Featured

Minimalist Floral Wall Art – Where Form Meets Feeling

A modern home is more than function—it’s a feeling. A place where morning light rests gently on the walls, where objects don’t just decorate, but tell stories.
This is the space that inspired the Minimalist Floral Wall Art series — six digital artworks that explore the delicate balance between geometry and emotion.

Each piece in the collection is built from geometric elements, yet reaches far beyond lines and colors.
The black, white, and soft pink tones are not merely aesthetic choices — they are visual echoes of moods and inner states. Through contrast and rhythm, these artworks evoke quiet landscapes
where stillness, playfulness, and harmony coexist.

These prints don’t dominate a room—they breathe with it. Placed in a bright dining area, a cozy reading nook, or a creative studio, they gently enhance the character of the space while telling their own story. In such a setting, the green of plants and the warmth of natural wood
enter into dialogue with the art — as if dreaming together of a calmer, more mindful life.

The series is digitally crafted and available in my Etsy shop. Each piece is downloadable, easy to print, and adaptable to your home.
More than decoration, these prints offer a mood —a space that radiates calm, freshness, and inspiration. A gentle reminder that beauty lives in the simplest forms, if we allow them to speak.

If you want your walls to hold not just style, but meaning — explore the shop and find the piece that speaks to you.

https://evajoachimartdesign.etsy.com/listing/4432942951

Featured

5 Simple Art Therapy Exercises for Home

Art therapy doesn’t require special tools or prior experience. All it takes is a little space, time, and openness. These exercises help you reconnect with yourself, slow down, and observe what’s happening inside – through colors, shapes, and movement.

1. Gesture Drawing with Closed Eyes

  • Choose music that feels good right now.
  • Close your eyes and let your hand lead – with a single, uninterrupted line.
  • Observe: what was the movement like? Energetic, gentle, fragmented?

This exercise helps connect the body with its inner rhythm.


2. Choosing Color by Feeling

  • Look at your colors (pencils, paint, markers – whatever you have).
  • Don’t overthink – just pick the one that “calls” to you.
  • Create a color patch or fill a surface with it.

Color choice often reflects our current emotional state.


3. Collage to Inner Voice

  • Cut out images, words, shapes from magazines or old papers.
  • Don’t plan – just place side by side what resonates with you now.
  • Glue them onto a sheet and observe: what does it say about you?

Collage helps reveal what’s inside through free association.


4. Free Writing – “What’s Inside Me Now?”

  • Set a timer for 5 minutes.
  • Write continuously, without stopping – anything that comes.
  • It doesn’t have to make sense. It doesn’t have to be beautiful. It just has to be honest.

Writing helps release, clarify, and arrive.


5. “Me Now” – Self-Portrait from Feeling

  • Create a self-portrait – not based on appearance, but on inner feeling.
  • It can be a symbol, a color patch, a shape – anything that represents you right now.
  • Look at it: what does this image reveal about you?

The self-portrait acts as an inner mirror – it’s not about how you look, but how you are.

These exercises don’t require artistic skills or special tools. The goal isn’t to create something “beautiful,” but to get closer to yourself. If you feel like it, try one — and notice how it affects you. It might help you better understand what’s going on inside, or simply offer the joy of creating.

You can download these exercises, pin them to your wall, and return to them regularly — especially when you feel emotionally full or overwhelmed.👇🏻

Creating from the Body – When Movement Leads

Art doesn’t always begin with the eyes. Sometimes, the hand knows what it wants to say before the mind does. Movement-based art – such as gesture drawing, intuitive painting, or body-centered collage – doesn’t strive for visual perfection, but rather expresses the flow of inner energy.

This form of creation doesn’t ask permission from logic. It doesn’t plan, measure, or correct. Instead, it listens, allows, and flows. The movements of the body – whether subtle or bold – convey what words cannot: tension, joy, memory, presence.

“Art is the source of inner strength.” – Agnes Martin

This thought perfectly captures why creation can become an energetic practice. Art is not only expression – it’s nourishment, helping us reconnect with ourselves.

What happens when movement leads?

  • Connection with the body: In the creative process, the body is not a tool but a source. The rhythm, direction, and intensity of movement reflect our inner state.
  • Energetic release: Gestures not only shape form, they release energy – helping us let go, arrive, transform.
  • Intuition and presence: Movement-based art doesn’t ask for explanation. It simply asks: be here. Listen. Allow.

How to practice it?

  • Try a gesture drawing: eyes closed, to music, with a single continuous line.
  • Create an intuitive painting: choose colors based on feeling, not concept.
  • Move your hand, arm, shoulder – and let the motion guide your brush, pencil, or collage element.

Practicing art and finding inner peace

Work and everyday stress often push us to seek ways to unwind, to shift our thoughts away from worries, to pause the noise of the world and turn inward—toward ourselves.

In my experience, practicing art can do just that. Think about what really happens when you sit down to draw or paint. Maybe in the first few minutes your thoughts are still racing, but soon you find yourself in a state of mental quiet. It’s like switching off the TV. You’re not thinking about anything—just drawing, making lines, painting. As your brush moves, it’s as if something deeper takes over. Sometimes you know exactly what you want to create, other times it unfolds as you go. Either way, a different state of consciousness emerges. And that’s what has a truly healing effect on our emotional well-being—it evokes a sense of inner peace.

If we consider the impact colors have on us, it’s clear that even coloring a simple image can bring emotional refreshment after a difficult day.

The latest visual inspiration from evajoachim-creative.studio highlights six gentle yet profound reflections on how creating art can help us reconnect with inner calm:

  • Enjoy the healing power of color
  • Focus on the present moment
  • Take a break and unplug
  • Embrace imperfection
  • Create for your own joy
  • Let creative energy lead the way

You don’t need to be an “artist” to create. All it takes is permission—to play, to experiment, and to let go of goals in favor of process.

If you’d like to get closer to yourself through art, visit the Creative•Studio website and immerse yourself in the world of lines and forms.

Coming soon: downloadable adult coloring pages in the Gallery Store. After purchase, simply print them out—and when you feel it’s time to pause, take a moment and color.