D Rusak
Jedi Council Member
I just read a really great book titled "The Artist's Way" by Julia Cameron. It's basically a self-help book to creative recovery and discovery. I was a little skeptical while skimming through the book and noticing many references to "god", but in the forward she notes that she believes creativity comes from some sort of higher energy that one taps into, and whatever we want to call it, be it God, Buddha, the universe, whatever, is fine. I guess the word "god" takes up the least space. The book has many exercises to work and think through and is designed as a 12-week program to unblock one's creativity. The two main features are what she terms "Morning pages" and "The artist date". Morning pages are journalling 3 pages' worth of material every morning. This can take any form- but must be done every day in its entirety, no matter how one is feeling. I think this is supposed to show you that good artistic work can be done in any situation, and that all of the things we write down are crowding our mind between us and our work. The artist date is a 2-3 hour block one sets aside to do something alone to cultivate our "inner artist child" (yes, I was rolling my eyes as well). This can be going to look at paint supplies at an art store, checking out a concert, making a collage out of things you find in the street, going on a walk, etc. The idea is that creativity is childlike, and we need to nurture it as such- finding fresh sources of inspiration, and showing it that we value it by giving it some alone time- not placing everything else as more important.
I've been doing the morning pages for a few days and all of my thinking is so much clearer. I did an artist date as well and I really got a lot out of it. I highly recommend this book not just for artists, but for anyone who is feeling blocked in their work, or looking for new sources of creativity in what they are doing.
I've been doing the morning pages for a few days and all of my thinking is so much clearer. I did an artist date as well and I really got a lot out of it. I highly recommend this book not just for artists, but for anyone who is feeling blocked in their work, or looking for new sources of creativity in what they are doing.