These last few weeks have been slowing down - like I’m on a carousel that is finally making those last rotations before it stops. it takes me a while to “recalibrate” back into my studio, and it usually begins with a quiet restlessness. I find myself sitting in my studio first, going through old magazines, cutting images out to paste in my notebooks, sorting, re-organizing and finally cleaning up my studio. Definitely a good fall habit as I start to muse over what inspires me first.
This might take days, weeks or perhaps even a month or two. To transition from the busy, sun-drenched long days of summer with so much intense activity for myself & my three guys (2 boys & a husband. . . .). SO MUCH ACTIVITY. For an introvert, I need SPACE (literally, mentally, emotionally) to press the “pause” button to just “BE.” Usually I would require this frequently, throughout the day or week, but I’ve had to adapt as lots of mothers do, to grabbing minutes, moments every other day/week or month. Lately I’ve been totally engrossed in a series of fantasy-thrilling novels reading on my tiny screen on my phone but even that is blessed time that I am grateful for at night while boys go to sleep.
I LOVE looking through all my material, either books or magazines like I mentioned. I am on the computer all day long for my job as a UX Designer, so I tend to prefer nondigital sources. I look at whatever inspires me - the actual decoration of a plate, a pattern of a curtain, lots and lots of color palettes, wallpaper or textile patterns, professional ocean landscapes, golf photos, magazine layouts etc. And then I know the restlessness is starting to flutter in bigger ripples when I start day-dreaming of color pallets and decorating rooms in my house etc. Or perhaps day-dreaming of buying new clothes in this color or that style, etc. Or even taking out my cook books to begin making notes and tucking the corners of recipes, admiring those beautiful photos of food on a stylized table, etc.
I know deep down that I am not actually going to DO any of these things - travel to Scotland (like I’ve wished all my life), revamp decorating my bedroom, buying new clothes or cooking the 40 recipes that look inspiring in my favorite cookbook.
What I am doing, is igniting the creative process within me. Waking it back up.
It’s like waves, the first are tiniest ripples, then energy is generated stronger then before, I dream and that ignites more moments of inspiration, then it links to other areas of my life and before I know it, I am training my eye to drink in as much color, pattern, line etc. to start to brand it into my conscious brain. In order to paint I must FEEL inspired. But what does that actually mean? What is inspiration? Why does painting have to start with feeling inspired? or does it truly?
Many artists would say they paint even if they don’t feel inspired because it’s the work ethic, it’s showing up every day in the studio to practice and keep practicing (like the piano or basketball) and I certainly respect that when it’s one’s own lifeline, one’s work or career. That is very admirable and impressive.
But I don’t have that luxury or haven’t chosen that life. For me, painting has to be fun, playful and joyful, otherwise in my busy life I would NEVER do it. There’s too many things in my life that are routine, that are what I “have to do,” what’s “expected of me,” what’s “my responsibility,” etc. Painting is for me, and me alone. It’s just a mindset to slip into in a few moments, to try my intuition and see if it works today. Many days it does not but there’s no harm in that, there’s nothing at stake - no one cares. Truly. It’s meditation. It’s faith. It’s being grateful in the moment. It’s . . . . spiritual . . . . for me at least. And ultimately it’s thanking God for momentary creative expression. And then it’s just practice. Over and over and over and over. That’s it.
I get excited because I am “due” for another series of work. It’s time. I’m also excited because there are fun endeavors I hope to accomplish and work on this year. But that will come later.
For now, I’ll just spend a few minutes sitting in my studio. :D