All creation is an act of faith. Faith in yourself and your capacity. Your skills. Your persistence. Your vision. Especially your vision.
As an artist, you don’t have a blueprint, a manual to show you the way. No IKEA how-to-kit. “Follow these steps, assemble these parts; here’s the final product.” Only the vision in your mind, of what it could be.
At times, you may waver. Self-doubt creeps in. You run into a problem, and your vision seems to be more and more a fata morgana, a mirage drawing further and further away.
Other times, you cannot be even bothered to do the work. “What’s the use? It’ll be useless. It’s such a bad idea.”
That’s fine, in fact. Self-doubt is an artist’s constant companion. We have to learn to live with it. Acknowledge it, look it in the eye, and keep working.
There’s no other way.
If you hear a voice within you say you cannot paint, then by all means, paint, and that voice will be silenced.
― Vincent van Gogh
Related Posts
- Just Do It!
- The Perpetual Tide and Ebb of the Creative Process
- Keep Going: Cardio for Zombie Hunters and Writers
- How To Handle Creative Blocks & Avoid Distraction
If you liked this post, share it on your preferred social network or forward it to a friend.