Recently, excerpts from two books have had a great deal of impact on I think about the process of creating art.
The first excerpt is from Stitching to Dye in Quilt Art by C. June Barnes.
Barnes goes on to explain
Barnes explanation spoke to my heart and my frustration. I have not allowed myself to work my way up through the steps. I have more often than not expected myself to be an expert right off the mark.
I heard once that the year Babe Ruth broke the record for home runs he also was the top in strikes. (Oh, I just checked it out and sure enough, Babe Ruth was top in being Struck Out almost every year that he was also top in Home Runs. Baseball-Reference.com shows it very clearly; especially if you scroll down a ways.)
Now think about that! He was top in Home Runs because he swung! He was also tops in Strike Outs because he swung too. He was willing to take the risks.
As artists I think we are often not willing to strike out. We are not willing to take the risk of having something go in the trash instead of on the wall. In part I think that is because of the time that the artwork takes and the cost of the materials. I only have time to do so much art so I want what I do to be stellar.
Then there was the second excerpt. This one comes from my new most favorite book: Outliers by Malcom Gladwell.
"The emerging picture from such studies is that ten thousand of hours of practice is required to achieve the level of mastery associated with being a world-class expert - in anything" writes the neurologist, Daniel Levitin. "In study after study, of composers, basketball players, fiction writers, ice skaters, concert pianists, chess players, master criminals, and what have you, this number comes up again and again. Of course, this doesn't address why some people get more out of their practice sessions than others do. But no one has yet found a case in which true world-class expertise was accomplished in less time. It seems that it takes the brain this long to assimilate all that it needs to know to achieve true mastery. "
Gladwell goes on to discuss "prodigies" such as Mozart, Bobby Fisher (chess), Bill Joy (Java, etc.), Bill Gates, and others - all 10,000 hours! And usually the minimum time to accrue the 10,000 hours is 10 years. Bobby Fisher is the exception. It took him only 9 years.
These two excerpts freed me up! Now I can think of the beading and sewing hours as working to accrue my 10,000! I can see the wisdom in that. I am currently beading my second piece which is a shawl that is being donated to an art auction.
The first one I beaded is this one: Think of Me as an Ocean
I am fairly happy with how it turned out. Beading it was a learning experience as I had never done anything like this.
At first I beading a number of areas heavily using multiple types of beads. Then somewhere along the way I scattered some beads on the fabric just to see how they would look and then suddenly I found myself beading more in waves. The beads found their own method of expression and let me know how they wanted to travel around the piece. I actually ended up tearing out almost all of the first bunch of beading I did.
Now I am starting to bead the shawl I mentioned above. The title of the Art Auction is All That Jazz. I am making a shawl of light blue polartec. Right now, I am stitching on the Jazz part.
I have not come up with the final title yet though I have all the words I want to play with. Since this is a warm shawl/scarf I want to play against the tern Cool Jazz. Plus the material and some of the "jazz" is blue. Therefore the words I have to play with are Warm or Soft, Jazz and Blues. The working title at the moment is "Warm Jazz & Soft Blues" or maybe it should be "Soft Jazz and Warm Blues". Hmmm. To be decided!
I will try to post pictures of the shawl soon.
