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Snapshots of the Creative Process For creative
art careers, the the
Inner Critic may be a helpful servant in disguise.
It may be hard for artists and other professionals to embrace this statement.
But understanding the Inner Critic is a significant force. If we push
the critic away it gets stronger. If we are patient and understand its
messages, it will yield to the Creative Voice, moving our creative process
into flow. The reformed Inner Critic can play a supportive role in our
creative career. This process of transformation is about using one's
"awareness mind" to listen deeply. When the Creative Voice gains its
authentic leading position, there is positive and productive movement
forward. The Inner Critic transforms into a helpful editor.
Do you associate over-long hours with greater productivity?
Clients seeking creative art career help sometimes overestimate the
usefulness of long hours. But spending more time on projects may, or
may not be, the answer. One of my clients gave up one "extra-curricular"
activity after another, devoting every spare moment to being in her
studio. Before long, her world became smaller. As her world shrank,
so did her imagination. The discipline was virtually dis-empowering
her creativity process. Just as in child rearing, artistry demands not
quantity--but rather, quality of time. The rest of our world--the places
we go, people we meet, food we eat, visuals and smells we encounter--all
foster our creativity on subtle levels. Watch out for the impulse to
narrow your world for the sake of over-productivity. In helping artists,
I have learned that balance is the golden rule, and each artist must
seek to balance the creative tools that are right for him or her.
The creative
process doesn't always feel good.
Old hands know this truth intimately, but it never hurts to restate
it. The creative process is complex, and not in the least simple. It
contains an equal number of valleys as peaks, and perhaps more. Just
as in a love relationship, it doesn't always deliver a high. Alongside
Inspiration, transcendence and joy, lurk fear, guilt, frustration and
disappointment. We are not capable of rendering the exact likenesses
fueled by our imaginations. We are limited beings who can only create
a mantel of those visions. We must learn to accept this reality and
acquiesce to it as a vehicle for growth and progress. The good news
is: in the longer run the "wins" outweigh the "defeats." Most often,
the journey proves to be worthwhile, and elevating.
Action is the answer.
As an artist helping others in creative process, I have learned that
the single-most important factor in success is to take action. True,
there are times when pullling back into receptivity is required. But
to act, on a regular basis, is the cornerstone for building momentum.
Even when we do not feel like it; when we are tired, fearful,
or filled up with life's complications. Even when we feel lousy.
Taking action, even just an inch of it, is powerful medicine.
Risk in creativity is optimal when assumed in degrees.
Staying true to our creative process and career does not mean we take
90 degree leaps overnight. Optimal engagement means that we are striking
a balance between our need to be creatively active and our need to be
grounded; financially, emotionally and socially. Life has many dimensions.
Each of us has fundamental needs to fulfill, and when we're in balance,
our creative work will neither be stifled nor dominate us.
Final results benefit from messy "drafts."
The ego part of the brain drives us to believe that creative genius
must arrive in an instant of creation. Nothing could be further from
the truth. For example, it took master playwright Tennessee Williams
15 drafts or more to complete a play. The messier we get in the "laboratory,"
the better our final versions will be. Genius arrives when we let go
into uncertainty, when we get out of our heads and leap in. From the
fires of spontaneity, mistakes will erupt, but so will unintentional
genius. You have the power to decide who views your work, and when.
Mistakes can be edited and revised. We forget that sometimes. Go ahead;
regurgitate on your page, prance like a fruitloop on the floor, splatter
paint like a new (and healthier) Jackson Pollack. This is your experimental
time; your growth curve. Even the most seasoned professionals are in
an unending creative process of empowerment and career growth, unless
they've hit the end. After all, isn't evolution, in a sense, the whole
point of creating?
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*Essay by Barbara Bowen of
GatewaysCoaching.com - the definitive source for artist careers
and the creative process.
Contact Barbara with your questions about your
creative career in transition. She would love to hear from you.*
Copyright ©2009 Barbara Bowen and
Gateways Creativity Coaching. All rights reserved.
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