Snails and The Blank Canvas (BCS)

Ink and wash snail sniffing small flower
Ink and Wash Snail Sniffing Flower

This week’s two themes in the studio were snails (because that’s what came up on the randomartigraph) and dealing with blank canvas syndrome.

You may or may not know this about me, but I love arting about the tiny things, especially the things that are usually connsidered slimy. But it’s not slime. It’s mucus. Except for snails. For them it is most definitely slime.

A few snail sketches drawn in fountain pen
Snail studies in Fountain Pen

These snail sketches, even the watercolor, are all on the smallish side. That’s to get a feel for what I want to do before I dedicate a canvas or the good paper to a new art piece. That’s the first tip to combatting BCS. Start small.

Second is to mess up the paper. Set your coffee cup on it or splash your paint water on it.

The bug painting on the left is the one I have been neglecting for months. The canvas on the right is in prep for the next painting.  It’s where I clean my brushes.

By staining or marking up the new canvas, you eliminate the idea that it’s unblemished and perfect. That frees you up to make whatever art you want with it, good, bad, or ugly.

The third method is to have a set process in place. If you have a system to your art, you always know what your next step is supposed to be. It’s hard to get mired in fear paralysis when you know exactly what comes next. For me, the hardest part is choosing a subject. I have systems for that whether it’s pulling a random object out of the random object randomogrifier, or picking the next thing on my list I cultivate when I’m feeling creative. Once I pick the subject, it’s just construct the composition, shade it, then add the details to finish.

Random Object Process

The fourth tip is to experiment with different techniques. Getting your curiosity involved can make you forget to be perfect. You know you’re not going to be perfect if you are trying something new. And who knows, it might just lead to a new favorite medium. It’s how I went from acrylics to fountain pen.

Acrylic snail vs fountain pen

My final tip is to embrace imperfection. When you look at all the art in the world, it’s the tiny differences that make them unique to their respective artists. If all of the portrait artists always painted with photorealism, how would we distinguish Rembrandt from Sargent from Van Gogh?

The little misplaced line, or color that’s off just a bit, or even a mispelling, all contribute to the uniqueness of your art.

Snail looking at you

Dandelions and Bad Art

Dandelion in ink and wash

The themes for the week were Dandelions and to Make Bad Art. Years ago when I was feeling creative, I would make lists of things that interested me and write them on a stack of business cards. Then, when I wanted to art but didn’t have a subject, I would shake the sack and pull out a random prompt to work with. Along those same lines now, I’m using a spin-the-wheel app that lets me add what ever I want to it. I just spin the virtual wheel and BOOM a prompt to brainstorm with for the week.  That’s where the dadelion theme came from.

Spin-the-Wheel App

Then I just go into free style mode on what exactly that means… Is it a literal dandelion? Is it a Dandy? Is it a lion? I chose for it to be any member of the Aster family like chicory

Pocket sketchbook with an ink drawing of Chicory and a scientific description of the aster family and where to find chicory in Texas
Chicory in fountain pen
Sketches of dandelions in my pocket sketchbook, done in fountain pen.
Dandelion sketches in ink

As for the make bad art, I sat down and listed a hundred or so slogans I’ve seen tossed around pertaining to art improvement and started listing them. This was the top of the list. It’s not really encouragement to make bad art. Nor is it an implication that your art might be bad. Instead, it means your focus should not be on making good art, but just on making art. Even bad art. Especially bad art. Bad art teaches you something new. Everytime you engage in your creative processes, you learn something, but you learn more when you have challenges and mistakes to review. So, make bad art.

These two themes came together on The Artistic Biker Live! last Thursday when I painted dandelions in the art journal. I realized that I should have made the background more dramatic and there should have been more splash in the colors and shadows of the asters. All in all it was a good time. I streamed it straight to youtube and left all the hair-dryer paint drying in. :)  You can watch it here:

The Artistic Biker Live!