Posts Tagged ‘Inspiration’
Any artist on the face of the this planet will tell you that at one point or another, the brilliant mojo that is responsible for the care and feeding of their creative ego will suddenly, inexplicably, dry up. It might be temporary or it might be a month but whatever the case may be you are left uninspired, unfeeling and would rather drown your unimaginative sorrows away with a good (aged) whiskey. As a writer the temptation to slit your wrists over writers block teeters closer then I am comfortable with at times, and I was recently forced to take a long hard look at conventional creative kick starts. I put my own spin on a few and found these newer acquisitions to be quite inspirational. So I am now here to share with you my own not-so-unconventional ways of staving off the inevitable “creativity lull”.
- Clear the head. This is important. Most artists will admit that when too much is crammed into the brain it tends to push out the creativity and breeds indecision. Show stress who is boss and take a walk . Be a Zen Goddess in the park with paper and pen/brushes. Get AWAY from the workspace.
- Run errands/Do housework. Those mundane chores can be a breather, and can also clear the head. I tend to get a lot of inspiration when I am shopping, or when I am doing the dishes. I also recommend keeping a notebook or a portable art pad with you at all times. I’ve had crazy inspiration in a melting parking lot before in 100 degree heat, but I still whipped out my notebook and jotted down a few ideas, and then scraped the tar off my feet.
- Eat crunchy things. Like crackers or vegetables. Crunchy is fun, and has been said to keep studying students alert. I often will have a handful of crackers to munch on when I am trying to finish a piece. Like now. I have a small stack of vegetables crackers and because of them, I have been able to finish this sentence.
- Play Music! Loud, obnoxious, steady and pulsating or soft and sweet…It’s something I absolutely can’t write without. My father swore that Led Zeppelin was the music to paint to. I tend to listen to what fits the mood. Right now? It’s the Pixies.
- I go to a happy place if I am truly stuck. This isn’t to say that I meditate (which is another option) but I will sit, eyes closed, and mentally go to this special place to try and recall every detail. For example: I recently I took a trip to the Canadian Rockies, and was at a vista near Kananaskis county (somewhat near Banff in Alberta). I was standing at first facing a reservoir, and then as I turned around the view of the valley opened up below me. The snow covered peaks towering around me, and the cool, clean glacial wind lifting my hair was intoxicating. I remembered standing there completely taken with the moment and instantly took a mental snapshot. Thus sealing it in my happy place zone. Recalling the details of that moment and trying to recollect the rocks, the ripples of the water and any sounds that were present always works. My dead creativity process battery is jump started, and I am able to finish what I started.
- Talk to yourself. Sure you might seem completely insane, but at least it keeps intrusive people away from you at the park! Talking a process through helps tremendously. If you would rather keep it in your head, that is up to you. I don’t. Also If I am completely tapped and all else is failing, I will go to a public place and write about the people around me. More often then not they have been the very subject of the piece I couldn’t figure out. I’ve seen bored artists sketch people on napkins, and then go home and create the masterpiece of all that is man. I’ve had a musician friend jump at me at a bar, when I was mindlessly tapping out a cadence with my fingers on a pint glass, and then proceed to write a song based OFF that rhythm ( I gloated for weeks). Inspiration can be fickle but when it hits, it can burn.
For me personally, it’s the the little things that seem to work. You can’t get blood from stone (It’s a cliche I know, but I love the imagery it conjures) and when you push and push sometimes the end result is a rushed creation, or a bad mood. Most of us have learned to take a step back and give the mind a rest, but sometimes we are so perpetually stuck on fast forward, that its refreshing to take that step back and find ways to unearth the creativity stuck inside. Whether it’s sketching the emo kid next to you, writing about the angry couple at the bus stop, or finding your happy place…it’s all about art. To me? Art is in everything. There is no right, there is no wrong. There is only “create”. So stop beating yourself up, stop thinking too hard and start creating.
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