Showing posts with label effort. Show all posts
Showing posts with label effort. Show all posts

Friday, April 25, 2014

The Gift of Failure

“There is no such thing as failure — failure is just life trying to move us in another direction.”
Oprah Winfrey
Ride the Peace Train

One of my favorite blogs I follow religiously is a blog called "Brain Pickings" - a site I only discovered because a dear friend pointed me in that direction. The author, Maria Popova, is articulate, extremely well-read, refreshingly insightful and she always writes on art and literature with such a perfect sense of what is important in the work she's reviewing.  The author herself calls Brain Pickings a "weekly interestingness digest.
and she'd be right. I've yet to scroll through the Sunday edition without getting caught up in the valuable lessons she shares through the work, writing and art of others, not to mention her own remarkably astute commentary. 

A few weeks ago, I marked an article to read later and then, as often happens, forgot about it in the crush of springtime activities - Easter, family visits, my Mom's 90th birthday, etc. But once I had a brief moment to go back to the file, I discovered this marvelous gem amidst all the other great articles on the Blog. It's an article on a subject we've probably all encountered but often neglected to dig into - failure. We avoid the topic because it has negative connotations, particularly in a society where it's often "winner take all" and "dog eat dog." Even our television shows express clearly how we feel about this subject - "Failure is not an option." 

We reject it because it has negative associations for us - failing damages our self-esteem, destroys our dreams, labels us as less than worthy. Or does it? As this marvelous quote above from Oprah Winfrey suggests, there are a gazillion lessons in failure and as many treasures to be found in those lessons that we would not learn any other way. It IS why and how we change direction and find another way around what seem to be insurmountable obstacles. There really could be no true success without a willingness and a capacity to accept what failure has to teach us. 

Popova's blog on the Gift of Failure comes from the title of a book by Sarah Lewis - 
The Rise: Creativity, the Gift of Failure, and the Search for Mastery.  Lewis is the former curator of the Tate Modern Gallery and MoMA and a member of President Obama's Arts Policy Committee. In her book, she uses the example of Thomas Edison who tried endlessly to create a working lightbulb and said of his efforts, "I have not failed. I have just found 10,000 ways that won't work." I think there are so many valuable lessons that Popova and Lewis have explored that I'd like to turn you on to the blog site with this introduction: 

Creativity, the Gift of Failure, and the Crucial Difference Between Success and Mastery

You  won't  be  sorry  that  you  were  introduced  to  this  wonderful  online  source  of  profound ideas  and  insight guarantee.
Speaking of failure, however, I wonder if you noticed that there is no link beneath my own artwork above. That's because it's not posted on any of my sites yet - and it may not ever be. I've reworked this piece 100 times - starting with a simple photograph that was small and not terribly good to begin with. But I loved the composition of the piece and I was listening to Cat Stevens singing Peace Train one night and decided to try to do something with this. I consider this work a "failure" in the sense that I've not managed to achieve what I hoped with it - it doesn't "deliver" the feeling I wanted it to. But each reworking teaches me something new about digital art and painting and that's invaluable to me for the future. I may not ever finish this work to my satisfaction but what I've learned by failing to do it has stood me in very good stead in other works. 

Friday, January 3, 2014

Matters of the Heart

“The principles of true art is not to portray, but to evoke” 
Jerzy Kosinski - author of "Being There"


Have you ever stopped to think why some photographs, some paintings, some digital creations move you even though you'd swear you didn't like that style of work at all. Or perhaps the piece wasn't even technically all that good...yet you loved it enough to say so or maybe even enough to buy it. I used to say that about a number of genres of art and writing that I just love today. 

I think that's because as I've developed myself as an artist, I've come to appreciate more than the real effort that goes into creating something of beauty or meaning. It's certainly about more than time or effort - it's about how much heart the artist has invested in his/her expression. I don't think it's coincidental that the word art is found within the word heart. I've said to people who tell me their work is not technically perfect that I'm not very interested in what they see with the lens of their cameras or the lens of their eye, but rather, I'm looking beyond that to grasp what it is they saw with the lens of their hearts. I've heard photographers themselves express this a bit differently - "having fancy cameras and equipment doesn't make one a photographer - that depends on the person behind the camera." That's true...just as owning about 500 very expensive paintbrushes doesn't make me Vermeer! It's really a matter of the heart.

For example, if you'd asked me a few years ago whether I'd ever buy an abstract painting, I'd have said, "Ewww, no way!" And then I met artists like +Art by SharonCummings  and +Lenore Senior and I've done a complete about face in that regard. Their abstract paintings are pure heart. Or consider an artist like +Lincoln Rogers whose values pour out of his heart and into his artwork as readily as water from a tap. Or fractal artists (a genre I first thought was just computer doodling) like +Heidi Smith  and +Deborah Benoit whose works literally sing that "this is from the heart." Maybe it was a style of poetry or story-writing I'd never believed I could appreciate fully - and then I discovered the brilliant story-telling and mystical poetry of +LisaJewell and now I wait with exquisite anticipation for her next blog post. It's unfair of me to mention only a few talented people here but hopefully in the coming weeks and months, I'll get to many more of the amazing artists who work with their hearts as well as their hands and heads. These are just some of the artists I've come to admire and appreciate while I've poured my own heart into becoming a member of the heART club with digital creations and poetry like this:

See the image and accompanying poem "In the Shattering" at