Three collaborative artworks created by families and community groups, with the title “How to Make Collaborative Art – Easy Step-by-Step Group Projects”

How to Make Collaborative Art – Easy Step-by-Step Group Projects

Beginner-friendly ideas for inclusive, joyful group art activities

✨ A collection of my most popular and practical “how-to” collaborative art tutorials — perfect for home, school, or community groups. Discover real artworks created by community groups, school groups, family groups, teams, at conferences, community events and exhibitions in Adelaide, South Australia.


🎨Are you looking for a fun, simple way to create art together?

This post brings together some of my most-loved how-to guides for creating collaborative art in groups. Whether you’re working with kids, adults, mixed ages or mixed abilities, these tutorials are a great way to get started. Each project is beginner-friendly, accessible, and proven to bring joy, confidence, and connection through shared creativity.

Get a feel for what Pattern Play Collaborative Art is all about — and catch the bug to start creating with this unique and simple style of group painting.

These are tried-and-tested ideas that people just like you are already searching for — and loving!


🖌️ 9 step-by-step collaborative art projects to explore:




📸 More creative inspo from my 60+ community art projects:

  1. This layered group artwork (detail) was created by teens exploring the theme of safety through collaborative painting, called “Safety”
  2. This vibrant mural (detail) was created with 30+ primary school students using expressive figures and a warm background, called “Movement is Life”
  3. This large collaborative artwork was created by over 600 people during a public community art event, called “Community”

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.

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❤️ What is Pattern Play Collaborative Art?

Looking for a creative way to bring people together? Pattern Play Collaborative Art is an inclusive process where you layer easy-to-use patterns from my Pattern Play visual tools. These resources make it simple for people of all ages and abilities to join in, express themselves, and create a shared artwork that celebrates community and connection.

Here’s how to create your own collaborative artwork using the Pattern Play method:

Pattern Play is perfect for beginners of any age — no experience needed!

  1. Messy Playing – Start with big brushes and easy shapes like circles, arches, and spirals. Add clusters of simple marks like dots or dashes. There’s no right or wrong — just play with colour and enjoy getting started.
  2. Exploring – Use smaller brushes and try a few accessible patterns from Pattern Play Cards or Pages. Start with just one or two patterns and repeat them. Mixing small and large patterns helps your artwork feel fun and full.
  3. Bling! – Add finishing touches using paint pens, white highlights, or a sparkle of stickers or glitter glue. It’s easy to outline your favourite shapes or add a bit of shine — this stage brings everything together!

💫 Perfect for first-time (or long-time-since) painters, cautious creatives, or anyone needing a gentle way to ease into making art, especially in a group setting!


Collaborative painting in cool tones created by a group of teens, featuring calming colours and layered designs
This layered group artwork (detail) was created by teens exploring the theme of safety through collaborative painting.
Collaborative artwork created by 600 community participants using multicoloured layers, paint pens, and expressive marks
This large collaborative artwork was created by over 600 people during a public community art event.
Collaborative mural of dancing figures in cool colours painted by over 30 primary school students on a sunset-inspired background
This vibrant mural (detail) was created with 30+ primary school students using expressive figures and a warm background.

Header image showing the article title “About Collaborative Process Art in Playgroups” with colourful group artwork from a playgroup.

About Collaborative Process Art in Playgroups – Why It Matters More Than You Think

Quick Takeaway

Collaborative process art in playgroups is a powerful way to help children explore, create, and connect. I’ve facilitated over 60 community and school-based collaborative art projects with more than 2,000 participants using my simple Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework, and I want to help you do the same with my helpful digital resources. In this post, you’ll discover practical tips and ideas to make group art playful, inclusive, and easy to guide in your early childhood setting.

This post is part of my “About Series,” where I share the story behind Painting Around is Fun and how Pattern Play Collaborative Art came to life. You can read the full About page here. Whether you’re new here or curious about how it all began, welcome!


About collaborative process art in playgroups – why it matters more than you think

Discovering the magic of collaborative process art for playgroups

If you’ve ever watched a group of young children dive into paint with wide eyes and open minds, you’ve seen the power of process art in action. But what happens when you turn that joyful chaos into a shared creative experience? That’s where collaborative process art for playgroups shines.

In this post, I’ll show you how easy it is to set up inclusive, group-friendly painting activities that spark confidence, curiosity, and connection—no artistic skills required. Whether you’re running a weekly toddler playgroup or exploring preschool art projects that build confidence, this approach puts the focus on fun, not perfection.


What is collaborative process art in playgroups?

Collaborative process art in playgroups is a way of creating art together that focuses on the experience, not the final product. It’s about exploring colours, marks, textures, and ideas as a group—without needing anyone to “draw something good” or “finish it properly.”

Unlike traditional, product-based art (think: “make a paper plate sheep”), process art invites children to experiment freely, often on a shared surface, where the goal is to enjoy the act of making—together.

This kind of shared art-making encourages:

  • Group interaction and cooperation – Kids work around each other, take turns, and add their own touches to a shared piece.
  • Skill-building through play – Communicating ideas, trying new tools or techniques, and growing confidence in making marks and using space.
  • Low-pressure creativity – There’s no “right way,” which makes it ideal for mixed-age groups, beginners, and kids of all abilities to join in equally.

It’s a joyful, social, and inclusive way to build both creative and interpersonal skills—while having a lot of fun.


How it started in our tiny school playgroup

When my daughter was a preschooler and in her early primary years, we joined our local school playgroup—a warm, welcoming space for parents and children to connect. With my older boys already at school, it was a gentle way for us to ease into the rhythm of school life. The following year, I took over running the playgroup and continued until the pandemic paused everything. By then, my daughter had moved into junior primary, and I was onto my next chapter.

The cardboard box phase: Process art made easy

In the beginning, we kept things simple. Each week, we decorated a giant cardboard box using process art techniques. The kids explored freely—collaging, stamping, painting, even dabbing on nail polish. This playful setup allowed them to build fine and gross motor skills with no pressure.

It was easy to manage in a shared space where drying racks weren’t an option—and the best part? That one cardboard box gave us six surfaces to revisit and rework each week. It was a wonderfully contained, evolving, and joyfully messy example of collaborative art in a playgroup setting.

I don’t seem to have a photo of that original Creativity Box. Someone from the main school ‘borrowed’ it for Show and Tell or something like that… and I never saw it again! Honestly, I didn’t go hunting—it felt right to let it head off on new adventures.

'Mia’s Rose' process art in pink, white and blue created by a mother and daughter using a limited colour palette.
A tender collaborative process artwork in pinks and blues created by a mother and her daughter.

The big canvas breakthrough: Shared painting in action

Eventually, we transitioned to collaborative canvases—a 1m x 1m shared artwork we brought out each week. For 5–10 minutes (or more), the children would add to the canvas using a single colour and a new or favourite technique.

This shift transformed everything. The process became a meaningful social learning experience. While the kids painted, they were also learning how to take turns, collaborate, compromise, and communicate—all key benefits of process art in early learning.

By working together, they practiced skills like:

  • Moving around and alongside others
  • Watching, modelling, and copying
  • Respecting personal space and shared tools

It was a real-time, hands-on answer to the question of how to do group painting with toddlers or preschoolers.

Vibrant playgroup process art using collage, shapes, and bright colours like yellow, green, and blue with overlapping big circles.
A vibrant collaborative artwork created in a playgroup using layered shapes and mixed media.

Our weekly ritual: Growing pride in shared creativity

Week by week, our artwork grew more visually rich—and the kids grew more confident. Every session, we’d pause to admire “Our Artwork” and give ourselves a round of applause. This tiny ritual helped each child feel ownership and pride. As I often said: “Once you’ve added to it, it’s YOUR artwork.”

It was a simple but powerful way to foster preschool art projects that build confidence and self-expression without judgment.

Collaborative process art created by a playgroup using abstract shapes, collage, and mixed media in red, green, yellow, and blue.
Abstract collaborative process art made by a playgroup using patterns and mixed media.

Why parents loved it (Almost more than the kids)

And the parents? They were thrilled. No more taking home piles of half-finished colouring pages or cotton ball sheep stuck on a bit of paper. Instead, they watched their children develop real skills—motor, emotional, and social—through meaningful play.

So many parents told me, “What do we even do with all this stuff?” My answer: let’s shift from paper clutter to shared experiences. Group art activities for toddlers can be just as developmentally rich without the mess—or the guilt of tossing it later.


Collaborative process art for playgroups: Why it matters (More than you think)

The deeper benefits of collaborative process art for playgroups

This approach offers so much more than just a fun activity:

  • It builds confidence in children who may otherwise be hesitant to create.
  • It fosters inclusion, allowing every child to participate at their own pace.
  • It helps overcome perfectionism, especially in kids who already feel pressure to “get it right.”
  • It supports social-emotional growth, encouraging collaboration, empathy, and turn-taking.
  • It’s sustainable—no piles of artwork to manage, no drying racks needed.

Whether you have five minutes or an hour, the impact is real. Even a short creative session becomes a moment of calm—a practice in focus and self-regulation.

Making it easy for you

Later, I took everything I’d learned and created resources that make inclusive process art for groups of young children easy for anyone to try—whether you’re an experienced educator or new to creative play.

One of those resources is Pattern Play Collaborative Art, and I’m now developing a new offering especially for this age group called the Growing Creativity Box. If you’d like to hear when it’s ready, you can join my email list.


Who this is perfect for

These easy art ideas for playgroups are ideal for:

  • Playgroup facilitators wanting a low-prep, high-engagement activity
  • Preschool and kindergarten educators looking to build skills through joyful art
  • Childcare teachers seeking inclusive, hands-on creative experiences
  • Sunday School volunteers needing activities for a range of ages
  • Parents and grandparents hoping to start a fun, ongoing art tradition at home

No matter your setting, these shared painting ideas for young children are about connection, not perfection. Just start, and see where the paint takes you.

Happy Painting!
Charndra,

Your Inclusive Social Art Guide


Want to try it with your own group?


Feature graphic with the title “How to Create Participatory Art Projects That Feel Natural and Fun,” featuring the collaborative artwork ‘King Leo’.

How to Create Participatory Art Projects That Feel Natural and Fun

Quick Takeaway

How to create participatory art projects is easier than you think. I’ve guided over 60 community and school-based collaborative art projects with more than 2,000 participants using my simple Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework. In this post, you’ll discover practical tips and ideas to run group art activities that feel natural and fun, and I want to help you do the same with my helpful digital resources.


How can you create participatory art projects that are simple, fun, and engaging?

Participatory art is about joining in, not standing back. At Painting Around is Fun, I focus on shared painting experiences that build connection through colour, movement, and layered marks. The Pattern Play style of collaborative art is designed so people of all ages can contribute freely, without needing a plan or prior art skills.

Each of these participatory art projects demonstrates how creative flow can emerge naturally when everyone joins in.

  • Safety” was created by teenagers over three sessions, blending blue, aqua, and green to express calm and connection.
  • Movement is Life” is a dynamic gym mural painted by over 30 school children of different ages and abilities, showing abstract blue figures leaping across a warm, sunset-coloured background.
  • King Leo” brought together 30 children to create a lion portrait using collage, painted spirals, and bold patterning.

These examples highlight how participatory art projects can feel natural, inclusive, and deeply engaging—making it easy and enjoyable for everyone to join in.

‘King Leo’ – a bold lion face surrounded by painted paper spirals, created by 30 children using collage, paint, and pens.
How to create participatory art projects: ‘King Leo’

Three simple stages guide your freeform creativity with ease

In each session, we move through three loose stages:

  • Messy Playing – anything goes! This stage encourages budding creativity and playful experimentation.
  • Exploring – shapes and patterns begin to emerge in layers, giving structure while maintaining freedom.
  • Bling – the finishing touches, using paint pens, dot stickers, or gem stickers, bring the artwork together.

It’s participatory art by design, because the process belongs to everyone, and each contribution adds to the collective creation.

Want to try it in your group? Grab the Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art via the form below to see how easy participatory art can be.

Happy Painting!

Charndra,

Your Inclusive Social Art Guide.

‘Movement is Life’ – a gym mural showing abstract blue figures in gymnastic poses, painted by 30+ students of mixed ages and abilities.
How to create participatory art projects: Movement is Life Mural

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.
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Group of adults painting on a large shared canvas—feature graphic showing fun team artwork ideas in action.

Fun Team Artwork Ideas: 3 Easy Painting Projects for Kids, Adults, and Inclusive Groups

🎨 Need some fun team artwork ideas to spark connection and creativity? Here’s three accessible ideas for you…

There’s something special about creating team artworks—the way painting together helps people connect, relax, and discover new sides of themselves. Whether you’re working with kids, adults, or mixed-ability groups, collaborative art can offer a joyful, low-pressure way to build community and confidence.

In this post, I’m sharing three real-life examples of fun team artwork ideas—each one created by a different group using my Pattern Play Collaborative Art approach. This method follows three simple, accessible stages: Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling. It’s designed to work with any age or ability, making it easy to adapt to your own group or setting.

Let’s take a look at how these artworks came together—and why this kind of shared creative experience is such a powerful way to bring people together.

Fun team artwork ideas: A team mural with kids on a soccer ‘Kicking Wall’

Primary school students painted this colourful soccer goal mural as part of fun team artwork ideas using Pattern Play Collaborative Art.
Painting a soccer mural together – a fun team artwork idea using Pattern Play.

One of my most energising team art activities for kids was created with over 30 primary school children who were part of a specialist soccer team program. Across three lively sessions, we transformed their plain ‘kicking wall’ into a vibrant, collaborative mural the size and shape of a soccer goal. From applying the primer to adding finishing touches, the students were involved in every step of the process—building not only their creative confidence but a strong sense of ownership. This colourful wall now serves a dual purpose: it’s a practical space they use daily for soccer practice, and a visual reminder of what they achieved together. The project blended movement, creativity, and teamwork, making it a brilliant example of how to paint a team artwork with kids in a way that’s both meaningful and fun.

Fun team artwork ideas: Peer Support – painting together with adults with disability

Bright, layered abstract canvas painted by a support group of adults with disabilities—an example of fun team artwork ideas using Pattern Play.
Peer Support artwork: a colourful team project created with adults of all abilities.

In this uplifting team art activity for adults, I worked with a group of people living with disability to create a shared canvas artwork titled Peer Support over a series of relaxed, supported sessions. Each participant contributed marks, patterns, and colour using a range of beginner-friendly tools and brushes—many choosing to paint standing up, moving around, or working side by side at their own pace. The environment was intentionally calm and flexible, with music, laughter, and plenty of space for everyone to explore their own creative rhythm. The group co-created every layer of the painting—from background colours to feature details—building connection and pride through the process. Projects like this show how inclusive team building art activities for adults can be, when we focus on expression and shared experience rather than technical skill.

Fun team artwork ideas: We Talk Together – A work in progress with parent carers

Parent Carers add alternating layers of warm and cool colours to a shared canvas during a team painting session—part of the We Talk Together project.
We Talk Together: carers reconnect through this inclusive team artwork idea.

We Talk Together is a long-term collaborative artwork created with a group of parents who are carers of children with special needs, as part of our ongoing My Time program. This team artwork is built slowly, one layer at a time—often just once a term—using warm or cool colours to gently mark each session’s contribution. The rhythm is relaxed, the process is reflective, and the result is a shared visual conversation that grows over time. For many participants, these sessions are a rare chance to step away from their caring responsibilities and reconnect with their own creativity. It’s not just about painting—it’s a much-needed break, a way to bond, and a reminder that they have so much more to offer beyond their role as carers. This ongoing group art project shows how powerful team building art activities for adults can be, especially when the focus is on connection, care, and creative expression.

About MyTime: A Peer support program for Parent Carers in Australia.

My Time is time for you. Being a parent is an important job. It’s easy to get caught up in looking after your child’s needs, but looking after yourself is important too. MyTime is a place where you can unwind, and share ideas and experiences with others who understand. MyTime is for all parents and carers of children under the age of 18 who need a higher level of care than other children. This might be because of disability, chronic medical condition, or other additional needs including developmental delay. MyTime members come from different backgrounds and their children have different abilities and needs.

Fun team artwork ideas: 🎉 Wrapping up: Ready to try your own team artwork?

These three projects—painting a soccer goal wall with kids, creating Peer Support with adults living with disability, and our ongoing We Talk Together artwork with parent carers—are all great examples of fun team artwork ideas that bring people together through colour, creativity, and connection.

Each one follows the same simple approach I use in all my Pattern Play collaborative art sessions, moving through three flexible stages: Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling! This structure makes it easy to adapt for any age, group size, or ability level, whether you’re working with kids, adults, or mixed-ability teams. It’s about making space for everyone to contribute, at their own pace and in their own way.

Happy Painting!

Charndra,

Your Inclusive Social Art Guide.

If you’re curious to try a team artwork yourself—at home, work, school, or in a community setting—why not start with something simple? I can help you with that:


REE 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.
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Accessible art projects for beginners – Title image for 'Accessible Art Projects That Work for Everyone' showing 'Voice' artwork created by teenagers

Accessible Art Projects That Work for Everyone

Quick Takeaway

Accessible art projects for beginners can be simple, fun, and inclusive. I’ve facilitated over 60 community and school-based collaborative art projects with more than 2,000 participants, using my easy Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework. In this post, you’ll discover practical ideas and tips, and I want to help you do the same with my helpful digital resources.

What Are Accessible Art Projects That Work for Everyone?

Make art feel possible, playful, and pressure-free.

Accessible art means everyone can join in—and that’s exactly what the Pattern Play Collaborative Art approach is made for. At Painting Around, I’ve created a process that works whether you’re young, old, nervous, confident, verbal or nonverbal. Everyone adds something. Everyone matters.

Growing Together – Accessible Art with Primary School Kids
Accessible art projects for beginners: ‘Growing Together’

3 simple stages guide your freeform creativity with ease:

The three stages—Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling—create a flexible path that lets people engage at their own pace. It’s hands-on, sensory, and simple to join in at any point. No special tools or skills needed – just curiosity and a shared surface. It’s designed to be accessible art – to all ages, abilities and groups.

These accessible art projects for beginners show how group creativity can thrive when the process is simple, inclusive, and engaging. ‘Voice’, created in one afternoon by a group of teenagers new to collaborative art, is a vibrant red and blue piece that celebrates their role as young carers. ‘Growing Together’ was painted in just one day by 30 primary school children using swirls of cool colours and playful, layered marks. And ‘Aspiring to Success’, a calming blend of greens, teals, blues, and gold, was created by 120 junior primary students in their very first group painting project over three sessions across three weeks. Each of these artworks proves that with the right approach, accessible art activities can work beautifully across ages and abilities. You can create artwork like these – always unique, always dynamic.

Accessible art project created by a group of teenagers – 'Voice' artwork in red and blue, their first collaborative piece.
Accessible art projects for beginners: ‘Voice’

Curious how it works?

Beginner-friendly accessible artwork created by 120 junior primary students – 'Aspiring to Success' in cool greens, teals, blues, and gold
Accessible art projects for beginners: ‘Aspiring to Success’

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.


'Inclusive Art Activities Using the Pattern Play Collaborative Process' over the Enhancing Voices artwork in warm colours, created at a state-wide conference by 96 members of Our Voice SA.

Inclusive Art Activities Using the Pattern Play Collaborative Process

Quick Takeaway

Inclusive Art Activities are a fun way to bring groups together and spark creativity for all ages and abilities. I’ve facilitated over 60 community and school-based collaborative art projects with more than 2,000 participants, using my simple Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework. In this post, you’ll discover practical tips and ideas, and I want to help you do the same with my helpful digital resources.


Inclusive Art Activities Using the Pattern Play Collaborative Process

A simple, joyful way to create art together—no experience needed.

Inclusive art is at the heart of everything I share through Painting Around. My Pattern Play Collaborative Art approach makes it easy for groups of all ages and abilities to paint together—no pressure, no perfection, just connection through creativity.

Sensory Garden Mural with layered colours, created by 100 staff and students at a specialist school.
Inclusive Art Activities: ‘Suneden Sensory Garden Mural’

3 simple stages guide your spontaneous creativity with ease:

The Pattern Play process flows through three flexible stages: Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling. First, everyone adds big playful marks. Then we slow down to layer shapes and patterns. Finally, we add highlights, shine, and finishing touches. This way of painting keeps things inclusive, intuitive, and fun from start to finish.

All the artworks featured on this page were created through inclusive art activities with mixed-ability groups—children and adults living with intellectual or physical disabilities. These projects show that with the right strategies, techniques, and inclusive approaches, disability is not a barrier to creativity—it’s simply a different way of engaging. Inclusive art activities like these allow people to create together, learning through observation, demonstration, and modelling. This shared process builds confidence, skills, and a genuine sense of belonging.

Enhancing Voices collaborative artwork in warm colours, created by 96 staff and members of Our Voice SA at a state-wide conference.
Inclusive Art Activities: ‘Enhancing Voices’

Want to try it yourself? Download the Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art: The Pattern Play Way or head to the homepage to discover more about this easy, expressive group art style. Download the Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art or visit my About page for more information on the origin of this Pattern Play Collaborative Art Process.

Detail of Myriad collaborative artwork in warm colours over a blue base, created by a mixed age and ability group of 80 people at an art exhibition.
Inclusive Art Activities: ‘Myriad in Harmony’ (detail)

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.

Feature graphic for “Unique Collaborative Art Projects” article, with layered abstract art from the Incognito series.

Unique Collaborative Art Projects: 3 Engaging Ideas for All Ages & Abilities

Quick Takeaway

If you’re searching for unique collaborative art projects, this post shows how Pattern Play Collaborative Art makes creativity accessible and fun for all ages and abilities. With over 60 community and school projects involving 2,000+ participants, I’ll share three engaging ideas that anyone can try, using my simple Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling framework. You’ll discover practical ways to bring groups together to create meaningful, playful artworks in a classroom, library, or at home.

What are some unique collaborative art projects that everyone can enjoy?

If you’re looking for unique collaborative art projects that are joyful, inclusive, and accessible for all ages and abilities, Pattern Play Collaborative Art is a perfect place to start. This playful, layered approach unfolds in three simple stages – Messy Playing, Exploring, and Bling – making it easy for anyone to join in, regardless of experience level.

The projects below demonstrate how this process can come to life in a variety of settings, from schools and libraries to the kitchen table at home, showing that collaborative art can be fun, engaging, and meaningful anywhere.

Unique collaborative art projects #1: Growing Together

Group artwork created by 30 children, filled with expressive marks and bright layered patterns – an example of a fun and inclusive collaborative art project.
“Growing Together” – a unique collaborative art project by 30 children.

On a scorching 40-degree day in Adelaide, thirty kids aged 4 to 12 came together during a school holiday program to create a unique collaborative art project called Growing Together. None of them had worked with me before, but over three joyful sessions, they layered patterns, marks, and colours using my Pattern Play Collaborative Art approach. The fast-drying summer heat meant each stage could be completed in a single day. By the end, their sense of pride was clear – one child even exclaimed, “The Mona Lisa is number one, THIS is number two!”

Unique collaborative art projects #2: Myriad in Harmony

Inclusive collaborative painting created by 80 museum visitors of all ages, blending diverse marks into a colourful harmony – a standout example of a unique collaborative art project.
“Myriad in Harmony” – 80 visitors contributed to this unique collaborative art project.

In contrast, Myriad in Harmony unfolded over three days at the State Library of South Australia during the annual Myriad exhibition, which celebrates the work of artists living with disability across the state. Across three sessions, I invited 80 visitors – from toddlers to older adults, including exhibiting artists themselves – to take part in another unique collaborative art project. With gentle guidance, they added their own marks, patterns, and creative energy to a shared canvas. The result was a joyful mix of colour and texture that reflected the diversity and spontaneity of everyone who participated.

We used my Pattern Play Cards exclusively for this project – simple, accessible patterns scattered around the canvas for the painters to take inspiration from or copy in different sizes, colours and combinations to create the wonderful artwork above.

Unique collaborative art projects #3: Incognito Art Show

Our third unique collaborative art project took shape as part of the 2023 Incognito Art Show, a national initiative based in Sydney that raises funds to support artists living with disability through dedicated studio programs. The show invites creatives of all ages and experience levels to anonymously contribute three small A6 artworks in any medium. Above are three of the 12 artworks submitted, For the first time, my kids and I worked on our entries together. We began by taping all the cards into one big canvas for a shared session of Messy Playing and Exploring Patterns, using our favourite collaborative methods. Later, we separated them and each added our own BLING stage with paint pens—three individual pieces apiece, filled with colour, energy, and love. The finished cards were sent back to Sydney where buyers had no idea if they were collecting a child’s first artwork or a piece by an Archibald Prize winner!

Unique collaborative art projects: In conclusion

From a holiday care program in Adelaide to a public exhibition at the State Library, and even a national art show in Sydney, these unique collaborative art projects show how creativity can bring people together in the most joyful and unexpected ways. Whether it’s kids layering colours around a classroom table, strangers adding their mark to a shared canvas, or families working side-by-side on tiny artworks, each project celebrates connection, expression, and the simple joy of painting around together.

Happy Painting!

Charndra,

Your Inclusive Social Art Guide.


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Explore more collaborative art ideas →

Best Collaborative Art Ideas: Projects, Guides & Resources for All Ages

Mural created by over 30 school children as part of a collaborative art project.

From Art Teacher to Group Art Facilitator: Why Art Is for Everyone!


Quick Takeaway

A group art facilitator helps teachers move beyond skill-based art lessons into inclusive, shared creative experiences. In this post, I share how I evolved from being a high school art teacher to a group art facilitator guiding over 60 community and school-based collaborative art projects with more than 2,000 participants using my simple Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework. I want to help you do the same, with clear ideas and helpful digital resources that make group painting feel doable, fun, and meaningful in real classrooms.

From Art Teacher to Group Art Facilitator: Why Art Is for Everyone

This post is part of my “About Series,” where I share the story behind Painting Around is Fun and how Pattern Play Collaborative Art came to life. You can read more about the person behind the paint in the full About page here. If you’re new here or curious about how it all began, welcome! Every artwork you see on this page was painted by a mixed-ability group of people of all ages.


The beginning — Teaching art in classrooms

I began my creative career as a secondary school Art Teacher, working across metro and country schools for over 12 years. I taught everyone from Year 6 students to adults in local TAFE leisure courses — and just about every year level in between. It was fun, challenging, creative, and frustrating — all the things.

Like all school-based art educators, I was a generalist. My days were filled with drawing, painting, printmaking, ceramics, design, and sculpture — along with the endless juggling that comes with preparing for all of them! Teaching kept me creatively sharp, but it also gave me a front-row seat to how students respond to pressure, comparison, and perfectionism.

Like most teachers, I disliked having to judge student work — all we really want is to help them build new skills, take risks, and enjoy learning.


Early signs — Why group art felt different

Every now and then, I got the chance to create murals with kids — and those sessions always stood out. They felt looser, lighter, and more fun. I started to notice something important: when we painted together as a group, students were more relaxed, more playful, and more connected.

Something shifted when the focus moved from the individual to the collective. The art still mattered — but the pressure didn’t. And that made all the difference.

The shift — Discovering the power of group art

Looking back, I realised my favourite teaching moments weren’t really about technique — they were about transformation. When people create together, the energy in the room changes. It frees them up. They laugh more. They take risks. They stop worrying about whether what they’re doing is “good enough.”

The silent audience is real — especially for kids. That internal pressure of “who’s watching?” or “what if it’s wrong?” can cause them to give up creative subjects before they’re ready. And yet, we all need creative outlets. Painting together is empowering. It takes the focus off perfection and puts it on connection.


Becoming a group art facilitator

In collaborative art, no one has to carry the whole picture. What you add becomes part of something bigger. The final artwork always looks amazing — not because it’s polished, but because it’s shared. This kind of process builds creative confidence through play, participation, and shared purpose.

Over time, I moved away from step-by-step instruction and towards something more dynamic. Now, as a group art facilitator, my role is to create the conditions for creativity to flourish in a shared space. I design guided structures that invite spontaneity, encourage contribution, and reduce pressure — all while keeping it simple and fun.

If you’re laughing, you’re learning. And when you’re painting with others, you’re in the zone. That’s the sweet spot where creativity lives. Maybe that’s why my projects always seem to work — you simply add another playful layer, and something wonderful emerges.

The now — Collaborative art for everyone

These days, I guide all kinds of groups in creating spontaneous, joy-filled artworks together. As a group art facilitator, I work in schools, community centres, vacation care programs, and at special events — anywhere people are open to connection through creativity.


Designing for inclusion

I embrace the principles of universal design — creating processes that work for everyone, right from the start. Universal design is about making environments, products, and experiences accessible to as many people as possible, without the need for adaptation or specialised support.

In collaborative art, this means designing with people who have additional needs in mind — because when we plan for access, we make things better for everyone. I truly believe that disability is not inability. Some of us simply need a different way in — more time, clearer steps, or extra support to create successfully and joyfully.


A simple, inclusive approach

My approach is inclusive, accessible, and beginner-friendly — designed to reduce pressure, spark curiosity, and celebrate contribution over perfection. Whether it’s a one-hour session with preschoolers painting a giant cardboard box, a large wall mural with teenagers over several weeks, or a multi-session artwork on canvas with adults of all abilities, each session is tailored to make participation easy and meaningful.

I don’t call myself an “artist” — I call myself a social artist or inclusive social art guide. A social artist is someone who uses creative skills to bring people together and foster positive change. I love painting with others. That’s why I always join in — because the artwork isn’t mine. It’s ours.

And I don’t believe in “talent” as a prerequisite. What many call talent is usually just skill built through time, effort, and encouragement. Anyone can learn. Anyone can create. That’s why I say: art is for everyone — not just for ‘artists.’


→ Curious where it all began? Read Part 1 of the About Series: Your Collaborative Art Guide to Creating Inclusive Group Paintings, or visit the full About page here.


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.

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Discover the Thinking Behind the Projects

These fun group activities are built on years of experience in running inclusive, creative painting projects. Head to the Philosophy behind Pattern Play Collaborative Art to learn more. You’ll find the values that guide every project I create and share.

Pattern Play Collaborative Art makes it easy to create something beautiful together. No fancy skills needed, just a few simple resources and a willingness to play.

Happy Painting!

Charndra
Your Inclusive Social Art Guide


How to Make a Team Artwork: A collaborative painting in progress, featuring bold overlapping shapes and bright colours. Painting Around is Fun!

How to Make a Team Artwork: A Creative Approach to Turning a Group into a Team

Quick Takeaway

How to make a team artwork comes alive when a group learns to collaborate creatively. I’ve facilitated over 60 community and school-based collaborative art projects with more than 2,000 participants, and I use a simple framework called Pattern Play Collaborative Art to guide the process. In this post, you’ll discover practical steps to turn any group into a connected team—and I want to help you do the same with my helpful digital resources.

Looking for a fun way to turn your group into a creative team?

Creating a shared artwork is more than just painting together—it’s about transforming a group into a team through creativity. In this article, we’ll explore how to make a team artwork. We will look through two collaborative paintings, VOICE and SAFETY. These were made by young carers during a Media Training Day. Using my Pattern Play Collaborative Art approach, we followed three simple stages. Messy Playing helped break the ice and build energy. Exploring helped develop patterns and personal contributions. Finally, Bling brought the final details together. With the help of an underpainting, participants eased the fear of a blank canvas. They quickly connected and layered their ideas. Through collaboration, they co-created something truly meaningful. Individual expressions were turned into a unified team artwork.

How to make a team artwork: Start with an underpainting to prompt confidence

When learning how to make a team artwork, starting with an underpainting can be a game-changer—especially in short sessions. For the VOICE and SAFETY artworks, I prepared the surfaces in advance. I used a base layer of colour. This was based on the shapes and colors of Carers SA. Carers SA supports the Young Carer’s Collective. This step served three key purposes. It provided a background to build on. This reduced the daunting feeling of a blank canvas. It also helped the young carers dive in without hesitation. Additionally, it acted as a visual prompt, sparking ideas and giving them confidence to start quickly. This simple step made a noticeable difference, creating a sense of flow from the start. By laying this foundation, the canvases instantly became inviting, collaborative spaces where participants explored their creativity with ease.

How to make a team artwork: “Voice” by teenagers

The VOICE artwork was all about self-expression and the importance of young carers being heard. We used the Carers SA logo colours—grey, blue, and coral. We began with ‘Messy Play.’ The canvas was filled with circles in various sizes. These transformed into eggs, doughnuts, links in a chain, and spirals. As the group relaxed into the process, they added decorative patterns, using post-it note inspirations to either copy or adapt. Small brushes were used to build layers of overlapping details. The final touch was a border of affirmations about the power of a young carer’s voice. Each painter’s name was subtly incorporated into the piece. This step-by-step process is a wonderful guide. It shows how to make a team artwork. It blends individual contributions into a cohesive whole.

How to make a team artwork: “Safety” – exploring values

The SAFETY artwork explored what makes young carers feel safe within Carers SA. Sticking to cool, calming tones, the group built up layers of circles, ovals, and spirals, moving fluidly across the canvas. Like in VOICE, they added decorations and overlapping patterns, drawing inspiration from post-it notes. Words representing safety were developed earlier in the workshop. These words were featured in the day’s videos. They were integrated as text-based elements in the final design. Again, each participant’s name was woven into the artwork, making it a truly collective piece. By using this process, the group learned to create a team artwork. This artwork reflects shared meaning and a sense of belonging.

My Pattern Play Pages, a downloadable .pdf is full of the types of simplified patterns you can use to create an artwork like this with your friends, family, students, group, team or clients:

How to make a team artwork: In conclusion

These two projects, VOICE and SAFETY, highlight how to make a team artwork that is both meaningful and engaging. By starting with an underpainting, we created an inviting space where young carers could confidently express themselves. The step-by-step process began with Messy Play. Then, patterns and decorations were added. Finally, text-based elements were incorporated. This approach helped transform individual contributions into a cohesive, collaborative piece. These artworks show that a group can unite through the right approach. This unity emerges from preparation steps to the addition of final details. They can create something powerful together. Whether focusing on self-expression or a shared theme, a team artwork begins with a strong foundation. It also requires an open, inclusive process.

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.


Feature image for “Your Collaborative Art Guide to Creating Inclusive Group Paintings,” showing three highlighted artworks.

Your Collaborative Art Guide to Creating Inclusive Group Paintings

Quick Takeaway

This Collaborative Art Guide shares how to create inclusive group paintings that welcome everyone. I’ve facilitated over 60 community and school-based projects with more than 2,000 participants using my simple Pattern Play Collaborative Art framework. You’ll discover practical tips to make art fun, easy, and meaningful, and I want to help you do the same with my helpful digital resources.

This post is part of my “About Series,” where I share the story behind Painting Around is Fun and how Pattern Play Collaborative Art came to life. You can read the full About page here. Whether you’re new here or curious about how it all began, welcome!


How can you create inclusive group paintings that welcome everyone?

Have you ever wished creativity could feel more welcoming, more shared, and less intimidating? Inclusive collaborative art might be just what you’re looking for. It’s more than a buzzword—it’s a way of making art that connects people, encourages expression, and includes everyone, no matter their age or ability.

Whether you’re planning collaborative art projects for school, home, or the workplace, this guide will help you get started with confidence, showing that inclusive art can be simple, fun, and meaningful for all participants.

Collaborative group painting in green, blue and purple, created by a mixed-age group including people with intellectual disability.
‘Peer Support’ — a collaborative painting created by people of all ages and abilities using cool colours and shared creativity.

Discover the power of painting together

Hi, I’m Charndra—the artist and guide behind Pattern Play Collaborative Art, a simple, inclusive approach to creating shared artwork that brings people together.

Years ago, I witnessed the power of collaborative painting, as people of all ages and skill levels—from toddlers to teachers, kids to carers—added their marks to a single canvas. That spark eventually became the Pattern Play Collaborative Art Method, a structure that makes it easy for anyone to run a creative group painting session. No art degree or teaching experience is needed—just a love of colour, creativity, and people.

Large public collaborative art created by 600 people, featuring expressive marks and layered patterns.
‘Conversation’ — one of three public artworks made with 600 participants using the collaborative art guide approach.

As your collaborative art guide, I’ve helped groups of all kinds discover just how joyful and bonding it can be to paint together. Whether you’re in a school, playgroup, team workshop, or around the kitchen table, inclusive group painting invites everyone to join in. It’s creative connection made simple, where each participant’s contribution adds to the shared artwork and the shared experience.

Happy Painting!

Charndra,

Your Inclusive Social Art Guide.

Six collaborative artworks in progress, showing the exploring stage using colour and pattern to create the ‘Utopia’ series.
Six shared canvases from the ‘Utopia’ series, created in the Exploring stage with aqua, purple, yellow, light green and burgundy.

SFREE 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.


Title image of the free Beginner’s Guide to Collaborative Art, featuring a close-up of the ‘Conversation’ artwork.
Learn how to lead your own inclusive group painting session with the Pattern Play Collaborative Art Guide.