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Blog

Updates and ramblings of an artist doing her best.

What else is in a painting? - A recipe

7/31/2025

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and all the hidden ingredients.
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Annoying story you have to scroll past to find the useful stuff:

When I was a child I used to draw with crayons and you could never quite get the sheen right.
So I moved onto pencil crayons and gee, they were so much better.
I'd get cramp in my hands from pressing so hard to make sure they looked almost printed.
I started painting with watercolours - owned so many of the Winsor and Newton mini packs after getting one for each birthday.
I loved taking the little jackets off each one.
I have a graveyard of them stacked up with stickers on each.
My best friend brought me one set a few years back - Faber-Castell, veryyyy nice.
Has some golds and neons.
It's what I use for commissions.
Bit hard to put into a bag for on the go - so I whack out the trusty mini WN's for on the go.
Watercolour is my first love.
Acrylic was my second.
It captures emotion like nothing else.
Messy, not always cooperative, bright, buildable.
Wonderful.
Did you read this?
Do you also read the stories on the internet recipes?
Does anyone?
​

Ingredients

Cooking time - variable.
Mental agility
Understanding of colour
Looking at it in shapes
Choosing the emotion behind it
Getting into the right mode to paint
Being prepared to work through or take a break if tiredness is gonna impede progress or emotion is going to convince you to give up
The actual timeline of when it needs to be finished by
100,000 attempts at similar things in the past
​Constant zooming in and out to look at the minute and then the whole picture
Lots of tea and coffee
Other paintings at the same time
Knowing the progress and the process

Annoying unrelated advert that gets in the way

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its me im advertising my own stuff cos this print is gone september 1st

Method

1. Begin with a base of your understanding of colour and ability to see shapes work out how to translate from reference image to canvas or paper. Sometimes this step will go wrong and you may have to resort to 'grid jail' to get it right. The eye sometimes just sees what it wants to see and you gotta whip it back into reality. Unless you're doing abstract. 

2. Whisk up the right emotion to paint. Can't paint a beautiful landscape if you're angry. Unless that's the dichotomy you wanted? Stormy sea? I guarantee it'll show up in the brushstrokes so don't skip this step. Why are deadlines stressful? Mood all wrong. I recommend finding out what you need to get into the right headspace to start with. I like an admin morning and a painting afternoon currently. This covers the right 'mode' to paint.

3. Once the batter is made you have to make sure you are prepared to call the shots on when to take a break. Are you actually about to rip it in half or do you just need a break. Are you tired... or are you sneakily bored? Call yourself out on your bullshit and act accordingly.

4. Technically step 0, I'm just throwing it in now to shake shit up. 100,000 attempts at similar things is very helpful for knowing when you're about to hit a wall. It's the difference between knowing you can't draw hands and having the evidence to prove it.

5. Take a tea or coffee break - let things simmer.

6. Take a lap of your house while you're at it.

7. The actual timeline and perceived timeline are different. Get used to telling the difference. No it is not going to take you '2 hours'. It's going to take 7 with all the other bits in between. So alter your entire schedule entirely. This recipe covers the entire process not just paintbrush on canvas time - because it's all part of it. Hence 'cooking time- variable'.

8. Make sure to check all the other projects are also cooking along nicely alongside the one. Sometimes they are lovely accompaniments. Sometimes they could do with being in another kitchen entirely but this is reality.

9. Chop up your vision by constantly zooming in and out of said painting. You gotta try and see up close and the whole picture at once. I recommend looking at easel from the other side of the room out of the corner of your eye like you're pretending not to see it.

10. Finish up the dish by trusting the progress and the process. This requires a generous helping of mental agility and the ability to trust yourself too. Take a deep breath. Serve.
i like metaphors - see you over at instagram.
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Too busy to meditate.

7/25/2025

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You should sit in meditation for 20 minutes every day- unless you are too busy.
​Then you should sit for an hour.
- Zen Proverb

A short blog today.

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If you are rushing on your walk - you should slow down
If you are angry with your painting - you should take a break.
If your workload is overwhelming you - you should see what you should outsource.
​When you are scrolling and drinking and talking and a million other things - you should just pick one.
Stop expecting too much of yourself.

Gentle reminders to myself to notice when I'm going too fast.

A short sweet list of ways to slow down

ADHD brain does struggle with remembering this
​So we start again every time

I let myself enter creative flow and sometimes that looks like multi tasking and chaos -
But when I reach 'peak-drive' - I take a walk.

I managed the habit of meditating daily for a while -
It had to be guided for my brain - but non-the-less.
I go to it now in times of need.
But I know really I need it daily.
​
Preventative not reactive.

Carving out time for moments of stillness is a constant trial.​

This is my gentle push to myself to remember meditation is really helpful.

Are you able to carve some stillness out today?

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Keep Calm and Carry on -

7/18/2025

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even when you hit the 'I hate it' wall.
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I'm at it - I've reached the:

"Oh god, I hate it. I can't paint. I want to give up. WhAT HAve I cREAATED."

stage of the process.
This is the part I often allow myself to turn off the camera filming my bts content so I can just be.
My face looks like this usually at this point:
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Hilariously - if you get your Sherlock Holmes on - you can see I hadn't even started the face at the point I took this - which means I've been at this point... a while.
​
I am not about to very serious in this blog post.
I am clearly writing this to avoid painting the painting on my easel.

Why does it happen?

What do I do?

Does it always work?

​Why does it happen?

My theory is that my head is full of gremlins that purely thrive on the lifeblood of anxiety and stress.
They are subdued by calm, peaceful painting - but the moment things start to move towards the messy middle - they are alerted.

Ears prick.

Snouts sniff.

Evil grins spread across their little faces as they eye each other to gather.

This is their moment.
​
As one united army they arrive to the brain centre and begin their war cries.
A brain gremlins war cry, though united in feeling, is chaotic in delivery.
They all yell at once- different iterations of panic, hate, misery.
They have been waiting all week for this.
Meditation kept them at bay.
So did that lovely walk and that fussing of a dog.
​But they have their moment to shine at last and they want to take full use of the opportunity.

(What do you mean your head isn't full of gremlins.
I'd go see the GP mate.)

​What do I do?

I was born understanding a gremlins war cry so well- I thought myself part gremlin.
But one day I was gifted a mirror and saw I had no snout.
No pointy ears.
And when I grinned - I was not evil.
A warriors heart non the less - but a gremlin I was not.
Armed with this new information I began to see the strategy of the gremlin nation.

I observed the war cry and the cult-like nature of the gremlins.
Stood aside and saw that what they yelled was not truth.
Gremlins fear peace and calm.
For in the peace and calm their very own inner demons take over.
Like a vicious cycle of misinformation and chaos.

I decided on a new movement - I would listen to each gremlin - a third party.
I would stamp it out with the angry gremlins.
Cry with the sad gremlins.
Breathe deep with the panicked ones.

Sometimes we blasted angry music and painted anyway.
Sometimes we took a nap.
But I stopped hating the gremlins. 

​Does it always work?

Gremlins are great at what they do.
They're loud,
They're proud and
they're excellent tacticians.
They're a practiced army that protects by keeping things small.
Even armed with my new 'I'm not a part of this' mentality - some days they won.

We keep a big scoreboard in the break room - it's waist height so they can reach it.
I'd say I'm winning this year - but honestly, I think they're cheating.

Zoe, why the hell did you write this?

Sometimes you gotta shake up the fear of failure with a little absurdity.

Sometimes you gotta remind yourself you don't have to take everything seriously.
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I'm keeping the first piece from The Archway Series close by to help me remember I can do it.
When the gremlins tell me "YoU Got it RIGht thatttt time"
I say "Guys, pipe down - that's a finished piece. Go make some coffee or something".
Zoe, take me away from the gremlins
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An artist walks into a business expo.

7/11/2025

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On the left - me, showing up as myself ready to see where the day takes me.
On the right - some pretty cool looking architecture from Leicester.
And this below -
is the webpage I signed up for the day on about 6 weeks ago during a business course.
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Would I have done that without the support of the course?
Probably not...

...let's be honest.
​No.

I initially registered my business in 2014 / 2015.
No training - no structure - an artist who liked to paint things for people.
That last part in 2025 is still true as ever,
But I've been making big changes since I re-registered in 2024.

I'm mostly writing this for 3 reasons:

1. For the person reading who is thinking 'yeah, but I could never'.

2. As a big thanks and well done to the kind people I spoke to on the day.

3. To look back on when I need a boost that I can in fact 'do things'.

So I'll be writing something for each title of what people might want to know and then a nice summary at the end. 

Why did I go?

To get out there! I am happy with one string to my bow being individual commissions - but art can lift, heal, entertain, decorate and capture so many other places beyond peoples homes. Finding those connections without face to face contact can be like shouting into the void. Who even are you? 
And for inspiration.
I had so many great talks with people throughout the course of the day about possibilities that become opportunities and then diary dates and memories. So many genuine, kind and interested people with equally interesting business stories and passions for art outside of their career. Foxes in suits, love for abstract art and aspiring artist daughters - some great conversations.

Most nervous about?

Honestly, and this is going to perhaps come as a surprise - getting there via the train system.
I know most people would think talking to strangers or making a pitch or even walking into the room. But once you're in there - seeing everyone all talking together and knowing everyone is there for the same reason - takes a lot of pressure off. No one forces you to chat but they are waiting in case you'd like to all the same. 
Reminding myself everyone is feeling a little nervous at first no matter how cool cat they are on the outside helps too. Mention it - be honest - you'd be surprised!
But it's the trains for me - I am one for getting numbers and times all mangled up - so navigating a new journey gives me the most anxiety! Especially when they cancel your connecting train - but the staff on the platforms were super groovy and helpful. Ask for help and often - you're gonna get it.

Gaining momentum

Ok so that initial conversation is a bit like jumping off a dive-board.
But remembering you're not just speaking to a stranger in the street and that everyone is there literally to network really helps.
Susie - thanks for helping me rip off the band aid with that great, inviting smile.
And also showing me how the Linkedin scanner works. This is the future. (I am joking - but equally thank you hahah).
Try not to overthink it.
Say hello and away you go.

Unexpected moment

Sometimes you're gonna talk to people who it's clear you aren't B2B compatible with - but still appreciate a great chat. 
My unexpected moment is spending 10 minutes chatting to Gareth and having a laugh as they tried to convince me to sticker graffiti Leicester on my way home with my tiger stickers.
They're a car company.
I don't even drive.
​But what fun!
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Best freebie (come onnnn - we're only human)

Look, I'm pretty sure if you wanted to sign up (it's free) just to come and collect all the freebies you could - no one would stop you.
Maybe if you brought a giant sack.
I saw some fantastic freebies on my way around from interesting stress balls to recyled material journals to every type of pen imaginable.
I turned around at one point and could see someone playing hook at duck and another person standing next to a cardboard cut out of Dolly Parton.
My favourite freebie - was the creme egg in a box over with Steve.
It just made me laugh that truly anything can be branded - even the branded.
Plus, Dale really enjoyed it when I got home ha.
Graham said it's a Lincoln Imp!
​And you bet it's branded!

Best piece of advice

I had a great chat with Amir (very thankful to see a familiar face - would recommend taking someone or meeting someone if possible) who drops gold advice like it's going out of fashion anyway. The best advice I got was to keep building your support network - fill it with likeminded creatives, people who are supporting you, people who know way more than you, people who do different - and do the same for others. Being self employed means you are stocking your own office floor.

Biggest takeaway

If you walk around with a clipboard - people are going to assume you either work there or have a stall - and that's not a bad thing - because you end up in some great chats about all sorts!
​Wear comfortable shoes if you're walking from the train station.
Also - go and get gelato afterwards - you earned it.
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Final thoughts

At the start of the year I was aware I 'should' go to things like this - I was working on changing my mindset towards being visible and comfortable in business spaces. I don't fit the stereotypical bill but that doesn't mean I'm not committed, serious and reliable. Changing the face of business by turning up as yourself helps other people to realise it's not unattainable. 
This networking event was free and it was packed - all day.
So many opportunities for connection, advice, learning and inspiration all in one building.
I'm very glad I went.
​Roll on the next one!
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Leicester sights spotted on the way - such a sunny day too.
Email me if you'd like to stay in touch
Mailing List - stay updated!
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The Call - Answered.

7/4/2025

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Last month I put out a call to my mailing list - an opportunity to celebrate creatives with an interview.

Join my mailing list to find out more cool stuff here:
Snail Mail

So, today we celebrate the wonderful
​

Chloe Chicarelli​

Artist, Muralist, Graphic Designer & Illustrator based in Dayton, Ohio

Chloe-

"Everything you need is within you. I wish every woman would give themselves the grace to listen to their body... I will put care, attention, love, and devotion into what I do. I don't really care for money - I could do this as a philanthropy thing. But we gotta eat.

I think little me would be really happy that I'm doing something that's just me. I didn't even know I would live this long or make it this far."

You can either watch, listen or read the interview below - or all 3 if you like!

The Blog Version:

I feel I simply have to preface this with the biggest thank you to Chloe.
She jumped right in, whole hearted- wonky mic, technical difficulties and all.
The honesty and humour she answered my questions with is worth its weight in gold.
​Thank you my 'big tumbleweed of emotion'.
​You can see that integrity shine through in her work at:
Chloe Chicarelli . com
Social links:
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Chloe at work on the 'Twilight' mural.

The short version:

Q: What was your favourite project?
A: The "Twilight" mural for the Juvenile Court system. "It was my second ever mural, and honestly one of the most humbling experiences. I worked with kids who were in tough situations, and giving them a creative outlet was incredible." I loved orchestrating the project and being able to work with a local famous artist's design.

Q: How do you push through tough days?
A: "I follow this quote by Abraham Lincoln: 'Leave nothing for tomorrow which can be done today.' If I'm lazy today, I'll pay for it tomorrow. It can become a knock-on effect that leads to burnout." I also try to listen to my body and understand my own feminine energy cycles.

Q: What made you say yes to creative opportunities?
A: "Why the fuck not? I'm at the point in my life where I take opportunities I'm presented with - even if they feel weird and wild and some scary." I want to support other artists and believe we can all succeed together.

Q: What would your younger self think about your current work? A: "I think she'd be really happy that I'm doing something that's just me. I didn't even know I would live this long or make it this far. I keep seeing milestones, and it's really cool that I keep pushing and making cool stuff."

Q: What do you wish people knew about your creative process?
A: "I wish people would appreciate the care, attention, love, and devotion I put into my work. I hate talking about money, but we've got to eat. When people say 'I could do that,' I say, 'Go on then.'" I want people to understand the real work behind creating art.

Q: What's been your biggest creative journey moment?
A: "It's been more of a slow burn. Every little thing I've done has built up. Now I'm at a point where people tag me in projects, and I'm building a reputation." Moving to America gave me a chance to become the person I know I am.
​
Q: What's your ultimate goal?
​A: "I want people to smile. I mean, somebody almost crashed their car yesterday just looking at my work - that's the ultimate compliment!"
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The grab a coffee and settle back version -
If you prefer to read and take in some more peaceful media.

​

Zoe Davey  0:00  
Hi, welcome to the first video of this type on this channel. It is linked to a blog. And if you've been following my creative journey recently, you'll know that I've been making a blog every single Friday, and recently, I reached out to my mailing list because I knew there's some wonderful creative people on there that I wanted to hear from, and figure that other people might want to hear from too. And and someone replied, It was Chloe, and I was so pleased, and I'll always be so pleased and thankful for her being the first interviewee. Enjoy the interview. It's long. We go off on tangents, but I love to listen to that kind of stuff where creatives talk to other creatives. They go off on tangents, and they don't apologize for it. I've done the best I can with the audio. It will get better in time, but for now, is what it is. It's scrappy. I've done the best I can with it. I've really enjoyed this interview. We talk about what you tell her younger self about what she's doing now, we talk about what her favourite projects were, and why they were her favourite projects, and how she pushes through on the really difficult times. It's heart-warming, it's wonderful, and I hope you really enjoy it. And now there's just one more message from me before we carry on. So it turns out, if you screen record a phone call, it doesn't necessarily record the audio. So this is the video of me apologizing for not being in the corner of the screen because I turned my camera off by accident and the audio doesn't work. So we live and we learn. That's what I'm going to say.

We'll get better from our mistakes.

Chloe C  1:32  
Lady, right. We are going to make an attempt at an introduction. Okay, this is the first one of these, my honoured guest, Chloe Chicarelli, here she is all the way from America. Thank you for being the first one. Thank you for being

Always down to be your test guinea pig, whatever you need. I love this. This is so awesome, amazing.

Zoe Davey  2:01  
Um, we've basically got how many questions are we doing today? We are doing eight whole questions. But the amount of me and you like to talk this is going to be, like, six hours long. So buckle in, everyone.

Chloe C  2:14  
Shut me up if I start yapping.

Zoe Davey  2:19  
No that's the point. Is, if I'm yapping too much. I need to be reined in, because I'm the one that's supposed to ask the questions and then shut up.

Chloe C  2:26  
That's fine. I am definitely more of the listener in a relationship than us than the talker. So...

Zoe Davey  2:32  
Well, it's your turn to have the spotlight put on you. I don't know how you feel about that. Try well, for anybody who doesn't know Chloe, she is a mural artist and general creative person, I will link her stuff on her website, because it looks amazing. My favorite piece, I think that you've done, I've written it down here so I didn't forget was the Downtown Box. Like it's a huge side of the building with the birds in it, and they're like the Heron, yep. It's amazing. That's really nice colors. And that's the picture that I'm going to put in there. 

Chloe C  3:10  
A little segue into question one. Then, fantastic.

Zoe Davey  3:15  
I didn't even plan that. That's perfect. Let's what is question one. Question one is, what's your favourite project you've ever worked on? And why? 

Chloe C  3:23  
Oh, my goodness, crazy. Yeah. So Twilight, that one was called, and it's actually the biggest project that I've done to date. And funnily enough, it was only my second ever mural. So I used to work a nonprofit in downtown Dayton, and I just completed the first one. They just kind of said, Hey, did anybody want to do this mural? Nobody really wanted to paint it. The design had made. So it was already like, ready to go. And I was like, I'll do it.

Zoe Davey  3:59  
That's the dream, there, right? 

Chloe C  4:01  
Like, you're pretty good at this. I'm like, thank you. Like, any other opportunities that you've got, like, thrown my way, I'd absolutely love that. Definitely no money. This was, this was before. This was definitely getting my experience. Yeah. So yeah, the owner just approached me one day, and she was like, Hey, we're going to be doing a really big project. Would you like to be the lead muralist? And like, no hesitation. I was just like, let's go. And then she kind of proceeded to, you know, go. Just explain a little bit more about what that would all entail. It was actually a program with the Montgomery County Juvenile court system. So they it's juvie kids, you know, just under 18, kids who have, you know, maybe kind of done something they shouldn't have. They're in bad situations. It was one of them. Most like humbling things I've ever done. So they have a project called the halo project, which is helping adolescents achieve long term objectives. So it just gave these kids, you know, something to do that kept them out of trouble. A lot of them were, like, really, really good artists, and they just, you know, I'm so happy that they finally had something where they could be themselves. It was a little bit scary. I'm not gonna lie, I had a couple of like, 18, 17 year olds who were like, I'm a run. I'm a run every day. And I'm like, please don't run. I've got so much of the stuff that I have to do with this, but it was such an eye opener. I was the lead muralist on that one, so I kind of really got to understand, like, the inner workings of it all, you know, like, I didn't get too much into the budget side of things, but just kind of like all the working parts and everything that it takes to make something like that go and I just, I loved it. I loved being able to orchestrate stuff, you know, getting out there doing actual work. The design was actually done by a local, famous artist called gay Hilton. So I was just like, super stoked to be doing her work, getting it all done. It was, it was really good. It really could, really cool, really good, really cool. 

Zoe Davey  6:34  
You can see it on your website, and that that side of the building is absolutely massive as well. I think you've got, like, a panel over there and before and after.
I didn't know that they had been painting it with you as well. That's amazing. Like, I mean, to throw you in at the deep end, like, obviously you said yes, not only that, you you're also in charge of these people, making sure that they like, on task, doing their thing. And you nailed it anyway. No wonder it's your favourite.

Chloe C  6:53  
It was definitely stressful. It was literal blood, sweat and tears shed mostly, I was hoping, like heavy equipment and stuff. Yeah, it was a it was one of the most cool learning experiences, as stressful as it was, and lots of egos and personalities and stuff, it was none of that mattered. Like, the moment I had done that, every all the kids were only helping on, like, kind of, like, the block colours and stuff, I just remember there was a little bit of lettering in the bottom left corner, and that was, like, the last thing I was doing. And like, it's so crazy. Like, you start something that's so daunting, and then, like, you have that final brush stroke, and then you're like, Oh, I'm doing it so weird, all of that, all of that stress, and I finally just finished, and you're like, oh, oh, it's happened. I did it.

Zoe Davey  7:57  
It was so good. So, yeah, no, that's an amazing answer. Thank you so much. If this doesn't record, because this is our first time doing this. If this doesn't record, I'll just cry, because that was a wonderful answer, and people need to hear that, because I think it's it's really inspiring to hear the joy that comes out of doing things that aren't necessarily always broadcasted as like, job type. Isn't easy.

Chloe C  8:26  
I mean, there's a couple of things, ;)  but...

-dog barks - sorry, just making sure the dog was fed.

Zoe Davey  8:36  
Important things in life.

Chloe C  8:38  
...is that, yeah, no, I just You just gotta keep going. Just gotta keep pushing. It's really cool, even when things are hard, like, I guess this,

Zoe Davey  8:52  
Maybe then after we piggyback and we go on to Question three, because that would be a perfect segue. It's, How do you push through on a hard day? Okay? And then we can go back, unless you want to do question two?

Chloe C  9:05  
What is Question three?

Zoe Davey  9:10  
Question three is, how do you push through on a hard day when the going gets tough? What? What are your ways of pushing through?

Chloe C  9:18  
Um, so David actually has this quote that he says all the time, and it's really and I want to say this right? I'm going to try and say it, and then I'm going to make sure it's right. What is it? Leave nothing for tomorrow, which leave nothing for tomorrow, which can be done today. Abraham Lincoln, oh, we like that. And I really hold it like quite close to my heart, honestly, as I continue to, like do this and start to, you know, get deeper into this, I'm a solo artist. I. Uh, the work comes out of my hands. Like, yes, there's times where I have assistance and they can do, you know, block colouring and stuff like that. But whatever I don't do today, if I want to be lazy today, I'm going to pay for that tomorrow. Yeah, I and it can really start to become a knock on effect, and that really affects me with burnout. So, yeah, I I am. It's kind of funny, like, I do feel like quite a lazy girl at heart, and it is hard to kind of push through sometimes when all you want to do is just go home and just, like, watch something on Netflix. But I just, I just know that if I don't do it today, it's tomorrow's problem, and then that will be the next day's problem. And it kind of like weirdly pushes me to keep going. It just makes me do that extra, you know, that extra 20 minutes that tomorrow, you know, and 20 minutes every single day you've lost another hour. And then, you know, that's that Friday feeling when I want to actually go home. I've kind of been through that. So I guess it's all about just trying to find the balance, listening, obviously, to your body. And I guess this does actually kind of go into like question four as well. Yes, yes, like that. I'm getting older. My body is not getting younger. I'm trying to get fitter right now. I'm trying to be better about listening to my body, but it really has been a game changer, especially for women. Following your cycle, I think is one of the most important things that you can do, because me, in my luteal phase, all I want to do is scream and cry. I don't want to be understanding to be I don't want to be dealing with bugs. I don't want to, you know, think no matter what industry you're in, I definitely think women should do that, because we are absolutely beating ourselves raw trying to keep up with men who have cortisol levels that get reset every 24 hours. We're just different creatures. And I just, I wish that every woman would give themselves the grace that I'm a bit of a hypocrite. I don't always do this. I sometimes have headlines, you know, I sometimes have to push a little bit harder. But if I could preach from the mountain tops, listen to your body. Listen to when you need rest, listen to what hurts and what you can do. You know it's like, oh yes, self care. It's just some face masks that's put some conditioning treatment on our hair. It's so much deeper than that. It's listening then checking in with yourself. Every single day, I find myself often, and more often than not, like, in a bad mood and trying to figure out the the core of that is it my body saying, oh, I need, I need to rest. Oh, my body's like, irritated, like, everything that you need is within you. I feel like, and maybe I sound like a crazy, crazy lady at this point, but like

Zoe Davey  13:01  
I'll join you!

Chloe C  13:03  
Your body knows what it needs. And I am really trying to, like, yesterday, it we had tornado warnings yesterday, and it was crazy. And I just said, okay, my body needs to rest. And I even joke about it. It's my forced relaxation. I sit there, and I will make myself just sit there, and it's like, I just wait for my body to, like, soak in and just appreciate it. I also think there's a lot of like, good with like, meditation and all that kind of stuff as well. But that's a whole 'nother. That's a whole 'nother conversation. I like it, though. Just take care of is that so obviously, yourself, learn how to listen to your body and then actually listen to your body, and then actually do the things that your body kind of needs you to do before everybody else who's up at 5am and doing this and drinking this and doing everything that's so good like Do what makes you happy? Sometimes I'm barely surviving, so

Zoe Davey  14:04  
We're just doing our best.

Perfect. Well, what was, Oh, we're going back to two then what were the biggest challenges you faced on that project? So we kind of covered them going back to the first mural project. But what was the biggest challenge for you? Do you think 

Chloe C  14:24  
Bugs.

Zoe Davey  14:28  
 Bugs?!

Chloe C  14:30  
So many bugs. There's so many spiders, outdoors, outdoors, flying creatures and like, I don't really care for them, but it was just constantly. No, that was that was definitely not ideal, obviously painted in summer, when the lights come on at night, it's 

Zoe Davey  14:58  
Oh,my God. I. Had not even considered that that's wild. I did paint outside for pretty much the first time with acrylics the other day, and there were a few, but I imagine over there, it is a little bit Wilder.

Chloe C  15:13  
I was led over to America. Was not informed about them - horrendous.

Zoe Davey  15:18  
God damn it, David, you didn't inform her?

Amazing. What made you say yes to the first mural or creative or creative opportunity that you did? What made you say yeah?

Chloe C  15:33  
Can I swear?

Zoe Davey  15:34  
Yeah.

Chloe C  15:34  
 Why the fuck not? Yeah?

Zoe Davey  15:38  
 I agree.

Chloe C  15:39  
 I just, I'm, at that point in life, like I'm a take opportunities. I, you know, we get presented with these weird and wild things every day, and some of them can feel scary. Some of them, one right now, yeah, like this is literally to be on podcasts and stuff. And I'm just like, I am not. 

Zoe Davey  16:03  
Well, you clearly are. You're doing some great answers.

Chloe C  16:08  
And if I can do something that benefits other people as well, but women like, it's kind of funny around here late. I mean, there's, there's a lot of artists who have a lot of egos, and that's like a global thing, but just trying to find people who have, like, similar mindsets, and just, we all got to eat. We all want to eat. Why can't we all eat? You know, it's like, I really want to support everybody, and it doesn't have to be like, this petty thing and like so just fucking vibe, and we all have different skill sets. Let's come together. 

Zoe Davey  16:44  
-sings- Yes, collaborate and listen.

Chloe C  16:49  
Yes. Why not? 

Zoe Davey  16:54  
Indeed. 

Number six, we're firing through these. I'm going to check what time we're on. What time are we on? It doesn't tell you we're in the zone. Excellent. What? Where's my I can't read number six. What do you-This is my favorite little question that came up with- what do you think little you as in, like you as I don't know, maybe like 6, 7, 8, would say about the work you do now?

Chloe C  17:22  
You know, I got a little bit like, when I read your questions, I like, a little bit teared. I thought that one, oh, I think she'd just be really happy that she's doing something that's just me. You know, I just feel like we all again, we take these opportunities in life. And I got to a point, you know, had my fancy corporate job, everything was good, but I just wasn't happy. I just wasn't where I thought I wanted to be in life, and I didn't know where I wanted to be. I spent my life just thinking I'd be kind of a bit of just a floater. I've never really had like a secure friendship group. I've got my family and stuff, but I've just always been a bit of a lone wolf, so I knew that whatever I did do, I needed that to kind of fill that little bit that I always felt safe, and I've always felt safe when I'm on my own, because I only have to worry about myself, and that's clearly some therapist talk. 

Zoe Davey  18:25  
I'll make a note of that one down for you.

Chloe C  18:31  
I think she'd be really proud. I didn't, I didn't even know I would live this long. Yeah, think I'd make it, and I keep seeing milestones, and it's it's really cool, and I keep pushing, and I keep making cool stuff, and I keep doing cool stuff, so better not stop now.

Zoe Davey  18:53  
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you for being really honest with that answer. You could have just said anything, and you gave me your heart.

Chloe C  19:00  
And that was because you said it my whole body -visibly wiping tears-

Zoe Davey  19:05  
Well, that's how you know it's true. That's how you know it's the good stuff. Yeah. So what do you wish more people knew about the process behind your work?

Chloe C  19:19  
Everything?

Just just the care, attention, love, devotion, that I will put into what I do, like I don't. There's not many things unless, like, you're a real prick to me. I'm going to give you my everything. Like you really have to, like, be an asshole to me, for me to, like, start not giving you my fault. Yeah. Wait, what was the question again, my brain just...

Zoe Davey  19:50  
 I think the question was, what do you wish people knew? Yeah, what do you wish more about the process behind it?

Chloe C  19:56  
Yeah, just the work that goes in behind. Scenes, the admin, the putting in every single receipt that I've ever spent on any kind of pain, figuring out how to be a business owner, because this is my first year full time. I still don't really know what I'm doing, but I'm figuring it out every day, and...

Zoe Davey  20:21  
...clearly something's working.

Chloe C  20:24  
I just wish people would give me the support and appreciate artists and the time and effort that does go in, because I will forever wear mug across my forehead. If I could do everything for free, I would, yeah.

Zoe Davey  20:38  
But we can't. We can't eat that way.

Chloe C  20:42  
I could do this, like, just as a philanthropy thing, that would be awesome. Maybe one day, that is where, maybe one day, because I hate talking about money, but we gotta eat.

Zoe Davey  20:53  
We have to eat, we have to pay for houses. We have to put clothes on our bags because we get arrested otherwise, you know? 

Chloe C  21:00  
Yeah, I guess that's the thing. A lot of people come to me and go, Well, I could do that. And I'm like, Well, go on. And then, well, you know, the cost of this, the cost of that, the cost of that, they can't seem to think of all the things like I, I was painting a mural, what, three days ago, and a guy came over. He was a general contractor, and I had four brushes laying on the floor. He was like, why have you got $200 just spilled out on the floor like that? And I went, Oh, you actually understand the value of things. 

Zoe Davey  21:36  
That's really cool, my friend, I saw something in my friend's story the other day that was like someone had asked, like, oh, you're a photographer. Do you just do that for fun or whatever? And then it was like, No, I just go to places with 300 300 Wait, 3000 pounds worth of equipment just hanging off me and try and make friends with toddlers for fun. No, of course, it's my job. But yeah, it's like when someone realizes how either how much time something takes, how much something costs, or how much effort and understanding and trial and error, how many times you failed before you got to that point when they recognize that, oh, that's a good day. That's a nice day. That's almost better than a pat on the back. It's a I see, I see what's going on here.

Chloe C  22:26  
I do. I mean, like, when I do my abstract stuff, a lot of people, that's where you really start to get the oh, well, I could do that. 

Zoe Davey  22:33  
Like, what the pain pouring thing, it looks amazing?!

Chloe C  22:36  
Just abstract work in general. Like, yeah, sometimes stuff only does take me two hours, and, yeah, charge you $1,000 for it, because that's how many times before, years and years and years learning all these different things to get me to that point. And it's just like anything. I just wished artists were kind of treated like general contractors. That's kind of where I feel in the same vein, yeah, yeah. 

Zoe Davey  23:05  
Never questioned a plumber. Never questioned a plumber in my life.

Chloe C  23:09  
Weird, isn't it? I can't believe we've made

Zoe Davey  23:12  
It has come to the last question, but we have, is there a moment in your creative journey that changed everything for you. 

Chloe C  23:23  
I was thinking about really, like trying to think of like something profound,

Zoe Davey  23:32  
It's okay, if there's nothing.

Chloe C  23:35  
I think it's kind of been like a slow burn more than anything. Yeah, I feel like every single little thing that I've done, I mean, I will say that working at the nonprofit, opened up a lot of doors, met a couple of people. I mean, yeah, just definitely, just through the years, just kind of, you know, building it up, building it, building it up. And like, now I'm at a point where, like, I'll go on Facebook every day and somebody's tagged me about a project, and like, I feel like just getting that reputation. And, yeah, you know, it's, I could lose that reputation in one day. I could do something, say something like, you know, cancel culture, like, and as a 90s baby, it can, it can be hard sometimes to find, like, where the wokeness is, and like what I can and can't say. I feel like, since moving to America, I was kind of given a, like, a bit of a second chance. I got to become the person that I know I am without all the past and everybody else's opinions and all that kind of stuff, you know, and it made me realize that I am a good person, and I want to do good in the world. And since that really it's just motivated me to want to do more. And I think within. Motivation comes that, you know, just it tumble. It's a big Tumbleweed of feelings and emotions to it.

Zoe Davey  25:11  
Doesn't have to be a movie moment right?

Chloe C  25:13  
 Sometimes, on and on and on, little meet cute, where everything just kind of went. You're a magical artist. 

Zoe Davey  25:21  
It's now, like, congratulations, but like, it's today, you're a magical artist. 

Chloe C  25:26  
Now, I feel like I've worked really hard over the like, I mean, I went to art school, I did all that good. 

Zoe Davey  25:36  
You did.

Chloe C  25:38  
Everything has just come out to this point where it was supposed to be. And again, I'm floating in a random country, in a random town, and my name's on buildings, and it's just, it's bizarre, but amazing. So yeah, definitely no magic firework moment, just a nice little slow Ember that's growing, and I hope it just keeps growing, because we should I want this to go to glow, glow forever with a because you're glowing right now, because this is so bright, the sun's just come out for the first time.

Zoe Davey  26:15  
Oh my gosh. Um, thank you. Thank you. That's not going to cover it. It's not going to cover it. It's it because, like, you need the people in your life who take a chance, and you take a chance of me all the time, so and now you're doing this for me. A special wish that this recorded properly. Wish with me. Ready? Please, please, please. -Chloe wishes, fingers crossed, on camera-. And then I had the little thing pop up that was like, You need to upgrade if you want to do 10 more minutes worth of speaking. I was like, I think the takeaways from this will be so lovely, because you've been so honest and so just full of joy about it all. And I think that shines through at the end of the day, even though things get really rough and like life is trying. Like, the thing that keeps shining through is that you love doing this stuff, and you love making beautiful things for people. And like, if you can keep doing that, then you're gonna pretty happy be

Chloe C  27:17  
I wanna, I want people to smile. Like, I mean, somebody almost crashed the car yesterday, and a policeman went like the wrong way yesterday, just because they're looking at my work and I that's one thing of a town where I don't think people understand general laws, but that's okay.

Zoe Davey  27:39  
I mean, that's a high compliment

Chloe C  27:41  
Oh God, Ohio now.

Zoe Davey  27:44  
So I think we'll carry on. Go, go.

Chloe C  27:50  
You inspire me again. The fact that you you have shown that you know, just because it doesn't always go the way you want it to the first time. Like tenacity, Zoe is it's all inspiring. It really we're doing this. Like, I just, we all have like things that we can, like, look up to, and like, just, I don't know, I love your style. I love how you can just bash it out and not overthink stuff, like everything that like, I wished I could do, like you just do it. You don't worry. You just do how do

Zoe Davey  28:28  
Oh how do you a how do you know I don't worry? You interview me one day. I'll tell you!

Chloe C  28:34  
You finished a painting. Zoe, 

Zoe Davey  28:37  
Oh, that is true.

Chloe C  28:38  
 I have ones, but I can finish them.

Zoe Davey  28:41  
But I'll get on you after we finish this, this interview, in a second, I'll harass you about finishing some art. How about that?

Chloe C  28:47  
Yeah, I mean, I'm getting my studio space set up right now, so I'm kind of, I can't wait to see that journey and where that all goes and my canvases have gone so like that's happening in the next you fully, fully talked, amazing, right? 

Zoe Davey  29:04  
Where can people find you if they don't know who you are or they don't already follow you? 

Chloe C  29:08  
They can find me on Facebook, on Instagram and Chloe Chicarelli Instagram at, just at, it's just because I sometimes put stuff on Tiktok. I am not the biggest social media girl.

Zoe Davey  29:25  
Want to we'll get there. You're a great example of someone who is bossing it without having to completely follow the norm. So that's okay. If there's people out there who are like, I don't know it, you're in that boat too, and you're still smashing it. 

Chloe C  29:41  
So okay, as the ex social media manager, I don't want to, I don't want to be there. And if you mural, I am International, you can go on my website, submit request, www.chloechicarelli.com,

Zoe Davey  29:57  
Oh my gosh. I want to see where this leads. I'm very curious. Trying to edit like that. All right, we're gonna end it now. Thank you for listening to everyone. Bye.


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Thank you so much for reading.
​This interview will always hold a special place in my heart.

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