6/21/17 colored pencils |
For many years, I wrote daily “morning pages” as
recommended by Julia Cameron in her well-known book, The Artist’s Way. The
concept is to write a few journal pages shortly after waking to release
whatever mental baggage you might have and make room for creative energy so you
can move on to a productive day. The direct focus of stream-of-consciousness writing
for those few minutes quiets your mind. Eventually I figured out that this release
of potentially negative energy through writing works better for me if I do it
in the evening before bed, because it helps me sleep better. That’s still my
journal-writing time now.
I’ve come to realize that drawing a small, simple still
life first thing in the morning serves a similar purpose as morning pages. The
focused concentration relaxes me even as I’m challenged by the exercise, and
the repetitive quality feels like a ritual rather than a boring habit.
6/20/17 colored pencils |
In past years, sketching an apple or a banana from the
kitchen used to be my way of getting through the bad-weather months when I couldn’t
sketch outdoors. Back then I didn’t necessarily enjoy it – it was just something to do
while I waited for the weather to improve. But the more I did them, the more I
appreciated what I can learn from still lives, especially this past winter when I spent several months studying the use of colored pencils. In
recent weeks as the weather has warmed up, and I’ve been able to sketch
outdoors again, I found that I still wanted to sketch cherries or tomatoes,
even though I have plenty of other subject matter now.
Mind you, I don’t prefer still lives over urban
sketching; drawing on location is still the most fun and engaging type of
drawing I do. But urban sketching requires a very different type of focus and
energy than anything I can do at my desk. Sketching on location is about looking
for appealing subject matter and keeping up with the challenges of constantly
changing light and other outdoor conditions and restrictions (those challenges are half the fun!),
but it isn’t exactly relaxing.
6/18/17 colored pencils |
Drawing a small still life, on the other hand, is
relaxing in a quiet, meditative way. It prepares my hand, eye and brain for a
creative day – hopefully filled with more sketching. The exercise gives a
ritualistic quality to my morning, and when I don’t do it, I miss it.
Morning pages, but drawing instead of writing? I like it!
ReplyDeleteIn 20 years or so when the kids have grown up I'll try it 😀 Until then, it has to be the evening.
I think Julia would agree that if it works, do it! :-)
Delete- Tina