Helen Klebesadel
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Finding Your Artist Voice

1/11/2026

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My artist mission statement is:

“I make art that matters to me and the world, and I help others do the same,
because the world is not better if we do not make our art.”


My path to having a career in the arts was not easy nor well defined, but I am persistent and stubbornly committed to making a life as an artist. That is why I have made a practice to try to pass on what I have learned along the way to make it a little easier for people earlier in their careers than it was for me. (I have added  more about my personal story below). 
 
With this purpose in mind, I am delighted to invite creatives who would like support as they envision their path as an
artist to participate is a year-long group opportunity to deepen you creative practice, explore personal meaning in you work, and develop the confidence to speak through your art as you envision a career path that fits your personal
​vision for yourself as an artist.

Finding Your Artist Voice in ~
A Year-Long Creative Journey

with Helen Klebesadel  at Adamah Art Studio
​in 2026-2027

I am looking forward to bringing together a group of artists at all stages in their development who are ready to grow, experiment, and connect within a supportive studio community.  (Some scholarships are available through Adamah Art Studio.  Scroll down for that information). No more than 15 artists will participate.  (My workshop will accompany a workshop of 3d artists working with ceramicist Steven Hill on the same schedule at Adamah).
 
There will be a total three week-long group gatherings at Adamah Art Studio over the course of the year (see dates below).  Each of the three in-person workshops during your year-long experience are designed to move you further along on your creative journey toward better developing an artist voice that is uniquely yours.
 
This creative journey begins with 6 days exploring your current relationship with your art at Adamah Art Studio. Through a combination of individual critique, group discussion and art-based creative exercises, your search for personal expression will be expanded and more clearly defined. You will leave the Voice workshop with a plan for the upcoming year and return to your studio with focus, renewed motivation, a peer group, and a mentor to help keep you on track. 
  • You do not need to know how to draw to use this process. 
  • You do not need to already be comfortable calling yourself an artist
  • This is not a watercolor workshop. Any media is welcome. 
In addition to individual and group critique/discussions we will be exploring creative art-based exercises designed to free up your thinking about your creative process, and to use your own life as a source that can be the bases of future explorations in art. 
 
I am best known as a painter who specializes in watercolor.  However, I also taught most 2D media on the University level for many years.  Using your preferred art media, or what I have on hand, you will explore greatest vision for your art and yourself as an artist.   You are the curriculum.   I find I can think about life’s big questions best through my art processes, especially if I have questions that require deeper reflection.  I will share this process.
 
When you participate in these workshops, the further you can put any traditional artistic concerns from you the better. This is also a chance to expand your approach and explore new media.  You can draw, collage, sew, bead, glue, smear, wrap, sew, bind, or anything else that seems right for you to get the image you want. (Oftentimes you may find yourself creating symbols for things that only you can really ‘read’). 

Workshop Schedule:
  •  Session 1: June 7–12, 2026 (begins the morning of June 7 and ends at noon on June 12)
  • June – October 2026 – Studio art exploration and preparation for mid-year critique and gathering.
  • Session 2: November 5–8, 2026 – Mid-year gathering and supportive critique at Adamah Art Studios.
  •  November 2026 – May 2027 – Studio work and preparation for the Adamah exhibition and group feedback.
  • Session 3: May 6–9, 2027 (final show and celebration on May 8, workshop wraps up after brunch on May 9)
Join us for a year-long creative journey in which you will expand your artist’s voice, define your goals, and create a plan of action for the future that is based in how you define success.

​Adamah Scholarship Application

PictureAdamah Vista, watercolor, 9x9
Adamah Art Studios is proud to offer two full-tuition scholarships for the transformational workshop Finding Your Artist Voice with Helen Klebesadel. These scholarships reflect our commitment to making high-quality arts education accessible to emerging and established artists alike.
Each scholarship covers 100% of the workshop tuition. Recipients are responsible only for room and board costs, should they choose to stay on-site.
 
This year-long experience with renowned artist and educator Helen Klebesadel
invites participants to deepen their creative practice, explore personal meaning
in their work, and develop the confidence to speak through their art.

It’s an inspiring opportunity for creators who are ready to grow, experiment, and connect within a supportive studio community.

 
Session 1: June 7–12, 2026 (begins the morning of June 7 and ends at noon on June 12)
Session 2: November 5–8, 2026 – Mid-year critique at Adamah Art Studios.
Session 3: May 6–9, 2027 (final show on May 8, workshop wraps up after brunch on May 9)
 
Applications are open to all artists, regardless of background or experience level. We encourage applicants who are passionate about their creative development and who may benefit from financial support to make this workshop possible. Apply now! Link in bio. https://www.adamahartstudio.org/scholarships/— in Dodgeville.

My Artist Journey

PictureAugust Clouds, watercolor on paper, 8x10
I am honored to have held positions at the University level as professor of studio art and an arts educator/administrator from 1989 to 2018. Since I retired from my day job in 2018 I have been delighted to focus primarily on creating my own artwork.  I have also maintained a second path since leaving higher education, teaching shorter workshops focused on watercolor painting, as well as creative approaches to art-making, career development, and authentic creative voice.
One of the experiences I missed the most after I left my university art teaching position was observing and supporting the development of individuals as the developed their identity as artists. 

I love getting behind artists and encouraging them to move further and faster in the directions they have identified for themselves as creatives.  It wonderful to be near by as they reach their goals and create the bodies of work and art careers they have envisioned for themselves.  That is why when Adamah Art Studios offered me the chance to offer a unique, artist development opportunity for creative individuals who would like to go on a year-long creative journey, I said yes. 

My story:  In addition to being a visual artist and educator, I have training as a creativity coach.  I tend to go deeply into researching and learning about things I am curious about.  My first art research, beyond learning to draw and paint, was to try to figure out the path to becoming an artist. I came from rural Wisconsin and despite the support of my rural  farm family, I really had no idea what the path to being a full-time artist looked like.  Anyone who has sought a career as a visual artist has probably had similar questions.

PictureMedusa Faced, watercolor on paper, 48x45
I am honored to have held positions at the University level as professor of studio art and an arts educator/administrator from 1989 to 2018. Since I retired from my day job in 2018 I have been delighted to focus primarily on creating my own artwork.  I have also maintained a second path since leaving higher education, teaching shorter workshops focused on watercolor painting, as well as creative approaches to art-making, career development, and authentic creative voice.
One of the experiences I missed the most after I left my university art teaching position was observing and supporting the development of individuals as the developed their identity as artists. 

I love getting behind artists and encouraging them to move further and faster in the directions they have identified for themselves as creatives.  It wonderful to be near by as they reach their goals and create the bodies of work and art careers they have envisioned for themselves.  That is why when Adamah Art Studios offered me the chance to offer a unique, artist development opportunity for creative individuals who would like to go on a year-long creative journey, I said yes. 

My story:  In addition to being a visual artist and educator, I have training as a creativity coach.  I tend to go deeply into researching and learning about things I am curious about.  My first art research, beyond learning to draw and paint, was to try to figure out the path to becoming an artist. I came from rural Wisconsin and despite the support of my rural  farm family, I really had no idea what the path to being a full-time artist looked like.  Anyone who has sought a career as a visual artist has probably had similar questions.

Artmaking has been the core of my creative and critical thinking process for 40+ years. Using myself as a test case to understand whom, what, why, and how value, form and how our individual experiences are determined by larger social, political, and cultural patterns.  Watercolor on paper, board, and canvas has been my medium of choice.  I push traditional boundaries of the medium in scale, content, and technique.  My visual concerns run the gamut from careful study to poetic, symbolic and sometimes political representations of nature and human nature, especially in relations to contemporary environmental concerns.  

My first year of art college in 1971 included no references to women artists or artists of color in the curriculum or on the faculty.  While I had wonderful professors, they inadvertently taught me women could not be professional artists or I would have been taught by nor about them.

I would dropped out to spend a decade seeking my path as an independent artist in rural Wisconsin before being awarded a two-year federal CEDA Grant, through the Wisconsin Arts Board.  The employment grant supported full-time work for visual artists.  Through the program I was hired by the Department of Health and Huan Services to paint a dozen murals for Central Wisconsin Center in Madison.  Inspired by supporting myself via y creative work, I returned to university in 1981 as a 28-year-old freshman. I would earn a BA in Art, a Certificate in Women’s Studies and a MFA in Fine Art before going on to work in higher education at Beloit College, Lawrence University, University of Wisconsin-Madison, and the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

My earliest professional works were surrealist revisions, in which I imagined a creative reality for myself as a strong, working-class, rural-rooted woman artist, in opposition to what I had been taught to expect for myself by the larger culture. These large-scale watercolors included mythic self-portraits as Medusa and Arachne, revisioning some of the larger cultural social narratives that were part of my socialization.  These works drew parallels between those things that had been needlessly polarized into negatives and positives, much as feminine/masculine or nature/culture were set in opposition to each other instead of being viewed as equally valued parts of a healthy whole.

The subject of my paintings evolved to reconsider who we are taught could be artists, and what could be art; focused on the creative work of the women who had raised me.  They were not considered ‘artists’ because their mediums were cloth and thread used to make quilts and lace for everyday use. 

Next, I focused on objects as metaphors for human values. In these works, the natural world often intrudes into human dominated spaces.  An even deeper thematic consideration of nature emerged next, exploring humans as a part of nature, with a particular focus on understanding how what we do to the earth we do to ourselves and vice versa. My path to authentic creative voice was not linear, occurring in cycles, spirals, branching, and meandering.  Ultimately, I focus on our elemental humanity in relations to the patterns and cycles in nature, with the goal of articulating how better to care for ourselves, each other, and the natural world.

My current work revolves around the concept of the ‘butterfly effect’, and small actions with large consequences, manifesting in my ‘Pollinator Effect’ series.  I have a parallel series of small watercolors and ink drawings, ‘Drawing for Good,’ that explore creative process and fundraising for good causes of my choosing.  
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Now at the beginning of my 8th decade, I am working on the creation and exhibition my next body of work, drawing on signature ideas from my career.  In the past my teaching and mentoring have made e a better artist.  This upcoming workshop is a part of my journey too.  Lets explore together.


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Spring Ephemera: Dutchman's Breeches, watercolor on canvas, 20x28,
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The Muse And Her Artist

11/2/2025

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Drawing Resistance: The Artist’s Dilemma in Political Conflict | A Virtual Exhibition

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​I an honored to have my watercolor and ink drawing 'Web' included in the Woman Made Gallery (WMG) virtual exhibition "Drawing Resistance: The Artist’s Dilemma in Political Conflict | A Virtual Exhibition".which will be on display
 August 16–November 15, 2025 


Woman Made Gallery reflected upon how a world increasingly shaped by political unrest, censorship, and global crises, artists are often confronted with a critical question: What is my responsibility in the face of conflict? Must art speak truth to power—or is silence also a choice?
“Drawing Resistance: The Artist’s Dilemma in Political Conflict” is a virtual group exhibition that explores the tensions artists face when navigating our creative practice in politically charged environments. The title plays on the dual meaning of “drawing”—as both a visual act and a metaphor for tracing boundaries, beliefs, or courage.
Woman Made Gallery  invited women and non-binary artists from around the world to submit work that confronts, reflects on, or challenges political realities—whether global or deeply personal. Submissions could explore war, migration, censorship, social justice, protest, surveillance, gender-based oppression, or the quiet defiance of everyday survival. They were especially interested in works that wrestle with the dilemma of making art in a time of unrest: how to act, what to say, and what it means to resist.
Since August 2025 Woman Made Gallery (WMG) has presented “Drawing Resistance: The Artist’s Dilemma in Political Conflict,” a virtual group exhibition that explores the tensions artists face when navigating their creative practice in politically charged environments.  The exhibition will be available online untile November 15, 2025.

The title plays on the dual meaning of “drawing”—as both a visual act and a metaphor for tracing boundaries, beliefs, or courage. In a world increasingly shaped by political unrest, censorship, and global crises, artists are often confronted with a critical question: What is my responsibility in the face of conflict? Must art speak truth to power—or is silence also a choice? Selections by WMG’s Program Committee include works that confront, reflect on, or challenge political realities—whether global or deeply personal.
​
Exhibiting Artists: Ellis Angel, Lucy Aragon, Amal Azzam, Jenny Balisle, Jesper Beckholt, Carol Bivins, Blackmedu$a, Sally Jane Brown, Lulu Luyao Chang, Violet Costello, Rosemary Ann Davis, Graciela DeAnda, Mary Rose Deraco, Jena Doolas, Julianna Finch, Claire Flath, Shawna Gibbs, Julie Glass, Renee Golway, Farah Art Griffin, Deborah Hirshfield, Joanna Hoge, Maggy Hovden, Doina Mihaela Iacob, Meg Katherine Johnson, Tumí Johnson, Elizabeth Kelly, Helen Klebesadel, Kim Laurel, Michelle Louis, Ruth Marchese, Kristen Martin-Aarnio, Clarissa Martinez, Lineadeluz, Heather Mawson, Lori McCoy, Angela A. McElwain, Shanna Merola, Amy L Misurelli Sorensen, Jacie Morgan, Ena Mork, Yue Nakayama, Kelsey Nichols, Laura O’Connor, Olivia Outlaw, Monika Andrew Poray, Nina Rastgar, Ippy, Kathy Sayad Zatari, Mary Senter, Rosa Silver, Sarah Sipling, Talon, Alexandra Rey, Susanne McKenzie Swanson, Jacqueline E. Tirey, Rhonda Urdang, Ria Vanden Eynde, Vikkokoro, Denise Weaver Ross, Lisa Wright, Denise Yaghmourian, Jane Zich.

See ALL the artworks  here:  Drawing Resistance Exhibition.

MY ARTIST EXHIBITION STATEMENT
We all can use the tools we have to make our world better. I am an artist and my art is the best, most powerful way I have to make a positive difference. Starting January 1, 2024 I starting my Drawing for Good Project. I posted on social media a-drawing-a-day each day where I drew into an existing watercolor sampler from my collection of unfinished small watercolors that were demos from teaching watercolor workshops. For all of 2024 I posted and sold the small works unframed and un-matted for $100 apiece and donated the profits to good causes of my choosing. I created 366 pieces in 2024. I still occasionally add to the collection. Now the works are sold matted and at market value but I still donate $100 from each work from the collection to good causes of my choosing as they sell. Over 150 pieces have found new homes. My main artwork is focused on the health of our planet, pollinators and climate change. These small works allow me to address issues that arise daily and are small creative ‘spells’ to name and control the uncontrollable. I continue to channel my concerns into all of my art and to uses my tools to address these times as best I can both in the art and with small bits of support where I can. We can not all do everything, but we can all do something.


​ABOUT THE ARTIST Helen Klebesadel is an artist, educator, and arts activist living and maintaining her art studio in Madison, Wisconsin, USA. Born and raised in the rural Midwest, she is best known for her environmental and feminist themed large-scale watercolors. Klebesadel has exhibited her work nationally and internationally, and her artworks are represented in many public and private the art collections. A celebrated mentor to less experienced artists, Klebesadel models making beautiful yet meaningful art centered around issues important to her while working to help others do the same in their own way.

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Past Blog Posts Prior to August 2025

10/14/2025

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Helen's Past Blogs:

  • Past Posts 2015-2024 
    • Reflective Drawings / Responsive Poems:  Almost a Year of the Drawing A Day for Good Project
    • Watercolor on Canvas and Board …………………. Still Learning! March 2024 
    • Still Teaching in Beautiful Places in 2024
    • A Drawing A Day For Good - January 2024‘Tis the Season for Art and Gratitude-December 2023
    • Still Teaching In Beautiful Places-July 2023
    • Full Spirals Podcast Interview- April 2023
    • To Gicleé  or not to Gicleé:  Making Prints of Original Watercolors- December 2022
    • Art Emerges with Spring Flowers in 2022
    • Check out Art on Display ~ Fall 2021​
    • Hang on a Little Longer: Art is Springing Up all Over the Place - April 2021
    • Using Art to Create A Better New Year for 2021: Online Watercolor Workshops - December 2020
    • ‘Tis the Season….for art - November 2020
    • Force of Nature: A Virtual Art Exhibit by Georgia Weithe and Helen Klebesadel -October 2020
    • Cabin Fever Creative Community: Art and Social Media in a Pandemic - May 2020
    • Oceans A Rising ~ Virtual Collaborative Art and Climate Justice Exhibition - April 2020
    • Visual Art and Creativity This Fall ~ Wisconsin and Beyond -September 2019
    • Art and Learning In Beautiful Places - June 2019
    • Celebrate Sharing Art: An Exhibition and Upcoming Workshops - May 2019
    • Art Matters: Social Practice and Art that Works - April 2019
    • Our Mornings Plein Air Painting in Spain -March 2019
    • Drawing on Nature and Circumstance ~ Two Exhibitions - September 2019
    • Teaching Watercolor Makes Me a Better Artist - June 2017
    • Cloud Studies: Drawing On Nature for Balance -September 2016
    • Spring Art Classes Follow April Flowers - April 2016
    • Colors of Light and Light by artist Ann Schaffer - September 2015
 
  • Helen Klebesadel: A Muse and Her Artist ~ 2010 -  2012​
  • Two Artists Share A Painting A Day for 33 Days
  • Creativity Lessons: Art, Nature, and Finding Our Inner Voices ~ May, 2012
  • The Art Of Resistance:  The Exquisite Uterus Project. ~ May 2012
  • Susan Grabel: Art that Explores the Human Dimension of Social Issues ~ June 2012
  • March 2012
  • June 2010

Other Venues:
  • Artsy Sharky:  Featured Artist - Helen Klebesadel
  • Modern Day Interpretations:  Modern Medusa
  • 15 Best Wisconsin Art Blogs and Websites in 2025
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August 21st, 2025

8/21/2025

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AA

Art Journal As Creative Practice

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There are many ways that visual artists use journaling as a means of capturing their thoughts, feelings, and observations in the world.  I will include resources, techniques, and journaling materials to fuel your own exploration here too.

Anyone who has gone through the exercises in Julia Cameron’s ‘The Artist’s Way,’ or her updated for retiree’s version, ‘It’s Never Too Late To Begin: Discovering Creativity and Meaning at Midlife and Beyond’ has likely added stream-of-consciousness daily journaling to their regular practice.

There are as many ways to do art journals as there are artists.  Art journaling can be an open-ended form of art in a bound journal or gathered loose pages where the focus is on the process of creating and of self-expression rather than a particular artwork. The fact that it is collected and documented in a book form can be very freeing, and implies the process is more important that completing particular artworks.

Art journals are a great place to work out ideas, express private emotions, develop visual business or career plans, create personal visions for your future, record travel or get in touch with nature.  I do all-of-the-above.  I teach workshops about nature and travel journaling occasionally too.

Artist Journals often combine text, imagery, found materials and expressive color.  Some are more words than images, some are made up of all images.  Mixed-media, drawing, mark-making, writing, painting, and collage can all be components.
 
Working in an art journal is, for me, is a form of creative self-expression that I find energizing.  I appreciate that there are no defined rules.  I love the ability to combine and explore materials, ideas and techniques!  I also find it interesting to look back and discover where the first ideas for current series of work may have started.  I sometimes find the seeds of an idea a decade earlier in the center of some other exploration I was focused on at the time.

I like to maintain a regular art practice so some of my art journals emerged as a way to carry on my artwork in my travels.  It is so much more satisfying to me to look back at images I drew or painted than photos (though I take my photos too and sometimes work from them).  The reason I love nature and  travel journaling so much is that with the practice  I give myself permission to sit in one place and soak up the sounds, smells, and images for a longer period of time, rather than dashing through without really observing where I am.

For me it was the travel journaling that led to doing regular nature journaling.  Sometimes when we are camping our way somewhere they are one and the same. 
 
I invite you to give art journaling a try.  There are lots of art guides out there that can help you get started.  If you would like to try your hand at nature and travel journaling, check out my upcoming workshop at Olbrich Botanical Gardens in Madison Wisconsin. 

(Register by August 22, 2025)

https://www.olbrich.org/calendar/watercolor-nature-journaling-with-helen-klebesadel-2
You can learn more about it here:

Sat, Aug 23, - 24, 2025 10:00 am-4:00PM
Watercolor Nature Journaling with Helen Klebesadel
Join us in this two-day watercolor workshop for painters with some experience. Designed for artists interested in Nature Journaling and/or creating travel journals using watercolors and mixed media. This workshop will present several approaches to journaling with watercolors and other media. Build upon the skills you have acquired while using Olbrich Gardens to practice your journaling skills. See registration page for list of required supplies.
Instructor: Helen Klebesadel, Helen Klebesadel Art

 

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