…. is there an artist in all of us?
I really believe that there is an artist in all of us. The problem for most people is that when you say artist they think of a painter, illustrator,or sculptor. So often people tell me they can’t draw. Everybody can draw; it’s just that some people are better at it than others. Why is that?
Very few people are naturally good at art. It takes practice and perseverance. Those that are good at portraits have studied the human face and done countless drawings of eyes, noses, lips and other facial features and then put them together to create faces.
People develop their own style after copying and experimenting and taking inspiration from other artists. I’m not talking about replicating or making exact reproductions of famous paintings. For example, I like Picasso’s abstract portraits with misplaced features and sharp angles. I’ve experimented with his style and have created a couple of paintings of my own. One is done in acrylic and in the other I used a combination of watercolours and oil pastels.
I think you can be great artist and never be an accomplished illustrator. I think that’s why I like abstract art. I love the freedom of it gives me when using paints and other media and how it allows me to play with colour and texture. I like using the word play because when it stops being fun then I lose interest. Why on earth would I want to pursue anything that wasn’t enjoyable and fun to do?
Now I’ve talked mostly about visual artists, such as painters and sculptors, and using traditional artist materials such as paints, clay and oil pastels. My point, however, is that the quilters, knitters, sewers, photographers, writers, bloggers, toymakers, musicians, jewellery makers, weavers, dancers, actors, singers and gymnasts of this world are also artists in their own right. They create beauty and give pleasure to many but most importantly they find personal joy and satisfaction in the doing of their art. Photography has become my new personal art form. I love experimenting with the different features of the camera.
None of these disciplines happen overnight. When you find what you like to do and work at it, you eventually get better. Did you knit a perfect scarf the first time around? Probably not. Are you a better cook today than you were in grade seven when you made your first macaroni and cheese? Hopefully. If you play the piano it’s more than likely that it involved hundreds of hours of practising scales that got you to where you are today.
The same is true for any visual art skill. Practice makes perfect or at least better. I know that if I took some life drawing classes my confidence and my ability to draw would improve. I’ve never met anybody that got worse at something after practising at it but I have a friend that believes only ‘perfect practice makes perfect’. I suppose that there is some truth to that as well.
For the last several weeks my grade 3 classes have been working on sewing quilt blocks and then decorating them with stitching, buttons and beads. It’s taking longer than I thought but their interest hasn’t waned and I hope I’ll be able to share some of their finished pieces in the next couple of weeks. In the meantime I finished my example. I think working with the students has helped keep them motivated and inspired to move on the next step. They’re really excited about adding stitches and embellishments to their squares.
Not everything that you create as an artist will be to your liking. Sometimes your vision doesn’t make it onto the paper. Last Friday my friend L and I ‘played’ with my paints. I just started to add colour to my plates and moved the paint around with brushes and forks and then transferred the design onto paper. I kept adding more paint and water to the plates. I usually have a lot of success with mono printing but I can’t say that this is my best work. I did, however, have fun experimenting with the paints. It was therapeutic and great stress reliever.
I see the artist in many of you whom I follow. I see it in your photography, in your writing, your paintings, your stories, your poems, your refashioned clothes, your DIY projects, your crafts, your recipes, your music and your inspirational quotes. Keep it up. Spread the joy.




I really like this post Carol! I am one of those people who say I can’t draw. But it doesn’t bother me, because I know I can write, and my photography skills are improving all the time (with help and encouragement from some professional photographer friends who are generous with their advice). So those are my preferred art forms! I can knit too…but after dragging out my needles last winter for the first time in years, knew I needed more regular practice. You’re so right. The first thing I knitted looked like a beginner’s effort, the improvement was marked in the second piece, once I had “practiced”.
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Thanks Lee. I wrote this post because one of my followers wrote how she wasn’t an artist and then she posted this beautiful painting that she had done with a group of friends at a workshop. I have to admit that it took years for me to say that I am an artist.
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I’m really looking forward to seeing your students’ quilt squares. There is nothing like art from children. When I used to teach first grade I used lessons from the book, Drawing With Children. I was always amazed at what the students would create. They were so free with their art and enjoyed the process. I really enjoyed your post today!
Beth
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Thanks Beth. Some of my best art comes from my youngest students in grade two because they haven’t learned to distrust their abilities and they soak up all the skills and techniques that I demonstrate and yet there’s still a freedom to express their creativity.
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So true. I used to paint as a child…but i was impatient and never tried to be really good at it. I regret it now. Well, atleast i haven’t done the same with my blogging. I will continue writing for as long as i am alive! 😀 i really liked this post.
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Thank you and I’m glad that you’ll continue blogging. Maybe some day you’ll pick up a brush again.
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As a kid I was more creative and enjoyed art a lot. As an adult I’ve always set myself up to be a non-artist. I tell my students that stick figures are the best I can do. But I remember in 5th grade my teacher was always having us do art and I thought it was the greatest thing ever – I was almost always happy with the results. Like with the painting I made last week, it turned out better than expected. 🙂
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After Grade 8 it was almost 30 years before I picked up a paint brush again. I think my own children inspired me to try painting again. Two of them went to an art school and studied visual art and music and the third one studied photography at university. All three of them now have jobs that involve the arts.
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That is so cool! I did photography in high school and had a blast. Mostly I experienced the arts through music, though – Piano, violin, and cello. But mostly piano.
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Piano and cello were the two instruments that two of my children played and the third (who always had to be different) played the saxophone.
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Loved your abstract faces. Quite Picasso-like. I’ve always like that sort of painting. It’s as if it explores different facets of a person making them more real than the usual portrait. I can only speak for here, and I’m sure it in no way applies to you, but many kids here were put off art in years past because their teachers told them they were rubbish at it as they didn’t ‘conform’ to what was accepted. Nowadays that has changed and we value those who see things differently. Vive la difference!
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Thank you Dorothy. I learned a long time ago that those that conform are denied their creativity and that when children put a lot of effort into their work and are allowed to experiment there is always something special and wonderful to look at when the work is done.
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