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Friday, February 7, 2014

Of Splatters, Colors and the Process of Allowing!

And my inky drip/splatter obsession continues! So much fun!!

 

 

It has been amazing for me to embrace all this color and lack of control. As somebody who is usually more on the muted and controlled side in her expression of creativity, these bursts of color and mess of splatters and drips are quite freeing!

With the last several paintings, I’ve been really aware of what goes on for me while I paint. It’s quite amazing what a little pattern I have got going on.

First of all, I’m always convinced that I don’t have the ability/technical know-how, talent or whatever else, to actually put on paper what’s in my head. That’s before I’ve even started anything!
And I am usually “right” in that, however, I have found that even though it never ends up exactly like what I see in my head in terms of a picture, it DOES always seem to carry that energy and evoke the emotion I wanted to portray in the end. So, I push through.

 

Next, I am usually going along just fine for a bit and then this ONE (first of many)  thing will happen that has me convinced that I have now “ruined” the whole painting and I might as well just ditch it.

I wonder if you can tell what that might have been in this painting? Yep, that rather large, pink splatter streak! Yes, even in uncontrolled splatter world there’s apparently an inner critic that has “splatter standards!”

I was sure it would really not work anymore now and since I had only just put down my basic splatters, it would have been easy to just start over.

But no, these days I roll with it. I go with it, I carry on, I ignore the inner critic that keeps on telling me that I will regret not starting over, etc. But this is how I practice courage these days - I carry on anyway!

Just like I carry on the other 5-15 times during any given painting, where I am “sure” that this is just not going to work out.

Why do I willfully go and ignore my intuition? Why do I put myself through that and isn’t this just a lot like obstinacy, rather than courage?

I do it, because I have learnt that it is not my intuition. It’s also not obstinacy. It’s my resistance!

My attempt to control what it becomes, my attempt to create something I have already determined in my mind. That’s the playing-it-safe me. That’s the not-being-myself me!  And that’s also the judgmental me!

Who says this painting doesn’t need a completely disproportionate pink streak going in the other direction from all the others?

 

So, when I push through, when I ignore “the voices,” I let go of resistance and  enter into allowing.

Allowing myself to create what it is I need to express, allowing the painting to become what it needs to be. So it can evoke/transmit what it needs to evoke, in myself and others. And that really never has anything much to do with the mind anyway and that is where the inner critics and the resistance junkies reside a lot of the time!

This being courageous and allowing thing - it’s a daily process! Not always an easy one.  But it is becoming a gloriously freeing one!

Do I always succeed? No.

Some paintings really don’t turn out that great - in my opinion. But, I am happy to say, fewer and fewer! Maybe because there is no such thing as “making the cut”  anymore. They all are what they are! And I am so grateful for them and what each and every one has taught me and continues to teach me!

 

And as all this plays out in my art, I find it plays out in my life:

The practicing of courage - every day!

The letting go of judgments and preconceived notions - every day!

The allowing. The creating. The freer expression. The colors. The just BEing. The gratitude.

Every day!

 

 

YES! YES! YES!

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12 comments:

  1. Perfect! Absolutely perfect! And I love what you created!!!

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  2. Birgit, Love it and love the colors. I hope you don't mind, but I quoted this post in my blog today, because it fit perfectly with what I was writing about. Let me know if you want me to change it. You can see it here. http://www.papercalliope.com/anxiety-2/duct-taping-the-mean-girl/ - Betsy at PaperCalliope.com

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  3. Wonderful blogpost! And wonderful art! Love what you wrote about the inner critic. I SO know what you mean. I think if I would listen to my inner critic no art piece of mine would EVER get finished. *laugh*

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  4. Love the art! What a colourful fun piece. And thank you so much for the reminder to please myself! That is really what makes my art me!!!

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  5. Art enables us to find ourselves and lose ourselves at the same time. I am so glad you're finding joy in the journey.

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  6. Hi Birgit, I discovered you via Pinterest and so glad I did. Stunning artwork and tutorials. Thanks so much for sharing.
    Fliss x

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  7. Gorgeous!!! keep going!! More and more!

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  8. Thank you all so much for your wonderful comments! I appreciate you!

    @ Betsy: I'm so honored you quoted me! Thank you! And I left a comment on your blog post!
    @ Le Petit: I used ink sprays, shimmer mists and acrylics! :)
    @ Fliss: Yay, so glad you're enjoying my blog!

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  9. What a beautiful flow of life and art! love it Birgit! xxx

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  10. OMG!!!!
    It's so cool!!!!
    I loved all your painting a lot :)
    You are so talented :)
    Keep up the good work! :)

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Birgit Kerr