Tina Mammoser over at The Cycling Artist has been doing a fascinating series of podcasts about her artistic process. Last night, I listened to the latest one and I was very struck by something she said about how artists are either good finishers or good starters.
I'm definitely much better at starting things than finishing. Truth be told, I often dither over starting things too - I like to get everything sorted out in my head first and then I'll suddenly dive in and get going. So when I say that I'm better at starting than finishing, it's all relative: it's just that I truly suck at finishing.
I'm currently at the stage with the red embroidery (yes, the one I said I was going to finish weeks ago) where it's very hard to work on it because it's getting towards an end point. I know it isn't finished yet but I'm having a lot of trouble deciding where the next lines go. It's stopped being filled with infinite beautiful potential every time I drop the thread onto the canvas and the narrowing options are making me increasingly uncomfortable.
My instinct is to rush off and start a new one. A better one. One that will somehow miraculously instantly work without all this tedious humming and hawing.
But I'm plugging away trying to finish this one because I know how I am: new work tends to push old work aside and then the old work doesn't get finished. You wouldn't believe how much unfinished work I have in my studio. One of the things I loved about The Diary Project was that I had a daily deadline so I had to finish; there just wasn't the option to sit around being indecisive for weeks on end.
I wonder how I can incorporate that lesson, that discipline, into my regular practice? I've noticed that I often do better when the rules or limits of a project are clearly laid out at the beginning. Do I need to make all my work that way though? Surely there needs to be a place in my practice for freeform creativity too?
Sigh, you see how I am - these are the sort of knots I endlessly tie myself in. How odd that sometimes the work flows out of me almost effortlessly and at other times, it's this tortured, labyrinthine process. My mother says that I always have to make things difficult for myself; sometimes I think she has a point!
If you feel that you need a creative boost this summer, the lovely Camilla is running an online summer school. I'm still swithering about whether to sign up or not; it looks like fun but I don't know how much energy and time I'm going to have. But I'm certainly going to be dropping in regularly to see how they're getting on.
erin
Really hope you finish the embroidery piece, can't wait to see it fully.
Though admittedly I can relate as I also have loads of unfinished pieces floating in my studio..
erin
Really hope you finish the embroidery piece, can't wait to see it fully.
Though admittedly I can relate as I also have loads of unfinished pieces floating in my studio..