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Working
out August 11, 2000
Dear
Artist,
Most of us haven't had the conditions that Tiger Woods grew up
with. Our parents may have encouraged us from time to time, even helped with
lessons or coaches, but it's rare to find the twenty-four hours of hands-on
grooming that Tiger seems to have gone through. If we are to demand excellence,
we have to plan and do the work-outs for ourselves.
Apart from all the
reading that seems to be going on lately, I'm one for putting in time at the
work station. This is the main theatre where ideas are generated, skills honed,
methodology found, joy discovered, and acceptable product is eventually
produced.
I know it may sound a little childish, but there's a game I've
played with myself for some time. I wouldn't have mentioned it but an artist
friend wrote (in the not for publication mode) and told me he did it too. It
made me feel better about what I'm doing. Here it is:
I tell myself: "If
I do this exercise here, I'll let you work on that one, and when you've worked
on that one for a while, I'll let you finish that one over there." I know it's
silly but I'm glad I told you.
Best regards,
Robert
PS "Dad said if I hit a thousand balls with
the 9 iron, he'd let me go around once." (Tiger Woods)
Esoterica: "The
great thing and the hard thing is to stick to things when you have outlived the
first interest, and not as yet got the second which comes with a sort of
mastery." (Jane Erskine Stewart)
The following are selected
correspondence relating to the above letter. If you find value in any of this
please feel free to copy to a friend or fellow artist. We have no other
motivation than to give creative people an opportunity to share ideas and
possibly broaden their capabilities. Thank you for writing rgenn@saraphina.com
Ive seen the enemy and he is
us What is it about our western society that
elevates golf and hockey players etc. to such lofty heights as superstars while
real people such as doctors and good politicians go unheard of? It is sad to see
you use Tiger Woods as a symbol to emulate. Many sports, in particular golf is a
sanctuary of mostly untalented people, people who by and large are used as
fodder to stock the often obscene money bins of media tycoons. Commercial
television, disguised as entertainment, essentially is there to supply (at as
little cost as possible) a captive audience to advertisers. Witness Jerry
Springer, the endless Hitler documentaries, and yes golf, hockey
etc.
I have personally watched Wayne Gretzky grow from childhood into
what I often have noticed a person who has very little real social
skills. His constant childhood hockey practice left little room
for any thing else and sadly now I see that his existence is largely
predicated on his addiction to fame.
The real travesty is that people like these are looked upon as the
gurus of our cultural existence and landscape, while others, many with real
talent are seen as mere curiosities at best.
Please don't mistake this
note as sour grapes on my behalf, as I truly feel that I have been blessed with
enough talent to have a fulfilling and successful life. The human condition is
always "A work in progress", never a fixed point, but nevertheless one who he
has seen that the enemies of culture and the crusaders of ambition are basically
us, many in a vain attempt to give our children a so called better
life.
Michael Swanson
Free stuff
It seems that no matter what duties or business ventures I've undertaken
in the past - even numerous passions I've pursued throughout my
life--I've found that there's a close relationship between imposing
self-discipline upon oneself and being successful in achieving your
goals. Hard work pays off in perfecting your talents and skills
but above all your heart has to be into it as well to really 'make
it happen'. Most of my rewards/successes have been non-monetary
in nature - opening doors to other opportunities to name one. ALL
THE BEST IN LIFE IS FREE!
Dianne Middleton, Calgary
P.S. Had he lived in our time, wouldn't Leonardo
have been fascinated by the computer and microwave-oven! Probably
he would have invented them. Life was slower paced, yet lived simpler
in his day. This fact enabled him to observe, study and invent all
that he could. It does make you wonder what he would do with himself,
or where he would take us, had he lived in our time.
Joi de vivre
It seems to me that if there is nagging pressure in one's life,
the source of that pressure should not come from being an artist.
Could it be said that a true artist's soul experiences pressure
of different kinds that is motivating in nature and serves as artistic
expression? Pressure while painting is not something that I can
imagine, simply because I paint for pleasure. I understand the concept
of having a tortured soul and expressing it through painting. Beleive
me I do. I cannot understand becoming a tortured soul because I
paint. Of course there is good and bad pressure, and I do not make
my living painting. I have had to deal with the consequences of
my choice to paint however. I have been considered by some misunderstanding
souls to be everything from the bottom of the proverbial food chain,
lazy, old fashioned etc. etc. because I not only enjoy painting
but I am a homemaker by choice! Talk about double whammy! ;-) I
don't just enjoy painting and being a homemaker I embrace every
moment. I consider myself blessed to have discovered a love for
folk art and/ or tole painting. I am a passionate beginner that
is enjoying every step I take in improving what I love to do or
simply just doing it. I see it as such a shame that anyone should
lose the joi de vivre while painting; as for me it is the whole
point.
Diana King, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
Not
silly Your exercise is not silly. If it is, then I
am a silly person too. That is the way that I get the mundane work done - like
stretching canvases, washing brushes and cleaning work surfaces, tidying the
studio, doing housework, etc., etc. It is also the same exercise that I used to
quit smoking about 25 years ago. Nothing is silly if it works!
Shirley
Erskine, Oregon
Orbiting through projects
Your mention of your "childish game" caught my attention,
because I do something very similar. I'll have several projects
on the go, so that when I poop out on one, I can "avoid"
it for awhile by focusing on another project, and when I lose interest
in that (or reach the limits of frustration) I can escape from it
by moving on to a third. Eventually I come full circle and am back
at the first project, having had a refreshing but productive break
from it. This system allows me to orbit through projects and remain
productive without trying to do the impossible (i.e.change the tendency
towards avoidance/resistance/escapism which is so deeply rooted
a part of my "creative temperament"). This way, I get
to work with it rather than against it. It sometimes causes chaos
around my home studio, with several projects on the go, but that's
a small price to pay. And, hey, that's what studios are FOR. And
of course, this system has to be adapted for deadlines set in the
'real' (outside) world.
Lena Leszczynski
Goofers and
duffers So much of what we do in our professional
lives, whether we be painters or podiatrists, is based on training. Im thankful
that I was trained well in a photography school and then in an academic art
school. There seems to be an unfortunate trend these days that an artist may
simply emerge, full bloom, from some mysterious miasma of talent, a gift to all.
Time will tell whether these unskilled and untrained goofers will have
contributed much of lasting value. The nice thing and the satisfying thing about
sports is that there is a way to immediately determine value.
Henry Siddall, Yorkshire
To be a
dentist As a professional art teacher at the
seminar and workshop level I have to say that if beginners would just do a few
basic exercises over a few times they would train themselves from making the
same damn mistakes over and over later on. In group after group I see people
making the same errors year by year. Will there be no end to this folly? No
school of dentistry would permit this sort of shoddyness. I always have my
people try to master the fundamentals of drawing, perspective, of color mixing
and color theory, composition, etc. If they cant do it I recommend they try
some other vocation.
R Prowse, London.
ý If you would like
to see selected correspondence relating to the previous letter "Uniqueness"
please click here http://www.painterskeys.com/clickbacks/uniqueness.htm
You may be interested to know that artists from 70
countries have visited these sites since March 30, 2000. That includes some of
the wonderful people we are meeting along the great river.
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