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Renewing Creative Energy
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Getting over boredom, repetition and the blank page blues.
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For most of us there are times when we open our sketchbook, pick up a pencil and 'draw a blank'. Even the most experienced artist can have phases when their creative energies seem exhausted. Here are some tips to help get over some common mental blocks:
- Lack of technical skill - the medium or the subject seem just too daunting.
- First, remember that this is drawing, not adventure sport - what's the worst that can happen?
- Do a trial run on cheap paper first.
- Break the task up into small steps
- Go back to basics - do some simple exercises, like a musician warming up with scales
- Classes can be a great investment - drawing is a learned skill, and lessons from a good teacher can lead to giant steps forward.
- Online tutorials are available for beginners and more advanced artists.
- Lack of inspiration - drawing is in many ways a means of communication, and you need to have something to 'say' about the subject.
- Think about an issue that you feel strongly about, and have a look at how other artists might have expressed similar ideas.
- Art doesn't have to be dramatic - many great works focus on details of daily life.
- If you're new to drawing, try looking for a subject that is meaningful to you - a favourite object, animal or person.
- Look somewhere different for ideas. Take a nature walk, read the classics, or take a trip to a museum, gallery or zoo.
- Boredom - Yet another life class/still life...
- Try an unusual view of the model - from feet or head, with strong foreshortening
- Do an overhead still life or try a bird's-eye landscape view.
- If you usually work in a tight, realist style, try some blind contour drawing or take look at contemporary work.
- If your work is an the abstract side, try going back to traditional approaches.
- Use a dramatically different medium or an unorthodox method of application
- Distraction - It's hard to think creatively when your life is crowded with other worries.
- If you need to, put your art aside a while until things settle down. However, if your art is an important source of income, or of personal expression, you will need to make time and space for it.
- Get organised. Organisation is also a learned skill. Schedule time for drawing, even if it's only occasional or brief.
- Keep a small sketchbook handy so you can take advantage of quiet moments.
- Multi-task. Can you sketch while in a meeting/on a train/breastfeeding/having morning tea/(insert appropriate task)?
- Do you have a space for your art? Consider setting up a small desk by a window, or create a special storage space with a fold-out table. If you have a studio, has the rest of your life spilled into it - toys, hobby items, office paperwork?
- Overload - You've taken on one too many commissions, or been in the studio for weeks preparing a folio, and have just had enough.
- If you need to maintain commitment, try positive 'self-talk' methods to help keep you focussed and on track.
- Visualise a time when you were excited about making art. Remember how it felt and hold on to that feeling.
- Look at a previous, successful piece and create a derivative. Use existing sketchbook ideas rather than trying for something original.
- If you don't need to maintain commitment, then have a break! Even the most dedicated artist doesn't spend their whole life in the studio. Think about something else for a while, and come back refreshed.
Lastly: 'Just do it'. Sometimes all you need is to take the first step, make the first mark, and inspiration will follow.