Thursday 25 March 2021

The #CreativeLife 2021 - could boredom help your creativity?

Today I am not going to say anything except that this was an interesting concept for me, and I am going to share it with you.

Enjoy!

💚Linzé 💚


This image will be better understood if you look at the YouTube video. Also subscribe to Adam's channel for more inspirational videos like this one.


Monday 22 March 2021

The #CreativeLife 2021 - review of week 11

 Planning is a good thing, but sometimes life has other plans

I mentioned in my previous post that planning is part of the creative life, and it is. It should be, and it is a good thing when you plan time to spend doing something creative. Last week life had other plans for me and my creative time did not happen until Friday.

Do I feel guilty about it? I do, but not because I did not draw or paint anything. I felt guilty for letting you down. I did not send out my newsletter and I did not post on Thursday, and that is letting down you, the person who takes time out of your busy life to read my blog twice a week. Even if you are not a subscriber to my newsletter, I respect that your time is as valuable as mine.

So, thank you for coming back today to read this post.

I cannot go back to change what happened last week, but I can only move forward and do my best again this week. The most important thing I have done is to not let last week (and all its issues) hold me back from what I enjoy. So I worked on a colour pencil drawing for a drawing competition due very soon and finished my inktober52 drawing for this week on Sunday.

Today is a public holiday in South Africa, so I will have a little more time to work on my drawing for the competition, but only after I have breakfast with a friend in my art group.

Even though it is a four day work week, I have to do a quotation for a client who requested that I do an evaluation of a new product. Exciting stuff!

I wish you a wonderfully creative week and remember to stay safe. Until Thursday!

︙ Linzé 🇿🇦💚


Monday 15 March 2021

The #CreativeLife 2021 - review of week 10

This week I will share a little more boring(?) detail of my creative life. So here goes:

On Monday I went for tax training. But while the lovely lady explaining stuff to me went to ask someone else the answer to a question I had, I realised that I simply did not have the time to do the monthly tax calculations for my company. So I decided to let my auditors carry on with the task and just send me the invoice. I know that I can do the work, but I also know that my diverting my focus, is not the best thing for my business. I am an engineer, and I am happy to leave the fax stuff to the experts.

I have to renew my driver's license. Yeah, that pain the butt rolls around every 5 years in this country. So on Tuesday, I had an appointment to have my eye test to get the certificate to say that I can still see properly. Hmmm.

Then the struggle started to get the appointment for the renewal process. I wasted a lot of time on that on Wednesday. Will try again this week.

On Thursday my daily planning shifted because of loadshedding. Yeah, our power supply utility still doesn't know how to keep the lights on reliably. At least we have an app that does help with dealing with this situation to some degree. At the current status, this app will be the most used in the country until Wednesday (we hope!).

Friday was mostly work stuff. And another Netflix series binge started the weekend, ending on Sunday morning just before lunch. This time it had 48 episodes of 45 minutes each. I am nuts, I know, but at least I am getting a few hours of sleep and am not completely useless otherwise.

I finished my leprechaun junk journal page (art group project) and drew a Colonial Viper for the #inktober52 prompt due this week.

So the goal this week is to finish drawing the seashells for the first challenge of the South African Drawing Guild and write a post or two for the #atozchallenge coming in April.

Stay healthy, live creatively and I will see you again on Thursday.

︙ Linzé  💚💚


Thursday 11 March 2021

The #CreativeLife - Keeping up the practice

How do we get better at being creative?

There is a saying that I am sure that you have heard about at least once: practice makes perfect. And then I am sure you will agree that perfection is not attainable, so why should you bother?

If you think back to when you learned something for the first time, was it easy to do it? Of course not. You practised it over and over again, and with every practice session, you became more skilled and improved your understanding of it.

And creativity in any shape or form works exactly the same way. People often tell me that they can barely draw a stick figure, so they cannot draw. I have given up trying to explain to those people that anyone can learn to draw. Instead, I focus my energy on rather helping people who want to learn, because they inherently understand that the skill is developed with practice. Practice learning, practice to improve their skills, and practice to deepen their understanding of the nature of their own creativity.

In my art group, everyone likes to paint exciting subjects and we enjoy playing with new materials. As the teacher, I am more aware of continuing to learn to improve my own skills on top of the fun of new projects. I, therefore, make a point of it to always reiterate that practice improves our skills, and not the new materials or spending 15 minutes to paint the pretty flowers we see in a photograph.

Practice takes time like everything else we have to do in our daily lives. Next time I will share more about how I plan time to practice my artistic skills.

Stay safe, stay healthy, and live creatively until Monday!

︙ Linzé  🇿🇦💚


Monday 8 March 2021

The #CreativeLife 2021 - review of week 9

  April is blog challenge month, and today the participants are revealing their themes for their 26 days of blogging. I am taking part as well, and my posts will following my blog theme for 2021: aspects of the #CreativeLife. But instead of boring you with 26 posts of my daily life, I will be sharing some of my artwork, as well as a few bits and pieces of info about the things influencing the creation of art projects.

For more info and seeing what other bloggers will be up to >> Twitter #AtoZChallenge or @AprilA2Z

Now back to the usual week-in-review news for week 9 of 2021

On Wednesday I took my car in for its annual service. I found a dealership close to the lab and decided to take my car to them since my husband, who usually takes my car to a dealer close to his place of work, working from home for two days. Not an unusual thing to do, I grant you, but that it was not a usual service day for me.

One hour after I fetched the car again, thanks to one of my colleagues who took me to collect it after the service, I got a call from the service manager from the dealership with an offer to purchase my car. I turned him down. Not because the offer was not good enough, but the one model of vehicle that would tempt me right now to sell is not available in South Africa. And it is apparently unlikely to be made available. Welcome to my world.

The challenge for our art group last week was to draw dead leaves lying on concrete blocks. I took the picture at one of the local malls and challenged the group to take the almost monotone photograph and turn it into an abstract/impressionistic project. And here was the true challenge: we had to do it using watercolour pencils.

I think all of us had a learning experience, ranging from colour combinations that don't work, applying the pencils on paper not suited to the media, and practising freehand drawing using the grid method. Was it worth the effort?

Learning about a medium or a technique only happens when you sit down and experiment with it. So I would say it was definitely worth the effort (or aggravation?) to learn more about the mediums we own.

Sleep deprivation due to a Netflix story happened again, but at least this time I waited for the weekend so I could catch up a bit on Sunday.

So here is to a new week, new work challenges, and a whole lot of trying to avoid procrastination (aka Netflix) until I finished my todo list for the week.

Stay healthy, and live creatively until Thursday!

︙ Linzé  🇿🇦💚


Thursday 4 March 2021

The #CreativeLife - the journey is the motivation

 What keeps you motivated?

People often say that you need to follow your passion and that will make you happy. In the context of this post, I am not going down the road of happiness, but rather discuss a few thoughts about passion and motivation. I don’t believe that following your passion will contribute to your creativity long term. Passions burn high, and like anything with a hot fire, it does not last very long. Of course, passion is not a bad thing, but it can be tragically short living. Kind of reminds me of being inspired by the muse.

She pops along, and you cannot help yourself so you create, create, create. But then you get tired and stop. Then you have to wait for the muse to strike again and the destructive cycle starts all over again. The problem is a lack of consistency and frustration. So if passion is not the answer, what is the alternative? I wish the answer was easy, because you need to clarify this for yourself, but here are a few pointers to help you out.

What motivates you to create?

  1.     Creativity is not given to a selective few. It is something that we all use almost every day, even if you are not aware of it. If you think for a moment, you will realize that even solving a small problem, often uses your creative skills even if it only involves thinking about the best way to do it.
  2.    Creativity cannot be used up. One of the reasons where the muse theory often lets you down. Because if you need to rely on the inspiration that is inconsistent and fickle, how are you ever going create anything for someone else? Let’s say you show this awesome painting to a friend and they want one too because her mother is having a birthday soon and she would just love this style of landscape. If you need to wait for the muse to rock up and do her thing, you are never going to produce a single mark on the canvas. That means that you need to find the inspiration within yourself to do the work because that friend is not going to be impressed if you tell her a day before her mother’s birthday that you couldn’t paint.
  3.    Finding motivation needs a habit update. You are creative, and you are drawing, and the muse does visit once in a blue moon, but that is not good enough. To make it good enough, you will have to take charge of your creative practice. And there is the keyword to this whole post: practice. Creativity needs fuel, and the fuel is practice. Now you’re wondering about that fire again, right? Let’s get into that again.
  4.    A habit update will keep the fire burning. What will last longer: a slow fire fed regularly, or a bonfire where you dump all the fuel on it in one go? Of course, the slow fire, there is no argument. For a sustained creative life, feeding the fire requires a regular effort. Daily if you can. Habits are those things that we do without thinking and adding a habit of creative practice to your life will not only keep the fire burning (without a fickle muse messing it up) but it will also produce the work that you can promise to others. And regular practise has the additional benefit of improving your skills too. Win-win, right?

You might wonder when I got so smart about all this? When I started writing 22 years ago, I knew nothing about writing books. I have read hundreds of books in my lifetime, and subconsciously understood what makes a good read, but I had to learn how to write that book that captured my attention. The same thing happened when I started drawing and painting. I read books, I took classes, and I practised. A lot. Now I teach art (and engineers), but I still learn and still practice, because it motivates me to keep adding fuel to my creative fire.

And that is both the journey and the motivation. Learn. Practice. Learn some more. Practice some more. And over time you will find the voice that makes you the author, the artist, the poet, the engineer that creates new solutions, new art, or new words every time you sit down to produce and deliver.

Stay healthy, and live creatively until Monday!

︙ Linzé 🇿🇦💚


Monday 1 March 2021

The #CreativeLife 2021 - review of week 8

 Pain, procrastination, and Netflix - welcome to a week gone wrong

I spent the week on my own with hubs away to take photographs at a safari park in KwaZulu Natal (or KZN as we locals call it). I don't mind the solitude and usually spend my non-working time catching up on art projects that are behind schedule.

Calendar week 8 highlighted
Yeah right. This time I spent more time procrastinating by watching my latest addiction on Netflix: Korean and Chinese series. Since I don't speak either language this was not an opportunity to do something else while the series played in the background. Nope, I had to watch the subtitles to follow the story.

So yeah, very little sleep (3 hours on Tuesday, and 4 hours on Friday) and not much else accomplished. In the past, I would have hated myself for this waste of time, when I have so many other enjoyable things to do, but no longer. I accept that somewhere, perhaps subconsciously, I needed the time away from other things. So I file the experience in my memory, enjoyed the Korean screenwriting and some excellent acting, and am ready for a new week.

The flip side of all this butt to chair hours of Netflix is severe back pain. I know better, but I don't seem to learn so well as I think I do. Five days of back pain was not fun, but I am getting better since I made a point of moving more often.

April is going to be a hectic month for bloggers around the world, so stay tuned for the reveal next Monday.

In the week ahead, there are so many things happening again, but I will save the stories for next week, because, you know ... life.

Stay healthy, and live creatively until Thursday!

︙ Linzé  📚💚


A-to-Z blog challenge: Step Q - action steps (part 4: preparing mixed media elements)

  Slapping paint on a panel is fun, but adding non-traditional mixed media elements allows me to really let the creative juices flow. Becaus...