Thursday, November 15, 2012

Work


I intended to go to the studio today, but didn't. I had a pretty intense day in there yesterday and probably needed some time to let things settle a bit. It was one of those sessions where I could see the beginnings of new ideas coalescing into a possible body of work and feeling a little grounded after being in a period of extensive experimentation. Experimentation in the sense of going outside of my usual mode of working, letting things fall where they may and leaving them in that unsettled state. Leaving some works in a state of being raw and unresolved are really useful later. There was a time when I'd automatically discard such things (I still do, but I give it more thought these days) and begin anew. 

This year, something has changed in how I look at and relate to new works. I've made more of an effort to not throw the baby out with the bath water, so to speak. I'm much more liable to let certain marks or passages in working paintings that I'm unsure of remain visible longer and give them more thought than in the past. Over the past few years, I had begun to be much more mercenary about what I thought wouldn't work for a particular piece and either remove the offending mark(s) right away or just do away with the work altogether. I've learned that when I have a day like yesterday, where I had a feeling for what I wanted and it wasn't turning out, that it might be better to not dive right back in the next day; that it may be better to take that next day, do something else and return the day after with fresher eyes.  I'm at my most critical and less patient with my work and progress when I'm feeling less than optimal mentally because of lack of sleep, as I was today. It's days like this that it's better for me to take care of errands or chores at home and go in tomorrow with a fresher eye, hopefully.  


2 comments:

The Artist In Me said...

Hey Tim!

I totally feel you on this! I do hope that your next day of studio time was great! I have been standing on this as of late: The only true failure is when you stop creating. The others are just preparation for success!

Micros said...

Tim

When you had mentioned that it is better for you not to dive in right away after having a "mercenary" day. . . I've got to say that there is a certain catharsis that occurs when we destroy our own. Sometimes however, the mistakes we had made (or thought we had made) work, if only we can fine tune them in without letting our deep emotions take over and build on them.

It is the phoenix rising out of the ashes we so loosely set down earlier.

Micros