers, contributed weekly.

The artwork includes paint, collage, stickers, gems, nail polish, stencils and more, creating a rich and playful surface.

Add Visual Prompts to Spark Interaction

Pro tip: Introduce bold shapes to reset engagement.

When the artwork starts to feel flat or uniform, add simple, large shapes. I often use an odd number—three to five circles, arches or spirals.

These shapes immediately invite interaction:
children paint around them, trace them, colour inside or outside them, or extend them into new forms.

Spirals are especially effective—I often place them off-centre rather than in the middle. Arches that sweep from an edge or corner also work well. These marks guide the next layer without taking control of it.

Reflection – Why Layered Collaborative Art Works

Each week, we chose a colour and explored a process technique. This kept children engaged and responsive—sometimes even unexpected play emerged, like a toddler driving a toy car through wet paint, which then became part of the artwork itself.

It’s all about the process. Each session builds on the previous layer, creating increasing visual complexity over time.

I’ve also used large cardboard boxes for this kind of work, which we brought out weekly and stored between sessions. One was eventually taken for an exhibition and not returned. Since then, I’ve shifted to canvases that can be hung and kept long-term.

Messy but Meaningful: Why Layering Works

Collaborative art with preschoolers can feel messy—but the mess is part of the process.

One child’s mark becomes another child’s inspiration. Every layer adds something new.

A simple approach works best:

  • Focus on one colour, technique, or material at a time
  • Build over multiple sessions instead of finishing in one sitting
  • Allow drying time so children can see change and progression

This teaches children that art evolves. Some stages feel unfinished, but that’s part of the creative cycle—not a failure point.

The result is layered, collaborative artworks full of energy, contribution, and shared ownership.

Final Thoughts

Creating collaborative art for preschoolers is simple: use a large surface, build layers over time, and allow space for exploration.

This approach builds confidence, creativity, and social learning skills through shared making.

Give it a try—the process is fun, flexible, and full of discovery.

Happy painting,
Charndra
Your Inclusive Social Art Guide

Bringing This into an Early Childhood Centre

While many collaborative art ideas can be explored in early learning settings, some centres choose to extend the experience through a guided collaborative painting project.

This approach moves beyond individual art activities and into a shared artwork that develops over multiple sessions. Children return to the same canvas over time, adding layers, patterns, and details as the work evolves.

The process is designed to be simple and flexible, making it suitable for busy early childhood environments while still supporting creativity, exploration, and group participation.

If you’re based in Adelaide, South Australia, you can also choose to bring me in to facilitate a collaborative art program in your centre.

Collaborative Art Programs for Early Childhood Centres

Explore More Early Childhood Collaborative Art Ideas

If you’re interested in seeing how collaborative art can be used in different early learning contexts, you can visit the Early Childhood Collaborative Art hub for related posts, examples, and ideas.

Free Guide + Mini Course

If you’d like to try collaborative art in your own setting, you’re welcome to join my email list:

Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art – step by step guide with Pattern Play Page and Cards

You’ll receive a free Beginner’s Guide plus a short email series that walks you through how to plan, start, and run your first Pattern Play collaborative art project with confidence.

You’ll also receive weekly ideas and inspiration for group art activities.

Bonus: Occasional special offers are shared with subscribers.

You’ll receive your guide immediately after confirming your email.
You can unsubscribe at any time.

Discover Why Collaborative Art for Preschoolers is Essential for Early Learning from Painting Around is Fun!
Collaborative Art for Preschoolers

🎧 I share simple, playful group art ideas adaptable for kids on the Easy Collaborative Art Podcast.

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

The Power of Unity: Successful Collaborative Art Work Projects…

Quick Takeaway

Collaborative art work projects bring people together to create something fun and meaningful. I’ve facilitated over 60 community and school-based projects with more than 2,000 participants using my simple Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework. In this post, you’ll discover how these projects thrive, and I want to help you do the same with my helpful digital resources.

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 Artwork!

Collaborative art is amazing. Painting with a group brings everyone together in a shared creative experience. You move around, interact with each other’s work, layer and overlap, and build your skills and confidence—without comparison or performance pressure.

Let’s take a look at three collaborative artworks from my 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 artwork, “Find Your Confidence,” was the mobile version of a public mural at Aberfoyle Park High School in South Australia. The canvas brought the mural inside and was painted alongside the large wall piece.

The artwork was created in a freeform style, guided by a spontaneous process. The students were encouraged to start with circles, spirals, and dots in different sizes and colours. They then built on each other’s elements, layering patterns and marks. Over several weeks, this approach added visual complexity while fostering collaboration and creativity.

Reflection:

This collaborative artwork was created by a group of teenage girls painting in public. Through the process, they built confidence and discovered they could achieve more than they imagined. Passersby who stopped to watch were completely captivated—and many shared glowing compliments about what the girls were creating!

Collaborative Art Work: “Aspire to Success”

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

This collaborative artwork, “Aspire to Success,” was created by 120 junior primary students over three sessions at IQRA College in South Australia. The project connected to the school logo and allowed the children to work in rotating groups, with each year level taking on a different stage of the process.

  • Reception: Messy Playing with sponging, stencilling, and scraping
  • Grade One: Exploring with medium and small brushes
  • Grade Two: Bling! using paint pens, stickers, and glitter glue

With so many kids involved, the project was full of energy and creativity. The image shown is a detail from two collaborative artworks created across the three sessions.

Reflection:

This is a detail from one of two large canvases—definitely needed with so many children! The teachers observed that some students achieved more in this novel, collaborative setting than they might in a regular classroom, in that some children you wouldn’t engage in art activities in a regular setting did with this approach. The novelty of group painting encourages shy children to be more adventurous. Working alongside others allows them to explore freely, moving around and experimenting without pressure. Through this process, they build creative confidence, which carries over into their individual artwork.

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.

“Parents Time Out” Collaborative art work.

In this collaborative artwork, created in just one session, we used brushwork, stamping, layering, and overlapping with a mixed colour palette. These days, I like to start with a coloured background (an underpainting) and then layer cool and warm colours on top. A background that isn’t stark white is a real game changer! There are many ways to approach it—you can use a single colour, an ombré, spray paint, or blotches of different colours. Each technique influences the final result. Most importantly, an underpainting gives participants a starting point and helps overcome the intimidation of a blank white canvas.

Reflection:

This was my very first collaborative artwork with adults, created with a group of fellow parent carers as part of our Parents Time Out activity for mums of children with special educational needs. It was here that I first experienced the thrill of collaborative art—a feeling that has since inspired hundreds of artworks created with over 2,000 people.

3 Collaborative Art Works – Conclusion:

These three collaborative artworks show how different groups can come together to create. From young children to teenagers to adults, everyone enjoys the process of painting together. Each artwork is unique, shaped by the dynamics of the group—whether it’s ten mums or 120 little kids just starting school. Most importantly, they have fun along the way!

Happy Painting.

– Charndra,

Your Inclusive Social Art Guide.


FREE Guide + Mini Course: Learn the Easiest Way to Run a Collaborative Art Project

Sign up to get the Beginner’s Guide and a short email course that shows you how to plan, start, and guide your first Pattern Play project with confidence.

You’ll get weekly creative tips and group art ideas from me.

Bonus: You’ll also receive a special offer inside.

Your guide arrives instantly after you confirm your email.
Unsubscribe anytime.


Successful Collaborative Art Work Projects: A Relaxing, Accessible Way to Paint Together

Pattern Play Collaborative Art is designed to bring people together — no matter their experience, background, or confidence with art. It’s perfect for groups where connection and relaxation matter most, and it provides a simple structure for successful collaborative art work projects of any size.

  1. Messy Playing
    Start with big brushes and playful marks like circles, spirals, arches, and dots. Everyone relaxes as they explore colour and movement together.
  2. Exploring
    Layer in simple patterns using medium and smaller brushes. Use Pattern Play Cards or Pages to repeat shapes and build a sense of flow.
    Tip: Use smaller brushes as the layers rise to create depth and visual sophistication.
  3. Bling!
    Finish with joyful details like outlining with paint pens, glitter for sparkles, and stick on gem or dot stickers. This stage celebrates the group’s shared creation and ensures every project feels successful and complete.

Explore More Collaborative Art Resources

If these Collaborative Art Work Projects have sparked some ideas, there are plenty of simple ways to explore this approach further with your own group. These resources will help you build confidence, keep things flowing, and make the experience fun for everyone involved.

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

Quick Takeaway

A collaborative art project for primary schools like our Autumn Banner shows teachers how to guide a whole class to create one shared artwork—without pressure, perfection, or complicated prep. Drawing on my experience facilitating 60+ community and school-based collaborative art projects with over 2,000 participants, this post walks you through what worked, what the students learned, and how my simple Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework supports inclusion, creativity, and calm classrooms. You’ll come away with clear ideas you can confidently adapt for your own students.

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, or three

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!

Happy Painting!

Charndra,

Your Inclusive Social Art Guide


FREE Guide + Mini Course: Learn the Easiest Way to Run a Collaborative Art Project

Sign up to get the Beginner’s Guide and a short email course that shows you how to plan, start, and guide your first Pattern Play project with confidence.

You’ll get weekly creative tips and group art ideas from me.

Bonus: You’ll also receive a special offer inside.

Your guide arrives instantly after you confirm your email.
Unsubscribe anytime.


Explore More Collaborative Art Projects →

If you enjoyed Our Autumn Banner – an exciting collaborative art project for primary schools, you might also like these resources to explore collaborative art ideas further and build confidence with your next collaborative art project for primary schools:

Our Autumn Banner – an exciting collaborative art project for primary schools. from Painting Around is Fun!
Collaborative art Project for Primary Schools
Four Inspiring Collaborative Art Projects to Spark Your Creativity (Created with Groups) from Painting Around is Fun!

4 Fun Collaborative Art Projects YOU Can Do!

Exploring collaborative art projects for all ages

Looking for collaborative art projects that are fun, inclusive, and beginner-friendly?

In this post, I’ll share four real examples that show how group art can bring people together. These projects involved kids, teens, adults, and people living with disabilities — proving that everyone is creative and can enjoy the thrill of painting together.

Four inspiring collaborative art projects to spark your creativity (created with groups):


Why try painting collaborative art projects?

Collaborative art has a special kind of magic. When people (even just two or three) create together, each person adds their own flair and imagination. The result is a rich, layered artwork that goes far beyond what one person could achieve alone.

This process also builds connection, confidence, and joy. I call my version of this inclusive social art — collaborative art projects designed so that everyone, no matter their age or ability, can take part.

4 Real collaborative art projects I’ve guided

Here are four collaborative art projects I’ve led as a social art guide. Together, more than 450 people contributed to these creative group paintings.

4 collaborative art projects anyone can try:

“Community” – a collaborative art project with members of the public
Part of the Art Story Artist in Residence program at Westfield Marion, this project involved over 600 members of the public over two weeks. Participants added layers of patterns in warm and cool colours to a shared canvas, highlighting the power of community in creating beautiful, large-scale collaborative artworks.

“Growing together” – a collaborative art project with children
Involving 30 primary school children aged 4–13 during a summer holiday program, this project guided them through three creative sessions called Messy Playing, Exploring, and BLING!. Each child painted around others’ work to create a vibrant, cooperative artwork.

“Mia’s rose” – a collaborative art project with my daughter
Started when my daughter was just 18 months old, this ongoing project uses short, playful sessions with a limited colour palette and simple tools like brushes and stamps. Over ten years, the canvas has evolved with her creativity, demonstrating how collaborative art can grow alongside a child.

“Safety” – a collaborative art project with teenagers
During a media training day, a group of teens who didn’t know each other used a limited palette and my Pattern Play resources to create a layered, vibrant painting in just a few hours. This project shows how collaborative art projects can help teens connect and build confidence through shared creativity.

A collaborative art project showing a swirling artwork of cool blues, greens and purples.
‘Growing Together’ Collaborative art projects are fun to create!

“Growing Together” – a collaborative art project with children

This collaborative art project involved 30 primary school children aged 4–13 during a summer holiday program. Over three creative sessions, the children explored painting together for the first time — and they were thrilled with the results!

Reflection: this project showed us the joy and importance of sharing space and ideas. During the sessions called Messy Playing, Exploring, and BLING!, each child painted around others’ work, contributing to a vibrant, cooperative artwork.

Imagine: picture a group of excited children dipping brushes into bright colors, layering patterns, dots, and shapes, and stepping back to admire a canvas alive with everyone’s creativity — that’s the magic of a collaborative art project in action.


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

“Mia’s rose” – a collaborative art project with my daughter

This collaborative art project began when my daughter was just 18 months old. Each 5-minute session we used either a blue or pink, with some white, and I offered her different-sized brushes and stamps — balloons and other items to transfer paint onto the canvas. Ten years later, this door-sized canvas hangs on her bedroom wall. We still add new layers periodically; purple is now her favourite colour. We’ve painted together through toddlerhood, preschool, and primary school!

Reflection: this artwork shows how much fun collaborative art projects can be for children. Even a five-minute session was enough for a toddler to enjoy the creative process. She loved choosing colours and tools each time — brushes, stencils, stamps, and even balloons. Can you spot our cat hidden in the painting?

Imagine: painting on a canvas using simple process art methods with your child throughout the year, watching their confidence and creativity grow.


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

“Safety” – a collaborative art project with teenagers

This collaborative art project took place during a media training day. The teenagers didn’t know each other, but over the course of the day they created this vibrant artwork together. Using my Pattern Play resources and a limited palette of three colours, they painted over an underpainting I had prepared earlier, giving them a bright and unintimidating base to get started.

Reflection: this artwork shows how a group of teenagers who had never met can create something extraordinary in just a few hours. The key is a limited colour scheme and simple, closed choices — like following a few Pattern Play ideas. I have many Pattern Play visual resources to help anyone create beautiful, layered collaborative art projects!

Imagine: teens painting together to break the ice, enjoying a relaxed activity that lets them chat, laugh, and connect while creating something unique.


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

“Community” – a collaborative art project with members of the public

During the inaugural Art Story Artist in Residence program at Westfield Marion in 2022, I engaged with over 600 members of the public. Over two weeks, we worked on three collaborative art projects, returning to this one every day. One piece explored cool colours, another warm colours, and this one combined both. Each day, participants added layers of patterns in either warm or cool tones, ensuring the colours stayed vibrant and clear without muddying the artwork.

Reflection: this project is a true symbol to the power of community. Hundreds of people contributed their marks to this piece over the two-week program, creating a beautiful collaborative artwork that no single person could have achieved alone.

Imagine: hundreds of members of the public coming together, layering colours and patterns, and leaving a piece of themselves in a vibrant, shared creation.

How can collaborative art projects be fun and successful?

Collaborative art projects are most rewarding when they look vibrant and fresh. To avoid muddy colours, use a limited colour palette and layer warm and cool tones separately once each layer is dry. This approach ensures the artwork stays eye-catching, and everyone can be proud of their unique contribution, excited to share it with others!


Start Your Collaborative Art Journey – Free Guide + Mini Course

Instant download. Free to access.

Sign up below to get the Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art and a mini email course that teaches the mindsets and skills to fall in love with Pattern Play Collaborative Art.

Plus, weekly creative tips and encouragement from me.

Your free guide arrives instantly after you confirm your email.
You can unsubscribe anytime.


Curious to try it yourself? Follow this simple guide about How to start a collaborative art project with a group, and bring your own group painting ideas to life!

How to start a collaborative art project with a group

Imagine you’re about to guide a group of beginners in a fun collaborative art project. This simple process builds confidence, creativity, and connection, and is perfect for anyone wanting to try group painting:

Step 1: Messy Playing

Start with freedom. Use large brushes to cover the canvas with broad strokes, swirls, and clusters of repeated marks over a coloured underpainting. Don’t worry about perfection—this stage is about loosening up and enjoying the flow. Easy collaborative art projects thrive on playfulness, so encourage everyone to try circles, spirals, dots, or arches swooping in from the edges. The goal is to build confidence and let go of hesitation as the group project begins.

Step 2: Exploring

Once the background feels alive, move into layering simple patterns. Use the Pattern Play resources to add shapes and lines that anyone can copy or adapt. Add clusters of repeating marks, overlapping patterns, and variations in size and colour.

Teaching Tip: use progressively smaller brushes as the layers rise to create depth and visual sophistication. This stage turns the artwork into something interesting and shared, even if everyone is “just experimenting.”

Step 3: Bling!

Now it’s time for playful finishing touches. Use paint pens to decorate patterns and shapes, or copy ideas straight from the Pattern Play resources. You can also add stick-on gems or dot stickers for extra sparkle. These finishing touches help pull the collaborative art project together and make every painter proud of their part in the shared artwork.

This beginner-friendly approach shows how an easy collaborative art project can be simple, relaxed, and enjoyable for all ages and abilities.


Explore More Collaborative Art Resources:

If you enjoyed 4 Fun Collaborative Art Projects YOU Can Do!, you might also like these resources to explore collaborative art projects even further:

Four Inspiring Collaborative Art Projects to Spark Your Creativity (Created with Groups) from Painting Around is Fun!
Collaborative Art Projects Created with Groups
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 therapist for one of my three children, 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 my own type 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 2,000 people across South Australia.

I invite you to join my Inner Circle today! You’ll get “Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art” It’s a free 20+ page step-by-step guide. It makes it easy to create a unique artwork with a group of friends or family, students, team mates or clients. I’m passionate about collaborative, social art and excited to share this experience with you!

Happy Painting,

– Charndra,

Your Inclusive Social Art Guide.


FREE Guide + Mini Course: Learn the Easiest Way to Run a Collaborative Art Project

Sign up to get the Beginner’s Guide and a short email course that shows you how to plan, start, and guide your first Pattern Play project with confidence.

You’ll get weekly creative tips and group art ideas from me.

Bonus: You’ll also receive a special offer inside.

Your guide arrives instantly after you confirm your email.
Unsubscribe anytime. free guide first!


Free downloadable guide titled “Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art: The Pattern Play Collaborative Art Method” with vibrant abstract patterns and paintbrushes in background.