Jul 17, 2016
Mar 7, 2015
Art isn't for sissies.
Art isn’t for
sissies.
All glory? All the time? Really?
There it is - the Mess. Once a promising piece of creative
fun, now it’s sitting, waiting on your desk - and there’s nobody to fix it but
YOU.
Look, you can see it across the room from here.
Worse, YOU made the mess, with the best of intentions,
pushing against the limits of your abilities
- and you found precisely where those limits lie.
And maybe you blew by some experience you already had under
your belt. Oops - Damn. Why? Why did I do that? How did I let that happen? Great,
I’ll be taking that psychological spiral inwards (and downwards) as well.
Where’s that flagellation stick?
You’re facing another learning curve – and you made it
yourself! Ah, the joy of intense analysis, pragmatic assessment, and once the
shame subsides, a plan – well, an idea of a plan.
There’s a process of decisions that must be made, some
slowly with deliberation and care, and more that must come rapidly, in that
uncharted space between experience and intuition.
And now all you have to do is wade in. It feels
like waiting for the trapeze to swing toward you so you can throw yourself out
into mid air to catch it.
Yeah, I can’t imagine why fear’s an issue.
And, as usual, there’s no net.
This is the time I envy the computer artist. Throw out that
nasty layer - Click - easy. Enlarge it so it’s bigger and easy to see - Click. Duplicate
the image and try out your brilliant idea – click, click, label, and save. I do
some computer artwork, too, so I know this; I do this, but when it comes to creating my
art I still prefer the Original, the genuine “hard copy”, the REAL piece of
physical creativity that stains my nails and strains my aging eyes, my temper,
and my temperament.
So, I’ve even asked for this. (Sigh.)
And Time, the
looming disciplinarian, regardless if there’s a deadline set, still judges, “You
STILL haven’t finished?” He stares at you; he stares you down, and ticks away
in angry increments.
Why do people struggle with creating?
Ha! It’s a war in there. And you’re on your own.
So if you are creative, and still working at it, know in your soul you've got more courage than it looks like from the outside. After you lick your wounds, grieve the losses, and regret the errors, - get up, assess the battlefield, plan a strategy, grab your armor, your weapons, and go back after it.
Just being back in the swing of it is victory. And this time, Serendipity may be yours, and the mess will prove to be nothing more than a learning curve.
Funny, how the scars never seem to show.
Ha! It’s a war in there. And you’re on your own.
So if you are creative, and still working at it, know in your soul you've got more courage than it looks like from the outside. After you lick your wounds, grieve the losses, and regret the errors, - get up, assess the battlefield, plan a strategy, grab your armor, your weapons, and go back after it.
Just being back in the swing of it is victory. And this time, Serendipity may be yours, and the mess will prove to be nothing more than a learning curve.
Funny, how the scars never seem to show.
Labels:
art,
artist,
creating,
creative,
creativity,
depression,
discipline,
drawing,
encouragement,
inspiration,
mess,
strength,
victory
Jan 10, 2013
BeadwoRx

Making beads has always been a hobby, a way to relax with
something 3D: beads and thread that I could hold in my hands as opposed to
skimming over the surface of a canvas with brushes and pencils, or hovering
over illustration board with the airbrush, never touching the image in
progress.
I had always made jewelry for my Mom, my sister, some
friends, and myself. My mom in particular, preferred my jewelry to any gift I
might give her, so I always made certain to make some for her birthday and
Christmas. Sometimes those dates were the only reason I had to justify playing
with beads during a long busy spell of illustration work.
The year she died left me with no one anticipating my
efforts. At Christmas, I finally had the excuse of making my sister’s gift, and
as I got out my beads I realized how much I missed it, and how much I missed
her.
Someone once told me that beadwork is grief work: focus on
one thought at a time, just as you place one bead at a time. The solitude and
introspection is worthy of any meditation, with the comfort of following a
reliable pattern. As the design is set, your hands can simply follow the
process while your mind is free to follow wherever your thoughts might
lead.
That Christmas an avalanche of beadwork pored out of me. The
work shifted and changed, it seemed to open up and become more of an avenue of
expression. It was no longer tied to my mom; it was mine, her Christmas gift to
me.
I now have an Etsy shop. http://www.etsy.com/shop/ZooLN
Thank you Mom.
I now have an Etsy shop. http://www.etsy.com/shop/ZooLN
Thank you Mom.
Aug 4, 2012
Why A.K.A. ZooLN?
I’ve always struggled with signing my name.
It took years to feel “worthy”—after all, if you sign a piece of
artwork, you ARE an artist, and who are YOU to call YOURSELF an ARTIST, and so
on and so forth till you realize, finally, after years, that it’s O.K. -really, -to sign your work -AND let it be seen -in PUBLIC. (It really is a
psychological growth issue, not uncommon to lots of creative types.)
And while all that was spinning in my psyche, I was wrestling
physically with my signature, which, like my handwriting, is about as out of
control as my drawing and painting is under control. I prefer pencil on paper or illustration board
with tooth. Don’t give me some skinny
pen to slide across some slickery piece of paper—I feel like a duck on ice.
Signing my name became a painful task. I had to contrive ways to
make it work, or close my eyes, sign, and tell myself I didn’t care that it
looked hideous. I could spend hours dredging up the courage for the attempt,
and hours trying to “de-hideous” it.
And especially when I was painting in oils, signing my name began
getting seriously tedious: my name is loooong and starts with an "S",
which is a real mess to do in oils. I remembered back to my childhood, watching "Zorro"
as the masked, caped hero in black silks deftly sculpted an effortless "Z" into a drape, a wall, or the bad guy's shirt, and thought, Hmm... "Z"s are soooo much easier.
And yeah, there was college:
I have a fabulous friend from college who (because she is highly
creative herself) always played with people's names. So, instead of Sue, I became
"Zoo". And it didn’t take much
to transform “Ellen” to “L N” among my college friends.
– So-- I sign the oil paintings (and just about all of my work now)
as ZooLN (Sue El-len). Its quicker, less angst-ridden, and, most important of
all, it looks cooler.
Labels:
Guy Williams,
name,
oils,
paint,
painter,
psyche,
signature,
zorro tv series
Aug 3, 2012
Don has a Cafe Press site now, too!!
I’ve been working with Don’s images as well. (I'm getting better and better with Photoshop.) So he now has a Café Press
site of his own: http://www.cafepress.com/dsartstore.677327781
It’s really cool to see new ideas emerge from the original art. And
it’s fun to revive some of his older designs from his black and white speckled
past.
You can go directly to his website (New and Improved!!) here: http://www.dsart.com
Enjoy!
Jul 27, 2012
I have a Café Press site now!
Yea! At last! I can provide my images on usable and fun items at affordable prices—and I didn’t have to make or marry or murder for a $million in order to make it happen!!!
I guess this only underscores that I must be an Illustrator at heart—it pleases me to see my art work in print—and not just as frame-able prints and posters, but on mugs and t-shirts and note cards and tote bags and mouse pads, etc. If this attribute disqualifies my assuming the title of "Artist"--O.K., I'll live with that.
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