Vibrant Journey – Abstract Expressionist Painting, 5×5
Title: Vibrant Journey
Media:
Mixed media (acrylic, watercolor pencil, soapstone)
Dimensions:
5″ x 5″ x 1 1/2″
Creation Notes:
When I wanted to add some subtle, wandering marks on this painting, I dug in a drawer for a mark-making tool I’ve never used: a soapstone pencil.
The father of a long-ago boyfriend had a long career as a graphic designer, and a lot of cool stuff in my supplies came from him. These soapstone pencils were used for making light marks on dark surfaces. They’re still in use today for marking anything from fabric, to steel, to cheese slates!
I got to try out a “new” tool, and I was pleased that it gave me just the “ghostly” effect I was hoping for.
Sold!
To Tanya.
May 31 – Abstract Expressionist Painting, 5×5
Title: May 31
Media:
Acrylic, watercolor pencil
Dimensions:
5″ x 5″ x 1 1/2″
Creation Notes:
I think I have the most fun when I’m playing, just seeing what happens when I mix these colors, use that brush. Often I come to a place where I’m not sure whether to keep going or not — it doesn’t feel done, but I’m afraid of ruining it… Or I’m just curious what would happen if…
In those cases, my general rule (from my Keys to Creative Flow) is to “take the riskier path.” That’s what I did in this case, adding the black watercolor pencil over the rainbow colors.
I liked what it looked like before adding the watercolor pencil, but for me playing in the Creative Sandbox is about trying things. If I hadn’t tried it, I’d never know!
This is also one of the advantages of working “tiny and daily”: if I don’t like how it comes out, not to worry, because I’ll be starting a new piece very soon. 🙂 (Plus I can always paint over what I don’t like — I do that a lot!)
In the Collection Of:
The artist (that’s me!)
PS — Pssst! Know someone who might benefit from seeing this today? Pass it on!
The Most Important Practice
Calligraphy Art:
Remember: the most important practice is just getting back on the wagon.
Media:
Watercolor, pastel, watercolor ground, graphite pencil, steel pointed pen on paper
Dimensions:
5 5/16″ x 5 1/2″”
Creation Notes:
My life goes better when I engage in certain practices on a daily basis. Meditating, for example. And writing. And making art. And making music. And clutterbusting, too.
I’d like to be able to say that I engage in each one of these things every single day. And although I could say it, alas, it would not be the truth.
It’s nigh impossible to do everything I’d like, every single day, but I still aim to do at least a good chunk of them. And I even fail at that sometimes.
The key in maintaining optimal happiness and quality of life, though, is not 100% consistency, but rather self-compassion when I stumble. And most important, getting back on the wagon.
Falling off does not mean you’re a failure, it just means it’s time to take notice:
- Look at why you fell off
- Notice how it feels when you’re off track
- Remind yourself how it feels when you’re on track
And then just get right back on the wagon and take a fresh start. No whippings, no guilt.
Onward, ho!
In the Collection of:
The artist (that’s me!)
Want an original ArtSpark for your own collection? Watch my Facebook page, because I periodically auction off my ArtSparks there.
PS — Pssst! Know someone who might benefit from seeing this today? Pass it on!
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My New Creative Practice: 3x5x365
Two weeks ago, at Patti Digh’s Design Your Life Camp, I had the great fortune of taking a 90-minute writing workshop with ninja poet and writing teacher, Maya Stein. What a treat!
My biggest takeaway from those way-too-short 90 minutes was the humble index card as creative practice.
Let me explain.
If you’re familiar with my 10 Rules for the Creative Sandbox, you may remember that Creative Sandbox rule #4 is think tiny and daily. For my visual art practice that means a couple of things:
1) Tiny time goals
In other words, do a little bit every day, even if it’s just for a few minutes.
Back in 2011, my original commitment was fifteen minutes a day, but lately I’ve been using the model that Laureen, one of my Academy members, shared in the Academy forums: for her creative practice, “any amount counts.”
You might be amazed at how even just a few minutes keeps your toe in the creative stream. For me, a tiny bit of time every day keeps my creative spirit happier and better nourished than a big chunk of time once a week.
(Plus the reality is that those big-chunk-of-time commitments rarely happen in my life unless I’ve paid money to go to a retreat somewhere that isn’t my own home. Those are great, and we need them periodically — it’s why I’m so passionate about hosting retreats and workshops myself! — but who has the time and money resources to do that every week?)
2) Tiny size goals
I confess I love to work BIG — full-body brush strokes on wall-sized canvases. But the fact is, the bigger the art, the more time and energy invested in creating it.
That creates a lot of pressure!
Even if I remind myself that there is no wrong (Creative Sandbox rule #1), and aim to stay focused on process, not product (Creative Sandbox rule #2), I still like the feeling of completing something and moving on to the next thing. Thinking quantity, not quality (Creative Sandbox rule #3) makes me feel wonderfully prolific, which pleases me no end.
So after years of making a living creating largish artworks that require a time investment of dozens, even hundreds of hours, I started working small in my creative practice. My biggest ArtSparks are no bigger than about 8×10″, and some are as small as 1×1″.
What this has to do with index cards
Tiny time goals and tiny size goals are easy to apply to my visual art, but until my workshop with Maya, it didn’t occur to me how tiny size goals might also work with writing.
Enter the 3×5 index card.
When Maya passed us each an index card, and gave us two minutes to write to a prompt, the proverbial lightbulb over my head went wild.
Here it was — exactly the container I needed to apply think tiny and daily to my writing life!
Since the day after I came back from Design Your Life Camp I’ve started each morning scribbling words on a 3×5 card. This past week I’ve started posting the cards on my Facebook page. And today I’m trying out posting them here, on the blog.
This is my new creative practice!
Dealing with Side Effects
All of this is great, but not without some not-so-great consequences. For example, I’m noticing already that knowing the cards will be shared makes me a whole lot more critical and less free while I’m writing them.
But perfection is not the point! Impressing you is not the point!
The point is to write. To commit to a writing practice that I can sustain.
And sometimes side effects have their own positive consequences. For example, noticing that I’m becoming more critical and less free is helping me tackle those particular problems.
The point is to write, and the point is also to practice allowing myself to make crappy stuff.
I figure if I force myself to post whatever comes out in my tiny and daily morning 3×5 write, I will desensitize myself to the fear of judgment for putting stuff out in the world that is less than brilliant.
And I also figure that if I maintain a daily practice, over time what comes out will probably get better.
And, since my story about myself is that I’m a creator and builder, not a maintainer, I also figure that setting a ridiculously achievable goal — like a creative practice of a daily two-minute write on an index card — may help me change that story.
Remember the Golden Formula
My goal, then (and I can feel myself bust out in a cold sweat as I type this), is to fill a 3×5 index card every day for a year.
(Oh my god, did I just say that?)
I’m pretty scared that I’ll stumble. A whole year? Even with a ridiculously achievable goal, stumbling is very possible. Maybe even probable.
But if I do stumble, I commit to practicing my Golden Formula:
Self-awareness + self-compassion = the key to everything good
In other words, I get to notice if I stumble, notice how it feels, remind myself that I’m human, and treat myself with lovingkindness, just as I would a good friend.
I also commit to keeping in mind that the most important practice is just getting back on the wagon. Which is why it’s a very good thing to make it a very short wagon.
Like two minutes a day. Like a 3×5 index card. Like “any amount counts.”
Here we go!
PS — Pssst! Know someone who might benefit from seeing this today? Pass it on!