Creativity Is An Artist
Creativity Is An Artist
Creativity Is An Artist
Is someone who does sketches on their dinner napkin given the same title as someone
who has worked for years on their craft?
It is just painting and sculpture, or should we take it in its broader context of The Arts,
with dance and music and performance?
Or even broader – think about someone who may be referred to as an artist in a non-
artistic field, maybe because of their incredible skills or creative problem-solving.
Creativity isn’t about a new age, hipster, or beatnik look or lifestyle; you don’t have to
don a new personality or even learn a fine art to be creative.
You have an idea, and you turn it into a painting, recipe, building, or knitting pattern. So
creativity is the process. And artistry is the skillset.
Artists being people, and people being the amazingly flawed being that we are, no two
artists will be alike.
The fact that they create, and glorify their creator by doing so, runs through them like a
seam of gold through a mine.
The better an artist’s awareness of their emotional state, the better they will be able to
chase down what they want to create and why.
“Your visions will become clear only when you can look into your own heart. Who
looks outside, dreams; who looks inside, awakes.” Carl Jung
1. Cultivating Curiosity
Once an artist has a spark, that idea needs to be built on. To do this, you need, well, more
ideas.
More thoughts, feelings, facts, plans. It would help if you chased down every lead.
Artists are, as a rule, curious. The need to probe and look deeper, beyond the surface. All
people are curious to a degree, of course. But for artists, cultivating curiosity means an
ability to ask even more questions than before – to keep the mind going.
Or you may start to wonder whether the tree knows that it is beautiful, or if the birds
landing on it thinks so, or if it was the bird’s sense of smell that told it to land there, and if
you could see smells, what would they look like? And so on.
The more questions we ask, the more we have, and it is this way we cultivate curiosity,
something vital for any artist.
To do this, you need to be wary of cynicism: the instinct to mistrust and doubt, to always
look for the dark side and reasons why something won’t work.
Now comes the tricky part. Turning that idea into something that exists. Believing in
yourself is the start, and it’s an important start, but then you have to get to work.
It’s one thing to have the most fantastic dance number ever conceived of by man in your
head.
It’s another to have the physical ability to perform it or to have the teaching ability to
instruct someone else.
They determine the skillset they need, and they practice. And when they fail, failure is
inevitable at some point (see the earlier note r.e. humanity’s amazing flaws) they practice
repeatedly until they can bring the idea in their head into the real world.
You can balance a disciplined training regime with time to play around with new ideas.
You can balance conservative tendencies with rebellious principles, your emotions, and
those of the people around you; real life and fantasy.
The balance will allow the artist to determine what is important to their work and what is
not.
Vincent Van Gogh, for example, famously left patches of unfinished canvas on Starry
Night.
This is certainly not perfection – but those spots were left empty because Van Gogh
decided to leave them, not because he lacked the skill to fill them.
5. Being Brave
An artist must be brave.
Because it can get pretty scary, showing the world an idea that germinated in your
emotions and came to be through your ideas and skills. You can get hurt.
Not only that but as an artist grows, they have to admit their current failings. How can
you improve if you think of yourself as perfect? Being open to criticism means learning
new things and constantly expanding what you can do.
“It reflects no great honor on a painter to be able to execute only one thing well…
confining himself to some particular object of study. This is so because there is scarcely a
person so devoid of genius as to fail of success if he applies himself earnestly to one
branch of study and practices it continually.” – Leonardo da Vinci
They look at themselves and the world and keep an awareness of both.
They follow new ideas. They build their skills, then use them to turn their ideas into
something real.