Seasons of Work; how my work-flow has changed in the pandemic
* Note * Please, please, please, if you are able, go get vaccinated. So many people have lost so much/everything to this virus. It’s real, it’s serious and we have a way to stop it - please go get the shot(s).
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It’s been interesting (at least, to me - maybe not to anyone else!) to step back and see what life in this pandemic has done to parts of my process. I can’t see all of it currently as we are still very much IN this pandemic, but patterns have slowly started to emerge.
The early pandemic days in the studio started as a frenzied mess. I was trying to make use of the extra time quarantining afforded me because if not, that extra time would be wasted and then I am a bad artist.
You can imagine how successful painting with that energy was.
(Narrator’s voice; it wasn’t.)
It took me a while to let go of the desire to harness some pandemic-residency vibe. To tell myself that we are living through some utterly weird and terrifying times and that extra time wasn’t necessarily best spent painting or other art-tasks. That I could use some time to process too.
In detaching myself from my ‘Before-Times’ schedule of brainstorming, creating, documenting, posting and shipping, all sandwiched between shows (cancelled), travel (cancelled), or other out-of-the-studio moments (severely decreased) I was able to watch a more organic, slower process start to become apparent. Less fits and starts, less following one project through each phase, more seasonal.
A season of creation.
A season of documentation.
A season of making the work public, sharing it and sending it to its new home.
Right now I’m firmly in the midst of creation. I’ve been making a lot of new things, some more successful than others, but the key is I’m making.
Instead of needing to stop to prep for a show or trip, I’m just going to ride this painting wave until my energy shifts back to the computer, to the camera and getting things ready for my website. Then onto the selling part, then to a new addition - rest and reset.
I’ve gone about two or so cycles with this pattern of making work, and thus far it’s been a welcome shift. Once life starts to get back to normal I know it will be hard to keep it - but for now I’m happy to exist in these seasons.