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May 31

How to Find the Work You Love

Posted on Monday, May 31, 2010 in Being an Artist, Personal, Quotes, Work/Life

“The quest for work you love – it all begins with the two simple questions: Who am I? and What in the world am I doing here?”

- Laurence G. Boldt in How to Find the Work You Love

Ah, yes – the “simple” questions. Right up there with “Want fries with that?” – “What is my purpose on this earth?”

Photo of a basket of fries

Who are you? Want fries with that?

I don’t know my purpose just yet, but I figure the best way to find it is by living mindfully. For me, that means striving to align my external existence with my inner one. Whenever I feel like something in my external life is hollow – that I’m just going through the motions with it – I know it’s time to make a change, large or small. (more…)

May 16

The Artist’s Way

Posted on Sunday, May 16, 2010 in Being an Artist, Books, Creative Habits, Inspiration, Quotes

“Life is a creative endeavor. It is active, not passive…When we experience our lives as flat and lackluster, it is our consciousness that is at fault. We hold the inner key that turns our lives from thankless to fruitful.” – Julia Cameron

In The Artist’s Way,  Julia Cameron writes about two essential tools for creative living: (more…)

May 7

Artists’ Origin Stories

Posted on Friday, May 7, 2010 in Being an Artist, Personal, Quotes

Superheroes have origin stories; so do artists. Origin stories tell us how superheroes gain their powers and dedicate their lives to fighting crime. For artists, origin stories are descriptions of the moment, or series of moments, when someone realizes, “I need to make art” — and then does it.

Take, for example, this story from micro-sculptor Willard Wigan – but first, take a look at one of his sculptures:

Photo of Willard Wigan Obama micro-sculpture

One of Wigan's "micro-sculptures" features the Obama family standing in the eye of a needle

Now, the origin story:

“It began when I was five years old…I started making houses for ants because I thought they needed somewhere to live. Then I made them shoes and hats. It was a fantasy world I escaped to where my dyslexia didn’t hold me back and my teachers couldn’t criticise me. That’s how my career as a micro-sculptor began.”

And here’s photographer Sharon Montrose: (more…)

May 6

Trust Your Gut

Posted on Thursday, May 6, 2010 in Being an Artist, Creative Habits, Personal, Quotes

Photo of graffiti that says Trust your nervous system

“If I have learned anything in this lifetime,” a friend recently wrote to me, “it’s that I need to trust my gut.”

I couldn’t agree more – but oh, it can be terrifying. It can be so hard that it feels physically impossible. But the alternative – living life like you’re playing a role in someone else’s play – is so much worse. I’d rather the pain of the band-aid ripping than a constant, gnawing pain that won’t go away. (more…)

May 4

Bad Writing Documentary

Posted on Tuesday, May 4, 2010 in Being an Artist, Film, Video, Writing

I love the story behind this film: Guy writes poetry. Time passes — guy quits drinking, gets his GED, starts writing again. Guy finds box of old poetry in mom’s basement and is horrified to find out that he isn’t the poetic genius he once thought himself to be. Guy decides to show his bad poetry to good writers, from David Sedaris to Margaret Atwood, and get their advice about what makes for good writing.

And so, I present the trailer for Bad Writing:

Bad Writing – Official Trailer from Morris Hill Pictures on Vimeo.

“Guy,” by the way, is Vernon Lott. The film is 100% self-financed, and he’s looking for a distributor.

Learn more about the project on Facebook.