
Zan Asha: Fairy Tales, Nature, and Halloween
08/31/19 • 44 min
Meet Zan Asha, an artist who is blending fairytales, nature, folklore, and Halloween into her art.
Zan is friendly, fun, and has one of the most interesting family and career stories I’ve ever heard. Zan has done time in corporate life, been a vet tech, directed a dance troupe, written, traveled, illustrated, and kept bees.
Zan’s family is a blend of Hungarian (Slavic), Romany, and Middle Eastern roots. Her childhood was full of fairytales and folk songs from her parents. In addition to fairytales, Zan loves mythology, ancient knowledge, secrets, Alice In Wonderland, Halloween, and forest animals.
Zan grew up in New York City and moved to Florida when she was a teenager. She returned to NYC to study film and theater at NYU. After school, she spent a decade running a dance and theater troupe. After the 2008 recession, Zan moved from dance to bee-keeping as part of an initiative of bringing bees back to the Bronx.
Zan moved back to Florida to care for her parents. A car accident damaged her back. As an active person, Zan felt miserable and lost. A lover of learning, Zan started to investigate different art mediums. An interest in working in 3D lead her to functional ceramics. A kind pottery shop owner taught her how to make hand-built pottery. Her friend Carolee Clark validated her pottery was on the right path. She will be participating in the Bewitching Peddlers of Halloween art show this year.
Last October, Zan’s home was damaged during Hurricane Michael. It is still under reconstruction. The garage with her kiln has no lights yet, so when she works at night, she needs a flashlight. Her studio is crammed into her bedroom. Many of her art supplies are still in storage.
To wrap up the show, Zan shared with us a Hungarian hedgehog fairytale. She encourages us to make life as colorful as possible and to take risks.
Check her out at https://www.themagicalvagabond.com/. She is on Facebook and Instagram as “themagicalvagabond”.
My website is https://www.halloweenartandtravel.com.
Meet Zan Asha, an artist who is blending fairytales, nature, folklore, and Halloween into her art.
Zan is friendly, fun, and has one of the most interesting family and career stories I’ve ever heard. Zan has done time in corporate life, been a vet tech, directed a dance troupe, written, traveled, illustrated, and kept bees.
Zan’s family is a blend of Hungarian (Slavic), Romany, and Middle Eastern roots. Her childhood was full of fairytales and folk songs from her parents. In addition to fairytales, Zan loves mythology, ancient knowledge, secrets, Alice In Wonderland, Halloween, and forest animals.
Zan grew up in New York City and moved to Florida when she was a teenager. She returned to NYC to study film and theater at NYU. After school, she spent a decade running a dance and theater troupe. After the 2008 recession, Zan moved from dance to bee-keeping as part of an initiative of bringing bees back to the Bronx.
Zan moved back to Florida to care for her parents. A car accident damaged her back. As an active person, Zan felt miserable and lost. A lover of learning, Zan started to investigate different art mediums. An interest in working in 3D lead her to functional ceramics. A kind pottery shop owner taught her how to make hand-built pottery. Her friend Carolee Clark validated her pottery was on the right path. She will be participating in the Bewitching Peddlers of Halloween art show this year.
Last October, Zan’s home was damaged during Hurricane Michael. It is still under reconstruction. The garage with her kiln has no lights yet, so when she works at night, she needs a flashlight. Her studio is crammed into her bedroom. Many of her art supplies are still in storage.
To wrap up the show, Zan shared with us a Hungarian hedgehog fairytale. She encourages us to make life as colorful as possible and to take risks.
Check her out at https://www.themagicalvagabond.com/. She is on Facebook and Instagram as “themagicalvagabond”.
My website is https://www.halloweenartandtravel.com.
Previous Episode

Cara Bevan: Gourd Life
Listen to this episode to peek behind the vines of gourd life with award-winning gourd artist, Cara Bevan.
I saw Cara’s work for the first time at the 2018 North Carolina Gourd Society Arts and Crafts Festival. I was floored to find such a passionate group of gourd enthusiasts. I knew people made crafts out of gourds – but I didn’t know the extent of it...the creativity includes everything from kids crafts to fine art. Cara brought several amazing Halloween-type pieces of work to the show, including a skeleton that won First Place in the Halloween category.
Cara grew up on an animal rescue farm which sparked her love of nature and animals, the subject of her work. All the animals she creates come across as beautiful and admired, even those traditionally thought of as creepy.
Cara started her career doing acrylic paintings of animals and fantasy creatures. Cara’s grandmother is a gourd lover, having over 3 decades of art and growing experience. In 2007, she gave a Cara a gourd that she couldn’t decide what it should be worked into. Cara took one look at it and saw a turtle, the first step in her gourd artist path.
Her biggest challenge in creating art out of gourds is finding the right shapes for the sculpture. She said they are like working with wood. Some gourd artists are purists and like to leave the natural brown color and not add any other objects to the gourd. Cara loves to add clay, wire, and paint, and combine gourds together. The biggest gourd sculpture Cara ever made was a 5’5” tall baby giraffe, composed of 11 gourds.
Cara’s “gourd hoard” contains over a thousand gourds, ranging from 3” tiny ones, to one the size of a table. Cara grows her own gourds and purchases at shows. Gourd vines can reach 40’ to 50’ long and will climb on anything. Serious gourd growers attend to their gardens daily.
There are 3 types of gourds. The decorative colored ones popular in Halloween decorations will rot like pumpkins. Another type is the loofah, which are grown for use as sponges. The last kind is the hard-shell type, which are dried out and used for art.
Gourd conferences provide a place for gourd lovers to come together and make art. Cara teaches technique classes at these conferences. Gourd people are all “crazy art people” who love to share ideas.
Halloween is Cara’s favorite holiday. She has plenty of macabre monster ideas waiting in her sketch book. She collects skulls, skeletons, skull art, and creepy things. She will be doing more anatomical work in the future.
Cara has a passion for storytelling and illustration. She recently did the artwork for “Born to Soar” a book about a vulture raised by turkeys (by Bill Barnes). Cara recently completed a commissioned vulture sculpture named Infinity made of 7 gourds, the largest bird she’s made so far. She loves tedious details so carving each individual feather was relaxing.
You can find Cara on Facebook, Instagram, and her web site. If you are in Winston-Salem, NC, look for her cosmic turtle scaled to 44 feet on a billboard on Highway 52 until July 2020.
My website is www.halloweenartandtravel.com.
Next Episode

Gina Iacovelli: The Modern Legacy of Victorian Hairwork
Hairwork is the art of making jewelry and other sentimental objects out of hair. If you like Halloween or history, you’ll start noticing it at oddities shows, incorporated into Halloween art, and at historical museums.
In this episode, we meet hairworker Gina Iacovelli, who helps us experience the sentimentality of this artform. Gina taught herself hairwork from Victorian journals and then created her business of making sentimental and memorial jewelry. She loves expressing the past in modern way.
Hairwork is about sharing love. Just think of how we still save hair from children’s first haircuts today. Gina recommended the book “Love Entwined: The Curious History of Hair Work in America” by Helen Sheumaker to those interested in learning more.
In addition to her hairwork, Gina is an interior architecture designer and creator of The 8th House Collection, a modern mourning and memorial emporium.
Gina grew up outside Gettysburg, PA which helped spark her love of history. She currently lives in Charleston, SC. Gina recommends these places in and around Charleston to Halloween lovers:
- Magnolia and Bethany Cemeteries
- Bulldog Ghost Tours
- The Charleston Museum and Gibbes Museum of Art
- Fort Moultrie and Poe’s Tavern and the Edgar Allan Poe Library at Sullivan’s Island
- NeverMore Books in Beaufort, SC
You can find out more about Gina and her work at https://www.instagram.com/mementos_entwined/ and https://the8thhousecollection.com/mementos_entwined/
My website is https://www.halloweenartandtravel.com.
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