Experimentation & Epiphany

February 7th, 2008

Creativity is allowing yourself to make mistakes.

Art is knowing which ones to keep.

  – Scott Adams 


I may be in the middle of a mistake right now, but I am fascinated by the process. One never knows until some time in the future whether one's time is judiciously spent.
O'Keeffe threw away heaps of canvases, those that she deemed unworthy or unsuccessful.
I've been pouring and scraping and spattering paints which sounds completely wild, but it's actually very deliberate and intentional. The question is now what to do with these luscious, sensuous and dynamic surfaces.
They're piling up.

For now they are spread around the studio staring at me… many small secrets. The muse isn't talking. I just have to keep the faith that "way will open," a Quaker expression from my childhood that has proved true to me in my own non-dogmatic fashion.
If one allows the time for the answer to emerge it usually does, based on many factors- experience, training, logic, doggedness, hard work. It can be an active process, or an epiphany.
I love the Merriam Webster definition of epiphany: (1): a usually sudden manifestation or perception of the essential nature or meaning of something (2): an intuitive grasp of reality through something usually simple and striking (3): an illuminating discovery, realization, or disclosure

However, being buried and surrounded by incomplete projects can be overwhelming and stultifying. Ideas flow much more quickly than I am able to test them.
I have a practical, urgent need to FINISH things.
One thing at a time as much as possible, with the reward of experimentation as a tantalizing carrot.
Here's one that I finally finished. It is also an experiment… to put the nest on pulsing color.
Completion is my word for the year.


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4 Responses to “Experimentation & Epiphany”

  1. Liza Myers says:

    Thanks, Kathy. I looked at your website. I admire your brushwork- passion and control are tangible. How's the weather out there? It's pristinely snowy in Vermont!

  2. The weather is wonderful of course.. its Hawaii. It does rain more than people realize though, I think. Everything is WET … as in any beach town I guess but ohhh so much more so on the Big Island. There is the problem of the vog now… eek.. Vog is like smog but from the nearby volcano. Yet who can fault Hawaii… there is all that Aloha and culture from the Hawaiian people.KathyFantasy Art Woman|Beautiful Women Goddess Art

  3. Liza Myers says:

    Kathy, someday I will get to Hawaii! Love the beautiful painting that you have posted. So graceful and poetic. I'm in the pyrenees doing an artist's residency right now… will be home in a few days. Trying to catch up on the blog and get good work done. Thanks for your comments!liza

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Experimentation & Epiphany

February 7th, 2008

Creativity is allowing yourself to make mistakes.

Art is knowing which ones to keep.

  – Scott Adams 


I may be in the middle of a mistake right now, but I am fascinated by the process. One never knows until some time in the future whether one's time is judiciously spent.
O'Keeffe threw away heaps of canvases, those that she deemed unworthy or unsuccessful.
I've been pouring and scraping and spattering paints which sounds completely wild, but it's actually very deliberate and intentional. The question is now what to do with these luscious, sensuous and dynamic surfaces.
They're piling up.

For now they are spread around the studio staring at me… many small secrets. The muse isn't talking. I just have to keep the faith that "way will open," a Quaker expression from my childhood that has proved true to me in my own non-dogmatic fashion.
If one allows the time for the answer to emerge it usually does, based on many factors- experience, training, logic, doggedness, hard work. It can be an active process, or an epiphany.
I love the Merriam Webster definition of epiphany: (1): a usually sudden manifestation or perception of the essential nature or meaning of something (2): an intuitive grasp of reality through something usually simple and striking (3): an illuminating discovery, realization, or disclosure

However, being buried and surrounded by incomplete projects can be overwhelming and stultifying. Ideas flow much more quickly than I am able to test them.
I have a practical, urgent need to FINISH things.
One thing at a time as much as possible, with the reward of experimentation as a tantalizing carrot.
Here's one that I finally finished. It is also an experiment… to put the nest on pulsing color.
Completion is my word for the year.


Read and post comments | Send to a friend

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