Four Steps to Finding Your Passion in Art (2024)

Four Steps to Finding Your Passion in Art (1)

I have two painting workshops coming up in October. It’s terribly exciting. It has been an investment regarding both the time and the other bits and pieces to create the classes. I have tried to create as coherent, useful and fun classes as possible, taking all the comments and suggestions into account without losing the focus and the real benefits that these workshops can provide.

Planet Colorcelebrates color in a 7-step process.
Nature in Your Mindcreates a natural connection between the mind and the brush.

Finding Your Passion in Art

This blog post is a pre-session for Nature in Your Mind. With this post, I want to show how much potential and passion you can have as an artist. I also hope that you will sign up for Nature in Your Mind, discover more possibilities and get personalized guidance while having a great time painting!

1) Discover through Experimenting!

Think about art as an exploration journey! Through experimenting, you can pick ways that feel most natural and enjoyable to you. Just like there are thousands of species of birds, there are many ways to paint. If you use only one technique and one approach to painting, it’s like sitting on a balcony and listening to the same bird every morning. But if you stand up and go walking in nature, you will hear a variety of melodies.

Discoveries happen through experimenting. Try painting with a dry brush, a wet brush, a brush that has thin paint, a brush that has multiple of colors, etc. Start painting with one thought and then change your focus to another one. Learn to see the possibilities of an unfinished painting instead of judging it like it’s already finished. Start with safe and easy and then be open to small mistakes that can show you a new direction. If you weren’t able to mix an even color,embrace the variety of colors, the painterly look and go to a new path from there.

Four Steps to Finding Your Passion in Art (2)

Three Levels of Experimenting

The way you paint most naturally isn’t what feels most comfortable at first. Staying on the balcony is easy. You can tell everybody that you have this friend, the bird that sings to you every morning. But you don’t know what you miss out if you only stay friends with one technique or one theme or one way to plan your painting.

My painting workshop Nature in Your Mind contains experimenting with paint in three levels.

First, playing with the way you look at things by changing the perspective in the middle of the painting.
Second, playing with a theme by building abstracts from realistic images.
Third, playing with control by taking turns with controlled and loose strokes.

While experimenting with these, you can pick ideas and techniques that suit the best for you and then start applying them to your art. You can set new goals and see how your art can bring more enjoyment not only to you but other people as well.

2) Listen What Other People Sayabout Your Art!

Let’s get back on the balcony. I remember the time when I felt totally lost in art making. It was like I had opened the door but didn’t see any birds singing. I felt alone. But then, I got tips on how to attract birds. I drew and painted what I saw other people do too. I felt like I had company but still, I felt limited. I was one of the many who had the same bird singing on the balcony. Sometimes it even felt like we were competing with whom the bird would sing the loudest.

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The situation changed when I started listening what other people say about me. I expanded my attention to how my art affects others. I found many comments extremely useful, even if the person was a family member, a blog reader, an art teacher or anyone who saw my art. First, there was just a word or two that I could grab. When I felt like I was following a path that was hardly visible, I found asking follow-up questions beneficial. I asked: “Why did you like this picture?” or even “Why didn’t you comment anything?”.The comments led me to strange places. But as I continued, my images changed, the voices got louder, and I heard more birds singing.

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But I wasn’t quite there yet. I hadn’t found what would personally resonate with me. After trying to see the big picture from people’s comments, I understood why we read horoscopes, click through personality tests, search for our personal style. We try to seeour originality – where our talents truly are.

3) Accept That Your Flaws Can Be the Best in You!

I used to beat up myself for being too demanding, a perfectionist. I blamed myself not being good with routines either. To get through the mundane work, I have reinvented the wheel too many times. My husband has found the perfect way to make a bed and fill the dishwasher. I have found many different ways, and I am in search for more.

But a couple of years ago, I made a test that described how other people see me. The test said that my ability to invent unconventional ideas, make new interpretations of the old things and always aim for the highest standard attract people the most! That’s probably the reason you are reading this blog. I have become more open with the worst in me which, in turn, has inspired me to blog more and create more. Sometimes the best things in us seem ugly to ourselves. However, authenticity attracts people. Our black can be pure gold to others. Our black can be like soil for the flowers that we can grow from there.

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4) Find Your Real Reason for Creating and Put It Into Words

When people ask me why I create, my first answer is: “Because I need to.” I need tohave time for balancing my life, be able to reflect what has happened and get energy from creative activities. But the answer doesn’t help me when I am staring at the blank canvas. I need a higher reason to create images that feel meaningful to me. I need more than some inspiring Pinterest boards to connect emotionally with my work. I need a direction, a statement that defines when I have succeeded and what I am passionate about.

I used to have ahard time in evaluating my pieces.Some looked ok, but there was something missing. Others were clumsy and awkward, but I felt connected with them. Iwanted to create unique pieces and still, be as good as anyone creating with the same style. I wanted to make my personal version but yet didn’t have a clue what to include and what to exclude. I wanted to express myself but still, play to be someone else. I wanted to escape, yet seek for the truth. I felt I have to focus and limit myself but at the same time, I wanted to be free when creating. It all felt controversial.

My solution has been to find the words that describe the real reason why I am creating. It’s surprising that the words have been the answer because the problem seemed to be visual only. I think that our left brain has to understand what our right brain wants to express. It’s like after naming the birds you would hear them better.Whatever I create I have the same focus. It’s not a theme, it’s not a style, it’s the emotional connection that I want to make through whatever I create.

My ArtistStatement

In my art, I want to console people. I want to express grief and sorrow, blacks and browns. But I also want to show the power that is more joyful and that comes in with brighter colors. I want my paintings to have the atmosphere of places that make you connect with your spirituality. I am inspired by churches, libraries, museums and special places in nature. I see spirituality as an uplifting timeless force that has no specific religion. I hope that even for a short moment, my art can be your icon, the image that connects you with your spiritual self. I wish that my art brings you hope no matter what your source of melancholy is. I wish that the images inspire you to overcome darkness, and even more: to go and create yourself.

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When you have your inspiration in words, nature in your mind is a happy place. When you hear the birds singing, you can pick the melodies that resonate with your mission. You can choose techniques, compositions, and colors that you feel most naturally aligned. You may not always succeed, but your mission makes you continue creating.Instead of looking for the perfect technique, the perfect style, the perfect theme, search for what is behind in all that! Search for the mission that makes creating art most meaningful and inspiring to you! That is the real reason why you paint, and that’s also the key to finding more passion for creating art.

I want to help you not only with painting techniques but also with your passion. This is why Nature In Your Mind also has time and assistance for self-reflection and discussion; it’s not only hurrying from one painting to another.

Sign up for Nature in Your Mind!
Join me in painting nature themes, experimenting with techniques and ideas, and then discovering what’s behind in all that.
>>Reserve Your Spot Now!

Four Steps to Finding Your Passion in Art (2024)

FAQs

What are the four steps of evaluating art? ›

The 4 steps of art criticism are:
  • Describing.
  • Analyzing.
  • Interpreting.
  • Evaluating.

What are the 4 coordinates of art criticism? ›

Expert-Verified Answer

Art criticism has four parts: Describe, Analyze, Interpret and Evaluate. Describing is speaking about the artwork based on what you see visually.

How do I rediscover my passion for art? ›

Experiment, expand, and don't look back. Finally, don't be afraid to experiment and try something new. Creativity is all about seeing things from a new perspective. It may sound like a bit of a cliche but it's true that no one has ever seen the world the same way that you do.

What are the 5 steps in art? ›

For our purpose in this article we'll focus on the art of painting or creating visual art. According to some there are five “stages” in the creative process, and not all five always go forward in a certain order. These five stages include inspiration, percolation, preparation, creation, and reflection.

What are the 4 stages of art? ›

STAGES OF ARTISTIC DEVELOPMENT
  • SCRIBBLE. (2 to 4 years) The Scribble stage is made up of four sub-stages. ...
  • PRESCHEMATIC. (4 to 6 years) The preschematic stage is announced by the appearance of circular images with lines which seem to suggest a human or animal figure. ...
  • SCHEMATIC. (7 to 9 years) ...
  • DAWNING REALISM. (9 to 11 years)

What are the 4 C's of art? ›

By embracing the 4 C's of art – Creativity, Composition, Craftsmanship, and Concept – artists can create work that resonates with audiences, transcends boundaries, and leaves a lasting impact on the world.

What are the 4 elements of art explain? ›

ELEMENTS OF ART: The visual components of color, form, line, shape, space, texture, and value. may be two-or three-dimensional, descriptive, implied, or abstract. Shape An element of art that is two-dimensional, flat, or limited to height and width.

What are the 4 contexts of art? ›

The contexts are contemporary, personal, cultural and formal. As students engage in art-making and responding, they employ different contexts to understand and appreciate how artists incorporate a range of influences and layers of meaning.

What are the four 4 main parts of art criticism? ›

Evaluating a work of art isn't as difficult as it may seem. There are four basic steps: describing, analyzing, interpreting, and evaluating.

How to rediscover your passion? ›

Rediscover your passion
  1. Love what you do. One way to rediscover your passion is remembering what got you into doing what you are doing now in the first place. ...
  2. Strive to impact others. ...
  3. Get curious. ...
  4. Mix with like-minded people.

What is passion in arts? ›

Artists that are passionate about their work are devoted to learning and progress. They are always looking for new ways to improve their talents, trying new techniques, and pushing their creative limits. Their commitment to growth keeps their passion alive and helps them to become an expert in their craft.

How do you describe your passion for art? ›

I'm passionate about being an artist. Even though “artist” is just a title, though it may be an earned one. More so, I am very passionate about creativity, using my imagination, being inspired and inspiring others if possible in the process.

What is the 4 step art process? ›

The four steps are:
  1. Descriptoin: What do I see?
  2. Analysis: How is the work organized?
  3. Interpretation: What is happening? What is the artist trying to say?
  4. Judgement: What do I think of the work?

What are the 4 stages of the creative process? ›

Wallas described how it consists of the four-stage process of preparation (or saturation), incubation, illumination and verification (or implementation).

What are the 5 C's of art? ›

Collection, community, culture, collaboration, and creativity – these are the five C's of art in design.

What is the 4 step method to Analysing art? ›

Evaluating a work of art isn't as difficult as it may seem. There are four basic steps: describing, analyzing, interpreting, and evaluating.

What are the 4 parts of an art critique in order? ›

One way to structure an art critique, no matter the medium, is to discuss the work through a four step process: Description, Analysis, Interpretation, and Evaluation. Organized as such, a critique resembles the scientific method of investigation: begin with observable facts and build to an evaluative conclusion.

Which 4 questions are most effective for evaluating art? ›

Key Ideas and Details
  • Now, let's discuss what you observe.
  • What else do you see? ( ...
  • Look at ________ (a key detail or section of the artwork). ...
  • Why do you think the artist included these elements?
  • What do you think the artist is showing?
  • What questions do you have about what you see?

What are the 4 basic elements of performing art? ›

A performance involves 4 elements: time, space, the performer's body or presence in a medium and the relationship between the performer and audience.

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