On Painting (Almost) Every Day.

IMG_3312 

“In Search” 6×6, oil on canvas [button link=”http://www.dailypaintworks.com/buy/auction/282187″ type=”big”] Bid Now[/button] SOLD

My pre-ordered copy of Carol Marine’s book came in yesterday, and last night I started pouring through it.

It inspired me to get back to daily painting. I’ve been painting (almost) every day for a while now, but lately I’ve not created single (small) paintings in one sitting. In other words, I’ve been painting every day but not creating a painting a day. Without the pressure of a 30 in 30 challenge, I’ve gotten into the awful practice of starting a painting, getting quite close to finishing it and then abandoning it in favor of taking a hot bath. I’m not a closer.

The book re-inspired me to get back to just painting– to make the daily paintings a priority even over the commissioned pieces because, in the end, it’s “painting small and often” that makes me a painter capable of successfully accomplishing the commissions I receive.

Last year, I was racking my brain for ways to make a living from my art– lessons, crafts, art and prayer workshops, etc. I spent countless hours on my computer looking around for other artists, ideas. I had a one failed Etsy store and a FB page with 300+ fans that I posted to once in a blue moon. It wasn’t long before I discovered the painting a day movement and Carol Marine whose paintings I immediately fell in love with (she started doing her daily paintings at nap time when her son was a year and half– sound familiar?). That’s when it occurred to me that perhaps I didn’t have to figure out something terribly niche, I could simply paint and sell my paintings, ie, be an artist.

I still have a million projects I’d like to do and the frontrunner is an ebook on using art to pray.  But for now, I just make paintings. Sometimes I write about them.

IMG_3306
I started this one yesterday and got quite close to finishing. Why’s it gotta be so hard? If I stayed with it another twenty minutes it might have been done today. Oh well.

Today, I put aside the almost-finished portrait I was working on in favor of a tiny 6×6 canvas. I used a big brush on a small surface– one of the things I’ve learned to do (relatively well) in the last six months. When I look back at the paintings I created in April, I’m a little shocked. I don’t know if others see it, but I’ve learned more (about painting and perhaps myself) in the past six months than I had in the previous six years. And it’s because of daily painting.  And I’m ready to do it.  Or almost do it.

 

 

Picture of Denise Hopkins

Denise Hopkins

November 5, 2014

Share Post

blog

Related Blog Posts

Day 31. If you want to go far…

  “If You Want to go Far” 24×30 inches, oil on canvas I started this month with a bike, and...

View Post
Day 30. Reteach a thing its loveliness.

“The Bud Stands for All Things” 24×24 inches, oil on paper I discovered this poem last week by Galway Kinnell...

View Post
Day 29. Intuition

“Follow Your Intuition” 9×12 inches, oil on paper My art studio is a 300 square foot storage room underneath our...

View Post

Privacy Policy

This following document sets forth the Privacy Policy for this website. We are bound by the Privacy Act 1988 (Crh), which sets out a number of principles concerning the privacy of individuals using this website.

Collection of your personal information

We collect Non-Personally Identifiable Information from visitors to this Website. Non-Personally Identifiable Information is information that cannot by itself be used to identify a particular person or entity, and may include your IP host address, pages viewed, browser type, Internet browsing and usage habits, advertisements that you click on, Internet Service Provider, domain name, the time/date of your visit to this Website, the referring URL and your computer’s operating system.

Free offers & opt-ins

Participation in providing your email address in return for an offer from this site is completely voluntary and the user therefore has a choice whether or not to disclose your information. You may unsubscribe at any time so that you will not receive future emails.

Sharing of your personal information

Your personal information that we collect as a result of you purchasing our products & services, will NOT be shared with any third party, nor will it be used for unsolicited email marketing or spam. We may send you occasional marketing material in relation to our design services. What Information Do We Collect? If you choose to correspond with us through email, we may retain the content of your email messages together with your email address and our responses.