Jala, i think you are going to have a lot of mail saying the same thing: we go through the same feelings almost everyday. these darker periods i think are essential for reflection and they have always worked for me as stepping stones to the next breakthrough. also you've just come back from a holiday abroad, different time zones and exposure to new art/ terrible british weather etc... that can also have a major effect on you too, possibly. be kind to yourself and paint for yourself and no one else:) r.
Hi Jala I love your art and your cute cats you have been posting! I believe your long vacation took you away from your art? It could be you just need some time to get back into the flow.
Jala- first, I think you have no wounds to lick. What you might be experiencing are growing pains. I look at your work and admire your uniquely YOU vision and touch of brush. It's natural/human/expected, that we have self doubt.
To ease frustrations and worries, it's good to remember this little adage: " Every day is a good day for fishing, but not every day is a good day for catching."
Your personality and self expression is very evident in your newer pieces and I share your point of view that the traditional methods don't show individuality. Perhaps it's a good way to learn method and from that foundation you can build.
I can't even imagine that self doubt is in your realm. Thought it was my singular domain since I can't seem to paint anything I like either lately.
Maybe you need to plop yourself down in the middle of the Lynx/Lemon mandala and just let the process percolate again.
I think it helps to know that we all get these funky lows and have to recognize when they come, that they don't last.
oh sweet Jala, I feel your pain and I know that no matter what is said you need to go through it because that is the way we are if we are to create. Instead I will give you words from artists far greater than I:
A great artist... must be shaken by the naked truths that will not be comforted. This divine discontent, this disequilibrium, this state of inner tension is the source of artistic energy. Goethe
Take solace from Henri Matisse, "It has bothered me all my life that I do not paint like everybody else.
Oh gosh yes – to see rejected or neglected ideas brought to life by someone with more conviction and determination - it is very off-putting. But it’s a comfort to here that others suffer similarly! It's a bit of a curse having access to so much art - and so easily. In the biography of de Kooning there’s a passage from art critic Harold Rosenberg, talking about de Kooning’s attitude to originality: ‘Even inventing a thing that had already been invented was an act of creation. De Kooning likes to call this “inventing the harpsichord” – the fact that we have the harpsichord, and even the piano that superseded it, does not prevent the invention that brought it into being from being legitimately repeated.’ So here’s to lots more harpsichords.
I was about to add my views, but I think Loriann said it best. Divine discontent - I've had more than my share. And it's usually before a quantum leap of some kind. Have faith, your work is amazing.
Jala, it's good you brought this topic to light. reading everyone else's comments has provided me with the determination to continue despite recent painting wrestling matches. r.
Jala, I have little to add beyond what has already been said... except to thank you for sharing your feelings. Your post and the responses from others are important for all of us who read them. I believe that most art is derivative in one way or another. Each of us adds our own unique vision, interpretation and personality, and in so doing we create something new. I agree with others that your current frustration and angst may be a sign you are on the cusp of a breakthrough to something new.
I couldn't get past Loriann and her quote from the old man Matisse... "It has bothered me all my life that I do not paint like everybody else." Perfectly direct and dead on. I dated his grandson in Aix; he was impossibly verbose. Probably a result of a lifetime of trying to explain the old man's simplicity.
Great thread, Jala. BTW, I am struck by this still life, too.
It crosses my mind that the traditional (so-called "classical" realist) works being done today are big time the same. But, OTOH, I noticed that if you look at enough of them, and in particular, enough of one artist, the signature does come out.
I sympathize with your struggle, and I hope for you that it never goes away. My hero, Wolf Kahn, recently said, "If you are particularly unfortunate, you might become an artist."
I am fine with both realist and abstract works. I feel that the CR movement is shooting itself in the foot by dissing the things that come with Modernism and beyond that til today. Dialectic theories suck, and are stupid. There, I said it.
Don't throw away what came before. Unless you have nothing of merit to present, and then you have to discard your fathers to make yourself look good. I hated that what's-his-name erased deKooning. That has no merit, IMHO.
Too bad your teacher couldn't persuade you of their case for realism. IMO, the CRM should shut up and paint. I very much love what they are producing, and they need to embrace as they would want others to embrace their art.
Ahh - Monday outbursts. Gotta love 'em. Thanks for putting this out. Back to my own struggles with technique...happy painting!
I'm a painter (and writer and Spanish instructor) living in beautiful Boulder, Colorado. I studied classical art in an ARC (Art Renewal Center) school, Colorado Academy of Art, full-time for two years, in order to benefit from the rigorous atelier-style training. I am currently dedicated to exploring abstract and semi-abstract art, working in oil and also in soft pastel. I firmly believe that all human beings are creative, whether or not they have yet found an outlet for the innate creative urge, and that the creative arts are the highest form of human expression. Email me at: jala[at]jalapfaff.com
...Please also visit my website: jalapfaff.com
...ALL CONTENT IS COPYRIGHT
13 comments:
Jala, i think you are going to have a lot of mail saying the same thing: we go through the same feelings almost everyday. these darker periods i think are essential for reflection and they have always worked for me as stepping stones to the next breakthrough. also you've just come back from a holiday abroad, different time zones and exposure to new art/ terrible british weather etc... that can also have a major effect on you too, possibly. be kind to yourself and paint for yourself and no one else:) r.
Jala, Another wonderful still life. You caught on very quickly in art school.
Hi Jala I love your art and your cute cats you have been posting! I believe your long vacation took you away from your art? It could be you just need some time to get back into the flow.
Jala- first, I think you have no wounds to lick.
What you might be experiencing are growing pains.
I look at your work and admire your uniquely YOU vision and touch of brush.
It's natural/human/expected, that we have self doubt.
To ease frustrations and worries, it's good to remember this little adage:
" Every day is a good day for fishing, but not every day is a good day for catching."
Your personality and self expression is very evident in your newer pieces and I share your point of view that the traditional methods don't show individuality. Perhaps it's a good way to learn method and from that foundation you can build.
I can't even imagine that self doubt is in your realm.
Thought it was my singular domain since I can't seem to paint anything I like either lately.
Maybe you need to plop yourself down in the middle of the Lynx/Lemon mandala and just let the process percolate again.
I think it helps to know that we all get these funky lows and have to recognize when they come, that they don't last.
oh sweet Jala, I feel your pain and I know that no matter what is said you need to go through it because that is the way we are if we are to create.
Instead I will give you words from artists far greater than I:
A great artist... must be shaken by the naked truths that will not be comforted. This divine discontent, this disequilibrium, this state of inner tension is the source of artistic energy.
Goethe
Take solace from Henri Matisse, "It has bothered me all my life that I do not paint like everybody else.
hugs, Loriann
Oh gosh yes – to see rejected or neglected ideas brought to life by someone with more conviction and determination - it is very off-putting. But it’s a comfort to here that others suffer similarly! It's a bit of a curse having access to so much art - and so easily.
In the biography of de Kooning there’s a passage from art critic Harold Rosenberg, talking about de Kooning’s attitude to originality:
‘Even inventing a thing that had already been invented was an act of creation. De Kooning likes to call this “inventing the harpsichord” – the fact that we have the harpsichord, and even the piano that superseded it, does not prevent the invention that brought it into being from being legitimately repeated.’
So here’s to lots more harpsichords.
I was about to add my views, but I think Loriann said it best. Divine discontent - I've had more than my share. And it's usually before a quantum leap of some kind. Have faith, your work is amazing.
Jala, it's good you brought this topic to light. reading everyone else's comments has provided me with the determination to continue despite recent painting wrestling matches. r.
Jala, I have little to add beyond what has already been said... except to thank you for sharing your feelings. Your post and the responses from others are important for all of us who read them.
I believe that most art is derivative in one way or another. Each of us adds our own unique vision, interpretation and personality, and in so doing we create something new. I agree with others that your current frustration and angst may be a sign you are on the cusp of a breakthrough to something new.
The true purpose of art is self discovery. It can be quite painful. You are an artist. Try to enjoy the journey as tough as it can be!
I couldn't get past Loriann and her quote from the old man Matisse... "It has bothered me all my life that I do not paint like everybody else." Perfectly direct and dead on. I dated his grandson in Aix; he was impossibly verbose. Probably a result of a lifetime of trying to explain the old man's simplicity.
Great thread, Jala. BTW, I am struck by this still life, too.
It crosses my mind that the traditional (so-called "classical" realist) works being done today are big time the same. But, OTOH, I noticed that if you look at enough of them, and in particular, enough of one artist, the signature does come out.
I sympathize with your struggle, and I hope for you that it never goes away. My hero, Wolf Kahn, recently said, "If you are particularly unfortunate, you might become an artist."
I am fine with both realist and abstract works. I feel that the CR movement is shooting itself in the foot by dissing the things that come with Modernism and beyond that til today. Dialectic theories suck, and are stupid. There, I said it.
Don't throw away what came before. Unless you have nothing of merit to present, and then you have to discard your fathers to make yourself look good. I hated that what's-his-name erased deKooning. That has no merit, IMHO.
Too bad your teacher couldn't persuade you of their case for realism. IMO, the CRM should shut up and paint. I very much love what they are producing, and they need to embrace as they would want others to embrace their art.
Ahh - Monday outbursts. Gotta love 'em. Thanks for putting this out. Back to my own struggles with technique...happy painting!
Thank you all so so much for your insightful comments, relevant quotes, humor, encouragement, sympathy, and good cheer. :D
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