Tuesday, 30 October 2012
Flex Your Creative Muscles...
...every day! It doesn't have to be anything spectacular. These pretty things are cupcakes. They look okay... they have white icing, with chocolate shapes (very Hallowe'en, all stars and moons), and it looks like they have a chocolate sponge base, which you can just see under bits of the icing. They have a secret ingredient, however. Instead of making my normal chocolate cup cakes, I added a little ginger to the mix. So...spicy chocolate cake. I like chocolate ginger sweets, so I figure I'll like chocolate ginger cake.
It's like anything, really. You can stick to the recipe (or the pattern, or the rules...), or you can ask yourself, what if I just add... and try it. That's creativity!
ps for the bakers among us, these cakes are made using a basic Victoria sandwich mix, with the addition of a half teaspoonful of ginger (from a Bart jar, if you're in the UK, though any kind of preserved ginger, including ground, would be fine in its place). Oh, and a lot of cocoa powder. I'm from the school of baking that assumes that There Is No Such Thing As Too Much Chocolate...so I just tip the packet into the mix until it looks as if I've added nearly too much. You have to practice that to get it right... dirty work, but someone has to do it, not to mention try the cake...
Monday, 22 October 2012
Making Room For Inspiration
'What is this life, if, full of care,
We have no time to stand and stare'
W.H.Davies
I'm sure you're familiar with this quote; I know I am. It was a feature of my childhood; my grandmother quoted it regularly. However, until today, I had never seen it written down. I thought the 'full of care' in the first line related to 'life', that our lives are full of care, and as a result, we're always busy, and don't take the time to look at things. Now, though, I interpret it differently; that lovely comma after the if suggests that it is we, ourselves, who are full of care. What's the difference? I hear you holler. Well... rather a lot, I think, when it comes down to it.
Our lives are possibly full of 'care', demands on our time, on our energy, on our intellect. If, however, we fill our selves, our heads and hearts, with cares, thinking about them endlessly, worrying about them, rehearsing different scenarios for resolving them, or just feeling sorry for ourselves, then in truth, it doesn't matter whether we stand and stare, or not: if we do, we won't actually see anything.
To be creative, we need to be in the moment. To be in the moment means actually paying attention to what is going on right now, the sounds, scents, sights that surround us. Making ourselves focus on what is in front of us...and nothing else. As I write, I can see out of the window to the garden. I've just spent a few minutes looking out at the trees, especially the oak at the end of the garden. It is a magnificent tree, and its leaves are just beginning to turn into their autumn colours. Being in the moment is about watching the faint breeze stir the leaves, admiring the sky as it peeps through the foliage... it does not, however embrace thinking that I really must go and rake up the falling leaves, and the bit of branch that got blown off in the last storm... Make room in your head for creativity. It's a practice, just like turning up and making the work is a practice. When you find you're thinking unrelated thoughts, kick them out of your head, and allow yourself to see what is really there...instead of worrying about it.
Perhaps the best way of being in the moment, for me, is to draw something. Then, there is only room for me to look at a leaf, explore it with my senses, and put that information down on paper. It doesn't really matter what the end result looks like; the important thing is really the looking, and the seeing, and the engagement with the leaf. Try it.
Labels:
drawing,
focus,
in the moment,
inspiration,
practice,
zen
Sunday, 21 October 2012
Quote Of The Week
"Perfection is the best you can do on the day".
Anon
This was quoted to me once by a yoga teacher, and I've been fond of it ever since. People seem to split into two camps; they either embrace it wholeheartedly, or reject it completely. There doesn't seem to be any middle ground with this one!
The logic is simple. If you are doing your absolute best, then perfection is, indeed, the best you can do on the day. You can't make it any better. If you really must aim for perfection, then perhaps this quote will help you to be a little kinder to yourself, to relax the rules you are living by; I suspect that they hurt you, on a regular basis.
Monday, 15 October 2012
Nothing Succeeds As Planned
It's true. Or, as John Lennon put it, 'Life is what happens when you're busy making other plans'. And if it's true of life, how much more true must it be for making art? We get an idea into our heads, for a piece of work... and we make it... and it doesn't match the picture in our head. So, we jump on our creative selves. You failed, we tell her. It's Not Right. It's Not Perfect. It's Not What I Wanted.
Funny how we rarely, if ever, contemplate the idea that it might be better than the original idea... Perfectionism is not a virtue; it's a vice. It squeezes the life out of creativity, and blinds us to the good points of what we actually make...if it allows us to make anything at all.
I knew what I wanted to achieve when I took this image...but it didn't actually work out that way. What do you think...is it a successful image? Does it have balance, visual interest, good colour? What do you think is wrong with it? I was disappointed with it...should I have been, do you think?
Now, fish out something that you have judged in your head as 'not good enough'; look at it again. Ask yourself the questions I ask above... how does it rate? If we can get past the subjective nature of perfectionism, we can see our work more clearly, and understand it better. Try it out.
Funny how we rarely, if ever, contemplate the idea that it might be better than the original idea... Perfectionism is not a virtue; it's a vice. It squeezes the life out of creativity, and blinds us to the good points of what we actually make...if it allows us to make anything at all.
I knew what I wanted to achieve when I took this image...but it didn't actually work out that way. What do you think...is it a successful image? Does it have balance, visual interest, good colour? What do you think is wrong with it? I was disappointed with it...should I have been, do you think?
Now, fish out something that you have judged in your head as 'not good enough'; look at it again. Ask yourself the questions I ask above... how does it rate? If we can get past the subjective nature of perfectionism, we can see our work more clearly, and understand it better. Try it out.
Labels:
analysis,
critique,
perfection,
perfectionism,
understanding work
Monday, 8 October 2012
Finding Your Star.
"I must go down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky,
And all I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by"
John Masefield
When John Masefield (1878-1967) wrote those words, he knew what he was about. He is describing the behaviour of someone who has found their true vocation. He is describing a sailor, but he could just as well have been talking about artists. Being an artist can be lonely, too. And because it is such a solitary occupation, mostly, it's easy to get lost. So many ideas, so many media; how do you find a star to steer by?
I believe that we have to create our own star to steer by, by thinking about what it is we want to achieve as artists. Businesses have 'mission statements', that are intended to help them to focus on what's most important in a maelstrom of choices. I think artists need something similar. To help us to make decisions about what it is we want to do, we have to be clear about what it is we are passionate about, and what it is we want to say to the world when we make art.
As an artist, I want to challenge people, to make them think, to show them my inner worlds, and invite them to wonder about them, to find things in the art that relate to their lives, perhaps allowing them to look at things in a different light. I want them to look closely at things that they might not have noticed before, and find joy in that. Over the years, my art has reflected that desire, even though I haven't always articulated it in that way before. That is my star; everything I make has to fit within that framework, or it is not really what I want to do...no matter how tempting it might be.
What is your star, your mission statement? What do you want your art to do or to say? If you're not sure, try looking back on what you've made, and what you are proudest of. What similarities do these things have? Is it materials, meaning, style, metaphor...what? What are you trying to say? It may take some time to work that out, and you may need to talk to others about it, too. I find that I know what I believe, when I hear what I say. So talk to others who are supportive of you, and see what they think. Try to explain what it is that drives you, motivates you to make art. If you can define that star, it will guide you in choosing what to make in the maelstrom of choices that face you, too.
Sunday, 7 October 2012
Creativity Prompt and Challenge : Combining Words
Language is wonderful. It develops, grows and changes with the culture it sprang from. Each word has its own meaning, sometimes more than one. For example, Red Square in Moscow is widely known, but did you know that the word red in Russian (krasni) used to mean 'beautiful'; hence, Red Square is really 'Beautiful Square', as well as Red Square.
Words are even more interesting when you combine them. This particular creativity prompt is an exercise, involving three words... Blue, Dream, Canary. The challenge is to take those three words, and make a piece that includes a reference to each of those three words. You can make the reference as direct or as indirect as you wish... but you have only one hour to make the piece (so keep it small!).
If you complete the challenge, please email me a picture, and we'll create a gallery for your work!
Labels:
challenge,
combining words,
creativity,
creativity prompt
Wednesday, 3 October 2012
Inspiration Journalling
I've already talked about how important it is to journal; I'm now going to suggest that you keep an Inspiration Journal. Keep this one in your studio, somewhere where it's EASY TO FIND! This journal is intended as the one thing you pick up when you need anything from a gentle nudge, to a kick up the backside (to quote one of my creative friends...). It will become your own personal creativity coach. It will remind you of all the things you thought you really 'ought' to do one day. It will have inspirational quotes, thoughts and statements, some of which you will find for yourself, some of which you will ask for, from your friends and fellow artists. It will support you through good times, bad times and all the bits in between.
Your inspiration journal needs to be large enough and strong enough for you to be able to write, draw and paint in. It needs to be able to cope with collage. You should put pockets in the front and back, so that you can keep odd bits of paper or clipped out articles in safety. You could consider giving it its own box to live in, so that you can keep a number of pens and pencils beside it, for easy grabbing! It could be an altered book, if you like. If you're not overly concerned about aesthetics, you could use a spiral bound folder, with plastic see through envelopes to hold your journalling...actually, I like that idea. I'm in bed with flu at the moment, but as soon as I'm well enough to get into the studio, I'm going to make one just like that. If you'd like to make one with me, make sure you have a folder, glue, see through envelopes, and card or other material for making the pockets.
Labels:
creativity,
inspiration,
inspiration journal,
journal,
journalling
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