for more than a year I've been stumbling... creative pursuits have been a struggle, the desire has never waned but the doing has been a different story
I've read a lot of books on making art, creative blocks, why we want but can't do
some have been so wonderfully well written, so full of thoughts and insights - I seem to be alternating from putting the books down, gazing off into the distance, puzzling my way through what I've just read or clapping them shut and heading upstairs to finally give something I've been toying with a go
I've learned many things but most of all I've learned the only through this is to keep going
keep working and stop trying to make it perfect
don't try to get it right
just do it and see what happens
then do the next thing
I won't say I'm completely over being blocked but I am certainly flirting with being on the other side
and along the way I've done some different things that have given me a lot of pleasure - nothing amazing, just interesting things that have given me the impetus to try what comes to mind
such as the print I made from when I was mulling paint - made into one of my every-other-day collages
it reminded me of a harvest moon so I combined it with some painted tissue paper from last year, in dark greens and burnt umber with shots of black - I noticed it had paint marks that looked almost like leaves and dark lines that reminded me of leafless trees
a few scratched lines
and then thinking about water...
(the subject of an upcoming member's show at our local Art Centre)
I've painted a few watery-looking papers with watercolour over the years but nothing that has excited me
I decided they needed texture and since I don't yet have the skill to paint that I added some to watercolour paper using a artist's medium and once it dried I painted it with some of my own paints, ones I made from wood and from rocks
a very interesting effect, beautiful marks
and I love the graininess
I love this section, almost like tidal pools, but I used a low-quality paper and it's buckled
I tried again on higher quality paper but used too much of the medium so the results were not great but I know now to use a light hand so will try again
I was always so afraid of wasting supplies, both from an environmental and a cost perspective but have come to learn there's a little thing called "gesso" which can be painted or scraped on top of failures, allowing the paper to be used again
the other day, whilst reading one of said books I got the idea to draw stems with a gold metallic pencil crayon and add leaves in a green-gold colour using a palette knife
don't ask me why, I have no idea
the book I was reading was not about painting at all, just about whenever you can, get your creative carcass into the studio and do what you're thinking of when you're dreaming it up
don't wait while you think about if you really should use that pencil, or are you sure green-gold paint would look good as a leaf
or what kind of shape the leaves should be
so I hauled myself up the stairs and ten minutes later I was looking at this
after I did the stems and leaves I thought
"I love this! I should add flowers..."
and immediately the "No" started... adding flowers would be too risky because I don't how to paint flowers, and I could wreck the whole thing - and what colour would they be anyway? What colour would be best with this green? Are the angles of the stems going to work for flowers or will they look awkward?
???????????
I grabbed the closest tube of paint and squeezed it out, mixed it a bit with the green and started
nope, they're not that great but they're a start and I can work with them
if I choose to
or I can leave it alone, put it in my sketchbook and write ideas down beside it as I think of them
but I don't have to keep trying to make this into a finished "perfect" thing
it can be what it is... the embodiment of an idea
a thought that occurred to me and wasn't afraid to try
and now I think this is one I could try to interpret in embroidery
stem stitching, French knots, appliquéd leaves... hmmm
the wheels really haven't been at all rusty - it's the fingers that are stiffened with disuse
but as I lean in to this new of way of thinking, of working, I feel the nimbleness coming back
and hot on it's heels, the joy
5 comments:
I think that’s beautiful. Knowing how simply gorgeous your stitching always is, I can’t wait to see this done in needle and thread.
That's good to hear - especially the return of the Joy!
And I rather like your gold stemmed leaves and flowers. Loose, impressionistic, charming.
Creativity does ebb and flow doesn’t it? It giveth, it taketh away and if we keep going, as you say, hopefully it giveth again. Agony and ecstasy! But we keep at it because we need to, like breathing… and it feeds us. I love your flowers. I would leave them just as they are, spontaneous, free and absolutely beautiful.
I do not experience creative blocks ANYMORE, since many years ago. I don't believe in creative blocks anymore, and this is where that constant creative energy and flow comes from. If you believe in them, and focus on them, you will experience them. Guaranteed.
We are creative beings by birthright, and come from an infinite creative Source... so we CANNOT be creatively blocked in any way! Go out in Nature and observe the world around you... is there anything like a creative block in Nature?!? Let yourself play with those ideas, and see what happens! :)
Much love,
Monica xoxo
P.S. Those flowers are gorgeous! I'm so glad you started playing with paint, too! Lots to write about in a letter, uh? :)
Ah, the best part - the joy! We all want more of that in our creative lives (well, in our entire lives, really) and sometimes it's very elusive.
I wonder if you'd mind sharing the names of some of the books you're perusing? Always good to find ones that come recommended by someone who has found them useful.
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