Barbara Bowen
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Insightful, compact guides to help empower your Creative Process.
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Snapshots
of Creative Growth
Creativity and
Art Career growth is in a perpetual evolutionary phase.
The learning process never ends. Many of us have trouble letting our Creativity
simply spill. We get tied into knots, worrying that our purges may not measure
up. Well, pardon my asking, but...measure up to what? We are often desperate
for our visions to materialize perfectly on the paper, on the canvas or in the
office. If you don't already know this, let me fill you in on a secret. There
is no fixed standard. Creativity, yours and mine, is in a perpetual state of
expansion. The only true competition is with ourselves, as Martha Graham stated.
What matters is that we stay focused on our own edge. That edge will be unique
and not quite like anyone else's edge. Most masterpieces are achieved through
long periods, requiring much trial and error. Their creators spend much time
in their "labs," producing with a mixture of stumbling and brilliance. Like most
other meaningful aspects of life, failure is an inherent part of the Creative
Process.
Failures breed solutions and wisdom.
In a study about artists, the single unifying element found among all
artists was the ability to continue re-creating. Artists execute a
form and then re-form
the form. They re-create, over and over, until the original inspiration has developed
to fruition. Those who succeed in art careers and in actualizing themselves as
artists all have this ability in common. This is the only constant, the only
linking factor. No demographic or sociological factor--family history, genetics,
habits, personality, or ethnicity--links all artists. This study is a helpful
guide, not just for professional artists, but for all creatives. It indicates
that we are not meant to focus so hard on end results. We are meant to be in
process, to make lots of mistakes, to evaluate, revise and change. This involves
letting go of the perfectionism while, at the same time, holding onto standards.
Some creators believe they don't deserve a learning curve. They make demands
on themselves to spill perfection in miraculous bursts. That's an unrealistic
expectation and is actually antithetical to the Creative Process itself. The
next time you feel reluctance to "spill" in messy experimentation, try to behold
spilling as the roadmap to creative genius. The next time you get down on yourself
or notice you are holding impossibly high standards, try reading this snapshot
again.
Creative Growth provides checks and balances.
Fine art and quality journalism in a free society provide checks and
balances
to the state's power. Likewise, Creative Growth provides checks and balances
to our inner lives. Our Creations provide mirrors to look into. In a way they
are similar to dreams because they contain fragments of our truth. Who and what
we are, what we think, how we feel, are reflected there. What we see can console
us and inspire us. It can also disconcert us. Seeing who we are more clearly
is wholly Good, no matter what we see. It provides opportunity. Opportunity to
appreciate the things we like about ourselves and to build upon them. Opportunity
to reveal our blind spots and broaden our awareness. Opportunity to listen to
our troublesome attitudes and shift what is possible to shift. Creating delivers
many rich gifts, to ourselves and to others. As we create and re-create our projects,
we re-create ourselves at the same time.
Do not underestimate the "inch-by-inch."
Yes, the cliche is still alive and true. Rome was not built in a day. It
was built inch-by-inch. Each sentence written, each frame shot, each inquiry
made,
each gallery visited, each net search conducted, each phone call sent, each lecture
attended, each film seen, each brushstroke made, each aesthetic conversation
held, each bit of research done (and the list goes on), will bring us one inch
closer to a fruition, to an output we will finally call finished. Every inch
counts. No inch is to be dismissed, even when you feel it was a step backward—-because
backward steps provide more clarity. Each time you yawn while moving another
tiny inch, try to stay in the moment with that inch, honoring it for the essential
link in the chain that it is. Pretty soon you will notice the your inches are
gelling into a unique creation. Enjoy your inches.
Contact Barbara Bowen with your
questions about creativity coaching and art career growth. She would
love to hear from you.
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