Now Live: The Online Nature-Inspired Holiday Art Market!

Meet Julia Kemerer

Julia Kemerer is a mixed media artist and an avid maker of all things. She paints and sculpts with paper, found objects, fabric, wood, and clay, and has a passion for creative reuse, or what she refers to as “using what you have to make what you need.” Julia’s creations will often make appearances at Brushwood Center, where she is the Director of Arts and Administration. Through her work at Brushwood, she curates shows and art markets, runs the Brushwood Art Supply Exchange, and teaches classes in addition to working behind the scenes on several area public arts projects. Julia attended the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and holds a degree in Art History from the University of Illinois at Chicago. She lives in northern Lake County, Illinois with her husband and daughter in a 100 year old lake house full of pets, art,and plants.

See Julia’s art on display at Brushwood Center at Ryerson Woods October 25- November 30, 2025.

The Nightwatch, by Julia Kemerer
Media: Mixed media sculpture

Julia’s Artist Statement

Four bird sculptures from Julia Kemerer's Portals series.

Art is alchemy. It is the transmuting of everyday materials using a lifetime of accumulated experiences, skills and knowledge into a magical new substance that only exists as a result of that particular recipe. The art I make now is the result of a fleeting moment in 2023 when a large round mirror frame in my living room suddenly resembled the opening to a birdhouse. I imagined for a moment what it would be like for an enormous bird to pop through that opening into my space, and I could not shake the feeling of awe and wonder it created. I found myself compelled to make it a reality, and it has led me to a series of work I call “Portals.” These sculptures of oversized birds were born out of my love of nature and the wonder it brings into my life when a wild creature appears in my path. Made from a combination of traditional and non-traditional materials, including light fixture parts, plaster gauze and plastic spoons, they are also an expression of my love of experimenting and doing things differently. They exist in an “in-between” space, inhabiting a world between sculpture and painting, 3D work and wall art, nature and human made, and fantasy and reality. They have taken on a bit of a life of their own.

Image: Make Way for the King, by Julia Kemerer
Media: Mixed media sculpture

Artist of the Month Events

Julia Kemerer with her sculpture, Make Way for the King

October 25
10:00 am – 3:00 pm | Free
Open Art Workshop with Julia Kemerer

Open Art Workshop is open to anyone who wants to make something in any area of visual arts and crafts, from the experienced artist looking for a community of others to work with, to the complete novice who just wants to try something out in a low pressure environment, or the family looking for a fun kids’ activity to fill their afternoon – this workshop is for you!

Image: Julia Kemerer with her sculpture, Make Way for the King.
Media: Mixed media sculpture

November 19
7:00 pm – 9:00 pm | $20

Create & Sip – Make a Wreath

Create & Sip is a monthly workshop hosted at Brushwood Center where participants can explore fun projects using supplies and tools from the Brushwood Art Supply Exchange, BASE. It’s an opportunity to get creative, try something new, and enjoy the company of fellow art enthusiasts in a relaxed and welcoming atmosphere.

Meet alexandra ok

alexandra ok is a Midwest-based painter showcasing the beauty of queer community. Ok received their BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2023, where they honed their figurative painting abilities and passion for color work.

See alexandra’s art on display at Brushwood Center at Ryerson Woods September 27- October 25, 2025.

act gay in public like your life depends on it, because it does by alexandra ok
act gay in public like your life depends on it, because it does, by alexandra ok.
Media: acrylic and mixed media on canvas

alexandra’s Artist Statement

angels on the beach by alexandra ok

Sometimes sad, sometimes raunchy, ofttimes downright confusing but always colorful; ok’s work revolves around their identity and the memories that formed their sense of self. Using the language of figure painting, portraiture, and color theory, ok reflects on what it means to be a contemporary queer.

Image: angels on the beach, by alexandra ok
Media: acrylic and mixed media on fabric

Artist of the Month Events

alexandra ok smiling in front of a rack of paintings

September 27
10:00 am – 3:00 pm | Free
Open Art Workshop with alexandra ok

Open Art Workshop is open to anyone who wants to make something in any area of visual arts and crafts, from the experienced artist looking for a community of others to work with, to the complete novice who just wants to try something out in a low pressure environment, or the family looking for a fun kids’ activity to fill their afternoon – this workshop is for you!

Portraits by alexandra ok

October 15
7:00 pm – 9:00 pm | $20

Create & Sip – Portrait of a New Friend

Create & Sip is a monthly workshop hosted at Brushwood Center where participants can explore fun projects using supplies and tools from the Brushwood Art Supply Exchange, BASE. It’s an opportunity to get creative, try something new, and enjoy the company of fellow art enthusiasts in a relaxed and welcoming atmosphere.

Image: Portraits by alexandra ok

Meet Kirsten Saunders

Kirsten Saunders began working with clay in college in 1982 and was hooked right away. Though her B.A. is in Psychology/Sociology, she took many fine art classes and workshops through the years to hone her skills and develop her own style. She taught children’s art classes while raising her own children, and still enjoys teaching occasionally and experiencing children’s playfulness and discovery.

See Kirsten’s art on display at Brushwood Center at Ryerson Woods August 30 – September 27, 2025.

Clay sculpture of a turtle
Turtle at the pond, by Kirsten Saunders. Media: Pottery

Kirsten’s Artist Statement

Clay sculpture with hearts surrounding a hand.

Kirsten is most inspired by her ever changing garden, whimsy, and her love of nature and its amazing creatures. Each piece is one of a kind, created in her home studio in Gurnee, Illinois. Working mostly with Terra Cotta clay, pieces are wheel thrown, hand built, or a construction of both. Her mosaics are a blend of crockery, her own pottery, glass and other enticing items.

Image: Loving Hands, by Kirsten Saunders
Media: Pottery

Artist of the Month Events

Kirsten Saunders holding a ceramic plate with a blue feather decoration

August 30
10:00 am – 3:00 pm | Free
Open Art Workshop with Kirsten Saunders

Open Art Workshop is open to anyone who wants to make something in any area of visual arts and crafts, from the experienced artist looking for a community of others to work with, to the complete novice who just wants to try something out in a low pressure environment, or the family looking for a fun kids’ activity to fill their afternoon – this workshop is for you!

A clay monarch butterfly ornament.

September 17
7:00 pm – 9:00 pm | $20

Create & Sip – Clay Ornaments

Create & Sip is a monthly workshop hosted at Brushwood Center where participants can explore fun projects using supplies and tools from the Brushwood Art Supply Exchange, BASE. It’s an opportunity to get creative, try something new, and enjoy the company of fellow art enthusiasts in a relaxed and welcoming atmosphere.

Image: An monarch butterfly ornament by Kirsten Saunders

Media: Pottery

Artist of the Month is a program at Brushwood Center featuring artists who align with Brushwood Center’s mission and explores themes of health, equity and justice, nature and the environment. Each month we feature an artist who will:

  • Display their work at Brushwood Center at Ryerson Woods
  • Teach a Create and Sip Workshop in their area of expertise
  • Demonstrate their work at an Open Art Workshop

Meet Susan Teller

Susan Teller graduated from the University of Illinois Chicago with a BFA in 1979. She worked at Spring Studio 1979-1982, United Letter, 1982-1984, and the Marshall Fields Advertising Department, 1984-198. She was Staff Artist/ Librarian at the Skokie Public Library, 1997-2022. She currently teaches workshops in paper making, watercolor painting, and book binding. She also teaches classes about women artists, process of making art, and storyboard drawing and development.

See Susan’s art on display at Brushwood Center at Ryerson Woods July 26 – August 28, 2025.

A Rock Is Just a Kiss, by Susan Teller. Media: MDF board, book pages, leaves, nails, string, prints, oil stick, color pencil, acrylic, pigment, soot, found objects, rice paper, cheese cloth, ink, and seeds
A Rock Is Just a Kiss, by Susan Teller. Media: MDF board, book pages, leaves, nails, string, prints, oil stick, color pencil, acrylic, pigment, soot, found objects, rice paper, cheese cloth, ink, and seeds.

Susan’s Artist Statement

Image: Stone Island, by Susan Teller
Media: mixed, MDF board, gesso, book pages, modeling paste, watercolor, acrylic, colored pencil, oil stick, pigments, cheese cloth, rusty pieces, ink, and seeds

“With all the noise around us everyday it is difficult to find a place for peace and rejuvenation. I know I live in a bubble of certain beliefs and that my truth and what I see happening in the world may be different from what others see. Art making and connecting with nature makes me slow down and see things from a new perspective.

Through my creative practice I can observe beauty in the natural world and in a few scraps of cardboard and rusty pieces of metal that are representative of our time and environment. I meld both traditional and non-traditional materials in my artwork. My mixed media works are rooted in the gestures and textures of the physical world and guided by the growing conflict between man-made industrial objects, disposable materials and our stressed natural environment. Combining recycled objects and natural forms into a new kind of beauty allows me to create a kind of time capsule that is sensitive to the environmental challenges we face in today’s world.

I am inspired by what I have seen on vacations to our National Parks and the everyday world in my own backyard in Skokie, Illinois. I went to visit Glacier Park in Montana about 40 years ago and again just two years ago. During my recent trip I saw the park in a very different light. It was still majestic and beautiful but my awareness of threats like climate change, mining, and human encroachment made me think more about our impact on the natural environment. I am amazed at the power that the earth has and its ability to heal from all the damage that is inflicted upon it. Moving water, ancient rocks, beautiful forests and native plants makes me think about the history of these places and how much they have changed and that makes me feel real and here today.”

Image: Stone Island, by Susan Teller
Media: mixed, MDF board, gesso, book pages, modeling paste, watercolor, acrylic, colored pencil, oil stick, pigments, cheese cloth, rusty pieces, ink, and seeds

Artist of the Month Events

Image:23/30 Reflections Series, by Susan Teller
Media: Cardboard, rusty objects, art paper, pencil.

July 26 | 10:00 am – 3:00 pm | Free
Open Art Workshop with Susan Teller

Open Art Workshop is open to anyone who wants to make something in any area of visual arts and crafts, from the experienced artist looking for a community of others to work with, to the complete novice who just wants to try something out in a low pressure environment, or the family looking for a fun kids’ activity to fill their afternoon – this workshop is for you!

Image:23/30 Reflections Series, by Susan Teller
Media: Cardboard, rusty objects, art paper, pencil.

Accordion Art Book made of recycled CD covers

August 13 | 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm | $20

Create & Sip – Accordion Art Books

Create & Sip is a monthly workshop hosted at Brushwood Center where participants can explore fun projects using supplies and tools from the Brushwood Art Supply Exchange, BASE. It’s an opportunity to get creative, try something new, and enjoy the company of fellow art enthusiasts in a relaxed and welcoming atmosphere.

Image: An accordion art book, by Susan Teller

Media: Mixed media

Artist of the Month is a new program at Brushwood Center featuring artists who align with Brushwood Center’s mission and explores themes of health, equity and justice, nature and the environment. Each month we feature an artist who will:

  • Display their work at Brushwood Center at Ryerson Woods
  • Teach a Create and Sip Workshop in their area of expertise
  • Demonstrate their work at an Open Art Workshop

Meet Maryann Wattelle

Maryann Wattelle is a BFA graduate from the Art Institute of Chicago. She focuses on painting, drawing and Art Therapy. She is a mom of four and also a foster mom. In addition to her artistic pursuits, she has worked for American Airlines for 25 years. Her greatest passions are sharing the experience of making art with others and guiding them through their own creative process. Her work is currently on display at the following locations: Forshey Gallery Tall Grass Arts Association, Dragon Fly Gallery Chicago, Downers Grove Library, Elmhurst Art Museum, and Artist Guild Artsy Gallery.

See Maryann’s art on display at Brushwood Center at Ryerson Woods June 28 – July 24, 2025.

Colorado, by Maryann Wattelle. Watercolor on paper collage.

Maryann’s Artist Statement

When Sister Forest Sings, by Maryann Wattelle. Acrylic painting, with figure of a tree rendered in bright pinks, oranges, yellows and blues.

“Growing up we had just one piece of adornment in our house, DaVinci’s painting of The Last Supper. I’m not certain how we even got that. With my ten siblings, material possessions of any sorts or extras were nonexistent, only to be found by making your own magic. This left mountains of room for our collective imaginations to put our heads together and make rivers flow. I believe this freedom crafted an artist life for me.

Fascination with oil slicks in summer rain puddles, clear glistening drops on blades of grass, ice crystals clinging to barren trees still inspire my art. My art is motivated by and depicts struggles and everyday observations, collective actions, and creative synthesis.

Stained Glass, Watercolor, Printmaking, oil paints and oil sticks are my mediums of choice along with collage, found objects and whatever means express the action or emotion. With a focus and reverence to the natural environment as a reference.

I also enjoy the vast resources of our museums and glean inspirations from my visits.

Art is a shared experience and the streams of color and mark making become the language for me. I work both figuratively and abstract, drawing from current events or memories. Nature is a constant influence with its brilliant hues, tones, lines, and balance. Responding and reacting I attempt to disseminate feelings and emotions into the piece. Success is when a connection is made with the viewer and maybe inspiring their creative sparks too.”

Image: When Sister Forest Sings, by Maryann Wattelle
Media: Acrylic on canvas

Artist of the Month Events

More Than a Tree, by Maryann Wattelle. An acrylic painting with a tree trunk at center. Yellows, greens, and browns are used, along with a red-pink in the upper left corner.

June 28 | 10:00 am – 3:00 pm | Free
Open Art Workshop with Maryann Wattelle

Open Art Workshop is open to anyone who wants to make something in any area of visual arts and crafts, from the experienced artist looking for a community of others to work with, to the complete novice who just wants to try something out in a low pressure environment, or the family looking for a fun kids’ activity to fill their afternoon – this workshop is for you!

Image: More Than a Tree by Maryanne Wattelle
Media: Acrylic on canvas

July 16 | 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm | $20

Create & Sip – Constructing and Deconstructing

Create & Sip is a monthly workshop hosted at Brushwood Center where participants can explore fun projects using supplies and tools from the Brushwood Art Supply Exchange, BASE. It’s an opportunity to get creative, try something new, and enjoy the company of fellow art enthusiasts in a relaxed and welcoming atmosphere.

Image: Collage by Maryann Wattelle.

Media: Mixed media, paper

Artist of the Month is a new program at Brushwood Center featuring artists who align with Brushwood Center’s mission and explores themes of health, equity and justice, nature and the environment. Each month we feature an artist who will:

  • Display their work at Brushwood Center at Ryerson Woods
  • Teach a Create and Sip Workshop in their area of expertise
  • Demonstrate their work at an Open Art Workshop

Meet Magdalena Kranc-Velazquez

Magdalena Kranc-Velazquez is a mixed media artist, working in collage. Her work includes intricate collages that feature layering and delicate, yet dramatic, hand painting and drawing. She also creates altered books, creating one-of-a-kind keepsake memory books for her clients, using their photos, jewelry, documents, buttons, and fabrics.

Magdalena’s Artist Statement

A vintage mirror frame, holding a collage featuring butterflies and a woman's face.

“I discovered passion for art while recovering from cancer. During this time I drew closer to God and he showed me places of myself I wasn’t aware of. In my art I want to grasp a longing for unknown world. A safe place. Home for healing, acceptance, joy and love. When I create, I’m in the flow where I’m enjoying the process and trust my artistic choices. Creating art makes me feel relaxed and in the moment where time doesn’t exist.”

Image: Curiosity, by Magdalena Kranc-Velasquez
Media: Paper collage, acrylic paint, vintage mirror frame

Artist of the Month Events

Mixed media paper collage inside vintage mirror frame.

May 31 | 10:00 am – 3:00 pm
Open Art Workshop with Magdalena Kranc-Velasquez

Open Art Workshop is open to anyone who wants to make something in any area of visual arts and crafts, from the experienced artist looking for a community of others to work with, to the complete novice who just wants to try something out in a low pressure environment, or the family looking for a fun kids’ activity to fill their afternoon – this workshop is for you!

Image: Way home by Magdalena Kranc-Velasquez
Media: Mixed media paper collage, vintage mirror frame

A collection of junk journals, handmade books made of various materials.

June 18 | 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm Create & Sip – Junk Journals

Create & Sip is a monthly workshop hosted at Brushwood Center where participants can explore fun projects using supplies and tools from the Brushwood Art Supply Exchange, BASE. It’s an opportunity to get creative, try something new, and enjoy the company of fellow art enthusiasts in a relaxed and welcoming atmosphere.

Image: A collection of junk journals by Magdalena Kranc-Velasquez. Media: Paper, fabric, thread, mixed media

Artist of the Month is a new program at Brushwood Center featuring artists who align with Brushwood Center’s mission and explores themes of health, equity and justice, nature and the environment. Each month we feature an artist who will:

  • Display their work at Brushwood Center at Ryerson Woods
  • Teach a Create and Sip Workshop in their area of expertise
  • Demonstrate their work at an Open Art Workshop

Meet Diana Noh

Diana Noh is an interdisciplinary artist working with photography, fiber, and installation. Her practice celebrates reconstructions of distressed photographs of architectural spaces and landscapes, exploring themes of trauma embedded in her family relationships and cultural in-betweenness.

Diana has exhibited pieces in Asia, North America, and Europe, at venues including Space HNH in Seoul, South Korea; Griffin Museum in Winchester, MA; Woman Made Gallery in Chicago, IL; The Arts Council in Fayetteville, NC; Eastern Market in Detroit, MI; Editart in Geneva, Switzerland; The Art Center Highland Park in Highland Park, IL; Hudson Valley MOCA in Peekskill, NY; Cranbrook Academy of Art Museum in Bloomfield Hills, MI. Her work is collected in the collections of Jennifer and Dan Gilbert, Kyungil University, and numerous Private Collections.

Diana currently resides in Chicago, IL. She holds a B.F.A. from Kyungil University (South Korea) and earned an M.F.A. at Cranbrook Academy of Art (Bloomfield Hills, MI).

Diana’s Artist Statement

“I reconstruct distressed photographs of abandoned spaces and landscapes to explore the trauma of growing up between cultures. I identify with buildings that are hidden but accessible; they stand in for my body and neglected feelings. Born American and raised in a Korean household, the emotional burden of being raised between two different cultures has left me angry, resentful, guilty and confused. I seek to understand my internal fracture through a process of destroying and rebuilding large-scale photographs. I physically break down my imagery, incorporating tearing, burning, stitching, sewing, restoring and breaking parts to visualize my recovery process. These images become a stand-in for my body. I grapple with the tension of materials, construct a space primarily using canvas paper that lays its schema somewhere between two and three dimensions. I employ a variety of stitching methods to introduce chance into the work. Hand-stitching allows me to make intricate but slow stitches; machine-sewing allows me to utilize time but encroaches my authority. I build new layers of skin above my scars. They become my own space to rest, the only space which allows me to intentionally sink into selfishness.

Image: 흥(興), 2024 by Diana Noh
Media: Archival pigment print on Hahnemühle canvas

Artist of the Month Events

April 26 | 10:00 am – 3:00 pm
Open Art Workshop with Diana Noh

Open Art Workshop is open to anyone who wants to make something in any area of visual arts and crafts, from the experienced artist looking for a community of others to work with, to the complete novice who just wants to try something out in a low pressure environment, or the family looking for a fun kids’ activity to fill their afternoon – this workshop is for you!

Image: Rapport by Diana Noh
Media: Archival pigment print on Moab paper

May 14 | 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm Create & Sip – Natural Dyes with Invasive Species

Create & Sip is a monthly workshop hosted at Brushwood Center where participants can explore fun projects using supplies and tools from the Brushwood Art Supply Exchange, BASE. It’s an opportunity to get creative, try something new, and enjoy the company of fellow art enthusiasts in a relaxed and welcoming atmosphere.

Image: 자화상, 2024 by Diana Noh. Media: Archival pigment print

Artist of the Month is a new program at Brushwood Center featuring artists who align with Brushwood Center’s mission and explores themes of health, equity and justice, nature and the environment. Each month we feature an artist who will:

  • Display their work at Brushwood Center at Ryerson Woods
  • Teach a Create and Sip Workshop in their area of expertise
  • Demonstrate their work at an Open Art Workshop

Meet Katelyn Patton

Katelyn Patton is a visual artist working in Chicago who was born and raised in the Midwest. Her practice focuses on the urban ecology and biodiversity of plants in the city and beyond, the ways that material and color can be naturally derived from them, and how this hyper-localized knowledge can be used as a vessel for connecting multiple overlapping histories, stories, and meanings.

Katelyn has been the Maker-In-Residence at the Harold Washington Library, received a DCASE award in 2020, and has had solo shows at Extra Projects, the Lillstreet Arts Center and the NEIU Fine Arts Center Gallery. In 2024 she received her MFA in studio art from UIC. She also received an award from the UIC Sustainability Fund to establish the Art Garden, a space for cross-disciplinary explorations with plants and alternative materials.

Katelyn’s Artist Statement

Common Songs (August) by Katelyn Patton

Media: Hollyhock, Coreopsis, Scabiosa, Safflower, Bachelor’s Button and Hopi Black Dye Sunflowers imprinted on silk and linen. The flowers were steam or hammer printed in the shape of bird calls recorded at the site of their harvest.

“My practice focuses on the urban ecology and biodiversity of plants in Chicago (my home), the ways that color can be naturally derived from them, and how this hyper-localized knowledge can be used as a vessel for connecting overlapping histories, stories, and meanings.

To do this, I research different types of plants that can be foraged or cultivated in the city and use these plants to create pigments, dyes and paints through traditional techniques. By grounding this research in my immediate habitat, I am able to confront the complexities and contradictions of the effects of climate change, colonization, and globalization on an accessible community-level scale. My work functions at the border of ecological science communication and fine art.

I believe that artistic interpretation creates an emotional connection beyond datasets and that art changes the emphasis of the questions asked during scientific research and recontextualizes observations. I established the Art Garden within the Plant Research Laboratory at UIC with the aim of generating awareness of the benefits and accessibility of natural fibers, fungi and pigments; fostering an understanding of sustainable materials; and cultivating cross-disciplinary connections. I also maintain a practice of foraging weeds within the city, as they play a fundamental role in urban biodiversity. My graduate thesis focused on common buckthorn, Rhamnus cathartica, an invasive plant that is dominating the forests of the Midwest. I facilitate community dye workshops with buckthorn in order to complicate the simplistic negative narratives surrounding invasive species and encourage people to engage with their environment.”

Image: Common Songs (August) by Katelyn Patton
Media: Hollyhock, Coreopsis, Scabiosa, Safflower, Bachelor’s Button and Hopi Black Dye Sunflowers imprinted on silk and linen. The flowers were steam or hammer printed in the shape of bird calls recorded at the site of their harvest.

Artist of the Month Events

Image: Tagma by Katelyn Patton.
Media: Coreopsis, Buckthorn and Scabiosa dyes on silk on panel

March 29 | 10:00 am – 3:00 pm
Open Art Workshop with Katelyn Patton

Open Art Workshop is open to anyone who wants to make something in any area of visual arts and crafts, from the experienced artist looking for a community of others to work with, to the complete novice who just wants to try something out in a low pressure environment, or the family looking for a fun kids’ activity to fill their afternoon – this workshop is for you!

This month, our April Artist of the Month Katelyn Patton will be our guest artist. Katelyn is a visual artist working in Chicago who was born and raised in the Midwest. Her practice focuses on the urban ecology and biodiversity of plants in the city and beyond, the ways that material and color can be naturally derived from them, and how this hyper localized knowledge can be used as a vessel for connecting multiple overlapping histories, stories, and meanings. Stop by to learn from Katelyn!

Image: Tagma by Katelyn Patton.
Media: Coreopsis, Buckthorn and Scabiosa dyes on silk on panel

Image: Orbweaver by Katelyn Patton. Media: Buckthorn bark dye on silk wheat pasted onto wood panel.

April 16 | 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm Create & Sip – Natural Dyes with Invasive Species

Create & Sip is a monthly workshop hosted at Brushwood Center where participants can explore fun projects using supplies and tools from the Brushwood Art Supply Exchange, BASE. It’s an opportunity to get creative, try something new, and enjoy the company of fellow art enthusiasts in a relaxed and welcoming atmosphere.

Katelyn Patton, who will teach us to make Natural Dyes with Invasive Species. For a sneak peek of this project, visit Brushwood’s Open Art Workshop on Saturday, March 29 where Katelyn will be demonstrating from 10-4 pm. You can also see Katelyn’s work displayed in the Brushwood Center Gallery from March 29 – April 24.

Image: Orbweaver by Katelyn Patton. Media: Buckthorn bark dye on silk wheat pasted onto wood panel.