herbavore
Bluelight Crew
This weekend I took a two day painting intensive from a friend. She called the class Fearless Painting and as we went around the room before class introducing ourselves and saying why we were there, it became very obvious that whether we had been painting for a short time or a lifetime it was the word fearless that drew us to sign up.
It got me thinking about how my art practice is really not too different from my meditation practice. Both bring up discomfort and uncertainty and both show us the value of that very open place. In this painting class, each time we arrived at a "safe" place in the process of painting--i.e. we were growing attached to how it looked--we were encouraged to push further by completely changing something or turning the canvas around or even painting over what we had in order to keep the exploratory energy flowing.
Creative work is a strange push and pull between process with no attachment to product or outcome and the need to produce a salable product or outcome in order to continue to work. Very young children are engaged with the process of art in a way that we adults struggle to recapture. Once they begin to receive praise or criticism for their work it switches from process to product and many children just stop at this point or they go on to draw or paint what they draw best and their relationship to the process of creativity is changed. One of my drawing teachers in college related a story about his young daughter asking him about his work. He told her that he taught grown ups how to draw. She gasped in surprise and said, "you mean they forgot?!"
Meditation, stilling the mind, sitting quietly in reflection is both peaceful and energizing to me. When I can be in that same open state, neither thinking ahead or in the past but simply seeing what happens in the moment, watching all the fearful and critical voices arise and letting them pass through, creating can feel the same.
Does anyone else have an creative practice that feels intimately tied with a spiritual practice?
It got me thinking about how my art practice is really not too different from my meditation practice. Both bring up discomfort and uncertainty and both show us the value of that very open place. In this painting class, each time we arrived at a "safe" place in the process of painting--i.e. we were growing attached to how it looked--we were encouraged to push further by completely changing something or turning the canvas around or even painting over what we had in order to keep the exploratory energy flowing.
Creative work is a strange push and pull between process with no attachment to product or outcome and the need to produce a salable product or outcome in order to continue to work. Very young children are engaged with the process of art in a way that we adults struggle to recapture. Once they begin to receive praise or criticism for their work it switches from process to product and many children just stop at this point or they go on to draw or paint what they draw best and their relationship to the process of creativity is changed. One of my drawing teachers in college related a story about his young daughter asking him about his work. He told her that he taught grown ups how to draw. She gasped in surprise and said, "you mean they forgot?!"
Meditation, stilling the mind, sitting quietly in reflection is both peaceful and energizing to me. When I can be in that same open state, neither thinking ahead or in the past but simply seeing what happens in the moment, watching all the fearful and critical voices arise and letting them pass through, creating can feel the same.
Does anyone else have an creative practice that feels intimately tied with a spiritual practice?