Showing posts with label Beyond Barbie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beyond Barbie. Show all posts

Monday, March 11, 2019

#59 - #64 of 100 Creations in 100 Days: On being an Artist

Here are some more pictures from the book of Creativity Affirmations I made for myself for when I wanted to read words of wisdom by people who've been on this road too. Being an artist is a true blessing, but I wouldn't say it's easy.  Occasionally I wonder what it would be like to know that I was to go to work 8-5, 5 days a week, was to perform certain tasks, and, in exchange, I would receive a steady paycheck, benefits, and requests for work I was to do, weekends and evenings off, and two solid weeks a year when I didn't have to think one bit about work. On the one hand, it's a delightful thought! So many uncertainties taken care of! So many things I wouldn't need to figure out for myself!

On the other hand, it's a ghastly thought - be under someone else's direction? Constantly be told by someone else what I needed to do next? To give my time away for 8-9 hours/day? Have little to no outlet for my own desires/thoughts/creativity/decisions? I think I would bristle under such constraints. 

I worked for a nascient computer corporation in Silicon Valley in the early 80's as a Personnel Clerk. It was fascinating because I learned so much - how to use a computer, how to do data bases, rules about hiring and firing, etc., etc.  But... the way I'm built, I felt myself chomping at the bit. As soon as I figured out how to do something, I wanted to do more. I wanted to move on. I could see how things should be and, at the ripe old age of 23, figured I knew better. I would go home from work and complain to my husband about work and eventually, 11 months in, I quit so I could find something else. 

I ultimately became a teacher and had the pleasure of working in Vienna, Austria, teaching elementary school kids how to speak German for two years. I served on the Teacher's Counsel there so I coud help determine policy and could negotiate for our salaries. I had watched Norma Rae and knew how to bargain. Well! All that got me was the Principal very kindly but firmly telling me, "Susan, your anger isn't going to get you where you want to go. It would be good to get it in check."  Chastened, I retreated and learned that not everything needs to be a fight.  I'm grateful to him for his kind words, said with compassion for a young firebrand.

I carry that attitude into everything I do - charging forward, ready to take on the world, wanting to do everything at once, determined, efficient, capable.

That doesn't work well in the work world, I don't think. It seems like one needs to comply and do what the bosses want and not complain.  I say this without really knowing, though, and I'm sure it varies from company to company.

Instead of trying to fit myself into that mold, I went rogue and worked as a private tutor for the 25 years while I was raising my children. It was the perfect job for me since I could set my own hours; I worked for each person privately so had no boss; I collected my own income; I could take time off as needed; I could teach in ways I felt would most effectively help the students I was working with.  It was a wonderful job!

...Until even that felt restrictive! I was working on Beyond Barbie, the art and performance series I created about women's body image and empowerment. I spent every waking hour painting, planning, talking to folks, coordinating, etc. - even when I was tutoring! I realized I needed to be doing Beyond Barbie/my art full time as I could no longer give students everything they deserved.

I asked my husband to sit with me and I told him I had to quit work - I had to be a full time artist. I simply didn't have a choice. From that day until now, I have been plying this creative trade.

Every day is different. Every day demands the best from me. Every day I set my own agenda. I teach a lot of art classes and private students, but I am doing art from morning til night. It's so different than working an office job:
There's no boss (except for me, and I'm a VERY demanding boss!)
No steady paycheck
No benefits (other than job satisfaction, joy, contentment, delight, excitement, etc.)
No retirement savings account
No paid vacations (though I certainly manage to vacate for long periods of time to Iceland!)
No one telling me what to do.
There's really no time off - I am thinking about and/or creating all the time.


Sometimes it's tricky not having someone to tell me what to do (not that I want that -), and I have to figure it out for myself. That's when these affirmations come in handy. They remind me that I'm not the only one who's been here. These great artists have had moments of wisdom and clarity. It helps to dip into their worlds for a moment and rest in their wisdom.





"A work of art is a scream of freedom."
~ Christo
So true - every time I create something, I am putting myself out into the world, amsaying to the world, this is what I see, this is what I feel, this is who I am. There is tremendous freedom in that.

"The spirit of creation is an excruciating intricate exploration from within the soul."
~ el Greco

"A line is a dot that went for a walk."
~Paul Klee

Creative people need time to just sit around and do nothing."
~ Austin Kleon
This is probably the most difficult one for me to remember! It's very difficult for me to "just sit around". I tend to judge my worthiness as a person by how much I've gotten done in a day. The times I have taken time to relax, though, I am significantly refreshed and happier and more able to create. So intellectually I know it's true. I just can't always convince myself to do it!

"Art is not just ornamental, an enhancement of life.
It is a path in itself, a way out of the predictable and conventional... a map to self discovery."
~ Gabriella Roth

"The painting leads the painter."
~ Ardath Davis

Wednesday, February 27, 2019

Following my Bliss (#47)


Sometimes I feel like I know what I'm doing.  I have a strong sense of direction in my life or in my art.  I love that feeling.  I wake up in the morning clear-headed, excited to begin the day, looking forward with anticipation to the loveliness lined up before me.
Bathed in Light,
oil on canvas
24"x30", $950
one of the Beyond Barbie Beauties
When I was in the midst of creating the paintings and performances for Beyond Barbie, my mind was alive with plans, ideas, the beauty of my models, meetings with other creatives, time in the studio, and more. I worked so hard and so relentlessly, I gave myself a six-month headache - literally - I leaned over the computer in ways that caused muscle tension that caused excruciating headaches.  I didn't understand much about moderation or that the headaches were caused by my actions, so I just plowed on through without stopping.  Those months and years were filled with exhilaration and pain and wonder and joy and excitement.  My dad died during that time, and I was hit with a load-of-brick depression I had trouble excavating myself out from under. But I persevered because I had a vision and was fueled by that vision to complete it.
A set of four images painted during this time,
after my father died, in response to his death and
events surrounding it.
titles (from Top L, clockwise): Grief,
Compassion,  Pleasure, Presence
oil paintings on canvas, framed as one piece
$2400

Beyond Barbie was a great time. A wonderful experience. I'd do it over again in a heartbeat if the opportunity presented itself - though I would learn how to treat my precious body with greater respect so I wouldn't have to contend with the headaches.

Since then (2011-13), I've had a few other projects which lit me up and turned me on. The major ones had to do with Iceland.  

Anyone who knows me at all knows I fell in love with that country while on a 3-day stopover on my way back from Europe in 2015. Since then, I've been back 4 times, leading tours of friends and their friends twice. I've lived in artist residencies and a cottage on the lake, I've traveled solo, with strangers, with my children and my husband. However I get there, and whatever I do there, it is my happy place. I thrive under the majestic blue sky with pure white clouds, on the volcanic, beautiful vast ground where my eyes see nothing but beauty.  I began painting landscapes because of Iceland. There was more beauty than I could contain inside myself so I had to express it through art. I want that beauty around me all the time. 

To be continued...
Midsummer Meadow
pastel
36"x30"
$1250
created after my first trip to Iceland.


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