+As a man thinketh
February 19, 2002
Dear Artist,
James Allen (1864-1912) of Ilfracombe, England was the granddaddy of
the self-improvement industry. His little book As A Man Thinketh
has gone through multiple printings and translations and has influenced
millions, including Norman Vincent Peale, Earl Nightingale, Tony Robbins.
His ideas, told mostly through metaphor, can be summed up thus: "The
mind is the master weaver, both of the inner garment of character and
the outer garment of circumstance, and where they have hitherto woven
ignorance and pain they may now weave enlightenment and happiness."
He makes the case that men with unwholesome thoughts are not fit
for prosperity, creativity, success, or even happiness. And while experience shows us that
there are lots of unsavory folks who become presidents of corporations, or even rich
artists, he has a message that many artists will intuitively know to be true.
Thought and forethought are imbedded in our business.
Visualization and imagineering are tools that we lose at our peril. Honesty and childlike
purity are our stock in trade. We know that anything that can be conceived can also be
accomplished. We know about accentuating the positive and eliminating the negative.
Self-employed, self-anointed and self-starting, we know that the building of character and
achieving the right mental habits are as important for the serious artist as learning to
draw and paint. Many of us have taught ourselves techniques to throw off depression,
self-defeat, dry periods, criticism. We have learned how to deal effectively with the
tides of disillusionment and even despair. We are a people who build castles in the air,
then live in them.
James Allen died at age 48, before he could see his
ideas truly fly. His was a newly- industrialized, exploitative society.
He hardly mentions women. Were he alive today he might be surprised
at the number of artists and other independent thinkers who "just
do it."
Best regards,
Robert
PS: "Dream lofty dreams, and as you dream, so shall you
become. Your vision is the promise of what you shall one day be; your ideal is the
prophecy of what you shall unveil." (James Allen)
Esoterica: At the same time there are many of us who believe we
are creatures inhibited by outside conditions. Allen's idea was that we are our own
creative power. "Master yourself," he said, "then you can master your
world. Man is manacled only by himself; thought and action are the jailers of Fate."
The following are selected responses to the above and other
letters. Thank you for writing rgenn@saraphina.com
+Key to Yourself
I have the James Allen book (one of my favorites) and if he was the
granddaddy of self-improvement then Venice Bloodworth was the grandmother. Her book
Key to Yourself published in 1952 is the book I turn to again and again when I
need reinforcement as an artist and as an individual. We are all unique and if we are
expressing ourselves with truly personal work it is unique as well. No one has seen
through our eyes or walked in our shoes so our experiences color our work to give it
individuality. Our life is what we make it and our success or failure is determined by the
choices we make. We attract to ourselves from the thoughts in our mind so if we want to
change our circumstances we must change our attitude. This art journey we have taken is by
necessity lonely. While in the art mode we retreat into ourselves with only the knowledge
and ability possessed to this point for expression. True creativity must be, I think,
heaven on earth.
Bobbie Kilpatrick brkarts@pdq.net
+Channel the energy
Certain people throughout time have known that each
individual creates their own fate, destiny, circumstance, whatever you want to call it, in
the course of what they think. This little gem of knowledge must be learned, if someone
just told you to think it and then you will get it, you would not believe him or her. But
once you learn to use your own power, you believe anything is possible as long as you are
willing to channel the mental and physical energy into the endeavor. Right mind, right
energy and true determination are the keys.
Sandy Triolo, Silver Spring, MD, USA sandytri@yahoo.com
+Connection
James Allen was contemporary with my paternal Grandfather, Samuel
John Ireland who was born in Barnstaple, Devon just a few miles from Ilfracombe. I was
privileged to visit both places and the Cornwall coast with a group of painters last May.
Our hotel for 3 nights was in Ilfracombe right at the seaside. I've printed out Allen's
book and shall cherish, digest and highlight much of his wisdom and have a sense of time
and place as I read. My grandfather studied at the Royal College of Art, London and in
Europe, taught at King's College, University of London and was selected to emigrate to
Canada in 1886 to be principal of the Hamilton Art School where he taught technical
drawing to J. E. H. MacDonald.
Grace Cowling, Ontario, Canada gcowling@sympatico.ca
+Pleasure in the journey
The bonus and the curse of our modern world is instant access to
information, trivia and imaging. People flip through headlines, scan pictures, become
instant experts and then forget. Involvement in the process of painting brings me
satisfaction: experimenting, ruminating, spending time with the subject. It is a visual
joy to watch the grays in the morning light turned to color by the sun, watch evenings
with color saturated shadows; to see how the noonday sun flattens, how colors sing on a
rainy day. This wonder filled process is a nebulous experience to describe. The finished
piece is the destination, but the pleasure lies in the journey.
Jo Scott-B scottb@direct.ca
+Yeats's friends
James Allen's apparently sexist attitudes
were not such a problem to readers 100 years ago. The use of the word
"man" was meant to imply all mankind with a tacit nod to members
of the fairer sex. In the recent book Yeats's Ghosts, the Secret
life of W.B. Yeats, author Brenda Maddox deals with the self-starting
and independent thinking woman poets, writers and painters that came
in and out of Yeats's life. Most of them were lesbians and had
already burned their bridges.
Jan Sinnott, UK
+Quilting
It is good to hear these good thoughts for so many times we
read in the paper such horrible tales of folks doing such unkind (to say the least) deeds
to others. It is good to read something that sets a goal in front of us, something to aim
at. "The mind is the master weaver, both of the inner garment of
character and the outer garment of circumstance, and where they have hitherto woven
ignorance and pain they may now weave enlightenment and happiness." This made me
remember how it is when one puts a quilt together. First picking out a pattern, or
designing your own, then picking out the right colors and material. As you put it
together, piece by piece, thinking you have the pattern in mind, but finding the real
excitement comes when you turn the quilt over. What a wonderful surprise, a colorful
picture, even more beautiful that you could imagine. It takes a long time to make a quilt,
just like building character.
Bev Willis, Fresno, California, USA willis@psnw.com
+Views of genius
Most views of genius are a combination of the
outside and inside world, as it's hard to be a self-declared genius,
even though just as valid as the rest. But looking at the "geniuses"
declared in the public arena, one is struck at the variety. Clearly
Gandhi and Rockefeller are quite different in their "genius."
And of course, there are some kinds of genius that many do not like
to acknowledge, such as Mao's, Stalin's, Marquis De Sade's, and Theordore
Kaczynski's genius on the dark side of human nature. Recognized genius
may be born of favorable circumstance (and also "good timing"),
but it is clear that genius is only accomplished as it has been said
by "hard work". But if the question of going from "smart"
to "sharp" to "bright" to "genius" is
a matter of persistence: what makes that persistence? I say temperament.
For persistence, you need passion, and for passion you need temperament.
It's easy to "practice" skills that you have a passion for
doing. Needless to say, however, there are an almost infinite number
of skills, so genius can vary greatly.
David Keirsey keirsey@keirsey.com
+Me and my art

Rocket girl, Leanne Cadden, Victoria, BC, Canada leannecadden@hotmail.com Peach Iris

Cold comfort, Sylvio Gagnon, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada sgagnon@cyberus.ca Skating at the National Art
Center
þ
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+Poem
Yet all experience is an arch wherethro'
Gleams that untravelled world whose margin fades
For ever and for ever when I move.
How dull it is to pause, to make an end,
To rust unburnished, not to shine in use!
As tho' to breathe were life!
(Alfred, Lord Tennyson)
Submitted by Tania J. Bourne taniaj1@shaw.ca
You may be interested to know that artists
from every state in the USA, every province in Canada, and at least 97 countries worldwide
have visited these pages since January 1, 2002. That includes Vic Johnson vic@asamanthinketh.net who says "You did a
magnificent job of connecting Allen's teaching to the specific challenges that artists
face." And Ed Berkeley berkeley16@attbi.com
of Portland Oregon reminds us: "Psychiatrists have patients who build castles in the
air and live in themin the meantime the psychiatrists collect the rent." And
Jewelene Walton jewelene.walton@tx.usda.gov
who wrote: "As a Man Thinketh made me go home and pull my copy and reread it
last night - what a scary thought that I alone am responsible for all my failures due to
bad thoughts. Isn't email fantastic? What I would never have dreamed of learning about
just 2 years ago that I have found here."
Will wonders never cease dept.
(RG note) One of the most popular features of The Painter's
Keys site, "The Resource of Art Quotations" http://www.painterskeys.com/quotations.htm
is now available on palm devices. (PDA) This service has been facilitated by subscriber
Ruth Temple ruthtemple@ix.netcom.com of San
Francisco, California. Palm telephones with internet access are currently one of the
fastest growing areas of the communications industry, and we are pleased to be in the
forefront. What this means is that the busy artist, artistic businessperson, or stressed
art-educator can get any quote from our resource while on the go. Amazing. "The
wisdom of the wise, and the experience of ages, may be preserved by quotation."
(Isaac D'Israeli)
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