There is an old saying that literally hit home with me recently, “When nothing in life goes right, go left.”
Over the past few months, I had been busy painting a new body of work for last month’s Kneeland Gallery Plein Air Exhibition. The last few weeks leading up to the event were extra busy and the ‘stress’ was starting to show up in my latest painting!
Have you ever battled with a painting, but you just can’t seem to get it right? Even though I had great expectations for this painting the results were falling short. I was trying to portray a peaceful scene, yet everything looked tight and wrong.
At times like this, artistic temperament tries to creep in and I will hastily wipe off a whole canvas and start over again. However this time, I wasn’t about to give up. I really needed this painting to be a success for my show, and I didn’t have time to paint a lemon.
Here is what I did…
I concentrated my attention on the positive aspects of the painting and reminded myself of its original concept. Then, I recognized my mistakes in order to solve them.
I used a few helpful techniques.
- I looked at my painting through a mirror. Viewing the backwards painting really helped.
- I also turned it upside down.
- I put the painting in a frame.
- I also took the painting into a different room in the house and viewed it for a while.
- Lastly, I asked a fellow artist for advice. (I was ready to cut the painting down from an 18×24” to a 12×24”…I wanted to zip off the trouble area to solve the problem. My friend encouraged me to keep painting on it instead.)
With all of that new information, I had regained my focus. Then with a new sense of empowerment, I grabbed the paintbrush with my right hand, like I always do. But, this time I paused. Then, almost without thinking, I switched the paintbrush into my left-hand and began to paint!
Now bear in mind, I am not an ambidextrous person, but somehow the paintbrush felt really good in my left hand. Before I knew it, I was creating beautiful paint strokes that I had never before achieved with my right-hand! This was exactly what that stress-out, tight painting needed. I had fun and loosened up my brushwork.
The final results were amazing. Ironically, the painting turned out to be the star of my show and the first painting to sell!
I learned a lot from this experience. Most of us do everything with some sort of expectation, and sometimes it might even be unreasonable. When the results fall short of our expectation, we assume everything has gone wrong. In this story, I am grateful I went through the struggle because I have grown into a better painter because of this unusual painting experience.
The American poet Emily Dickenson once said, “The capacity to terminate is a specific grace.”
This quote rings true within the many facets of our lives, including relationships, jobs, goals and even painting. It took a renewed sense of composure and grace to successfully edit this painting. I had to decide upon which passages were good and which needed termination.
In the end, it’s not about giving up, and fixing it can be as easy as simply moving from the right to the left!
*****
I hope to meet you on Twitter, Facebook and now on Google Plus! http://gplus.to/lorimcnee ! If you want to see my paintings, please visit LoriMcNee.com
You might find some of these other articles helpful…
The Importance of Value & Tone in Painting
When Are You Ready to Call Yourself a Professional Artist?
On My Easel #3: From Lemons to Lemonade
How I Destroyed a Painting to Make it Better
Water Soluble Oils: Facts, Tips & Why I Use Them
How to Use the Rule of Thirds: Composition in Art
Focus and Plan to Paint!
10 Ways to Overcome Mental Blocks & Boost Creativity
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5 Common Traits of Successful Artists
How to The Right Paintbrush for the Paint Technique
I love this, Lori! You have such great insight. I loved hearing the story about your frustrations with the painting and how you turned it around. Congrats on it being a hit and selling it first! That’s awesome. I love the tip about holding the painting into the mirror & upside down–I do that, too! And it helps! I will have to keep in mind to switch hands next time I am in a rut. Thanks (as always) for the great advice! –Alli (@AllisonBrattArt)
Hello Allison,
Thanks for stopping by for a visit. It is great seeing you here. Glad this article inspired you. I have a big mirror in my studio and I use it all the time. Let me know if switching hands helps you!
Best-
Lori
Yep, a lot of the challenge is, in that uptight, stressed moment, to remember that there are tools which do work if only we would have the faith to try them. Sounds like your long experience has helped you do what you need to do when it all grinds to a halt. And the result is lovely – not surprised it sold quickly.
Unrelatedly, I’d love to hear your advice around pricing work – for established artists and also newbies like me. Thanks Lori.
Hello Lunar,
Thanks for the comment and feedback. I really appreciate it. Pricing is tricky and I plan to address it soon…it is on my ‘to do’ list! Thanks for the suggestion. Meanwhile, this post might help a bit… https://www.finearttips.com/2011/06/helpful-ways-to-negotiate-and-set-your-art-prices/ I plan to follow up with more details soon.
Cheers-
Lori
Thanks Lori…this is just what I needed to read, I have been having similar trouble and have been fussing to the point of it driving me nuts! I have done the mirror and upside down thing so now I will try the left hand…maybe I can rescue it!
Wow, Karen! I hope this technique works for you. Let me know how it goes…
Good luck!
Lori
I love how your painting turned out. Mesmerizing, simple and stunning. I can see why it sold so quickly!
Thank you for sharing your frustrations and solutions. It’s good to know that I’m not the only one. Switching to the left is such a great idea! I’ve done it with drawing, but have never really given it a good try with my brushes.
Hello Wendy, this one event has helped change the way I look at painting. Let me know if it works for you!
Cheers-
Lori
Lori,
What a great story! Can be applied to many life situations. I love the finished piece, the water looks so real I feel like I can touch it. Hope you have a great day. ~Julie
Thank you Julie! I am so glad you liked this little story and painting.
Best-
Lori
Nice story and even a more beautiful painting!:)
I wonder what your next painting would look like if you painted with your feet! Just kidding:)
Haha! Don’t tempt me…I am on a roll now. Seriously, this painting was a breakthrough piece and it freed me up to try new things – in paint, that is – lol. Thanks for the visit!
Cheers-
Lori
This piece has inspired *me* to find a way to apply the methods you used to rescue your work to other creative work contexts … Off to brainstorm! Well done, Lori.
Thank you Annie, your comment really made me smile.
Best-
Lori
Thanks for the mirror tip! I do mostly abstracts so I am always turning my painting upside down also moving to another room really does help! Great article and your painting turned out great Lori : )
Glad to teach you a thing or two! Thanks for the comment Heather.
Happy painting-
Lori
I just stumbled upon your blog and love your philosophy as much as your painting. I make landscape art quilts and can totally identify with creators block. Best to walk away and view another day. Last night gremlins took over my sewing machine (thread breakage, Puckering ect.) so I gave up and went to bed. They must have left during the night because this morning my machine is purring like a kitty:-) the painting you did would make great quilt, but I would not create it without your permission and I need to finish the 10 other project ideas I have going. I will be following you on twitter
What a fun comment! Those little gremlins visit my studio late at night too…it is best to get some sleep instead of fight with them! lol… I am glad you enjoy this blog and my thoughts.
Best to you-
Lori
Hi Lori,
I love this post and the title. So true, that we get stuck in our thought patterns and how we do things and forget other possiblities. Congrats on your show and the sale of your beautiful painting. I would love to attend one of your shows one day.
–Ann
Thanks so much Ann. This was a fun post to write, and I learned so much from the experience. It is always a pleasure to see you on my blog and I hope you can make it to one of my shows someday!
Lori 🙂