This February we celebrate love in its quiet, everyday forms. Have a gentle look at connection through fine art.

Artwork: Intertwined, Jonathan Hateley

Intertwined

Cherie Lubbock

Art is an act of love. Every mark you make is a connection—between your inner world and the one we share—an offering of care, presence, and humanity that reaches beyond the studio and reminds us that we are not alone…

Artwork: Songs of Love, Chérie Lubbock

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Love & Connection

Susan D’souza is an American born Textile Artist and experienced Textiles Lecturer. Susan’s artwork has a focus on nature, transience and seasonal shifts in texture and colour…

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Susan D’souza

Love & Connection

Art is an act of love. Every mark you make is a connection—between your inner world and the one we share—an offering of care, presence, and humanity that reaches beyond the studio and reminds us that we are not alone.

February invites us to slow down and remember why we create.

Art is not just output—it’s a relationship.
With materials. With ideas. With people we may never meet, but somehow reach.

In a world that often asks artists to be louder, faster, and more marketable, February offers a quieter truth: connection matters more than attention. Love for your craft. Kindness toward your own process. Respect for the communities your work touches.

Valentine’s Day isn’t just about romance—it’s about devotion.
Devotion to your practice, even when it’s difficult. Even when it’s invisible. Even when doubt creeps in.

And on World Day of Social Justice (February 20), we’re reminded that art has always played a role in shaping fairer, more compassionate societies. Visual artists help us see differently—to notice injustice, to imagine alternatives, to humanise what statistics cannot.

You don’t have to make protest art to make meaningful art.
You don’t have to explain everything for your work to stand for something.

Sometimes, choosing care over cynicism is radical.
Sometimes, continuing to create is an act of justice in itself.

Susan D’souza

Susan was taught how to sew, knit and embroider by her Scottish Mother, Aunt and Grandmothers.

Educated in Yorkshire, Susan D’souza is an American born Textile Artist and experienced Textiles Lecturer. Susan’s artwork has a focus on nature, transience and seasonal shifts in texture and colour. Starting with observation and photography from large scale landscapes or small scale natural fragments, images are selected and translated through mixed media textiles, appliqué, paper collage machine and hand stitch.

Often the work takes the form of a series or sequential set of images showing change over time. Batik and natural dyes are a feature of more recent work, sustainability is increasingly at the heart of Susan’s textile work and research interests.

susan D'souza WEBSITE

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This section of the journal contains blog articles in 3 categories - Art, Business of Art and Wellbeing. It also includes articles created by Pure and published in Aspect County Magazine and Ingénu/e Magazine.

You can search the separate categories listed below or scroll through to discover the full catalogue.

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