Making art can become dishearteningly difficult.

These “difficulties” can often paralyze artists or send them into a downward spiral of un-creativity or inactivity with no foreseeable end.

So how do we overcome this?  How does art get done in the first place?

I ask myself these questions often because I’ll find myself not “finishing” pieces or series.  I’ve got a hard drive with terabytes of images that need second and third looks.  I’ve got folders and “albums” in my image editing library that should be done with test prints made and uploaded to my online gallery.

As a visual and thinking type, I often find that the images, or artwork, that I haven’t quite completed may better than what I do have finished, even if it’s all just in my head.

While this may be a case of being “my own worst critic” it’s certainly possible that I struggle with a different set of difficulties that prevent me from completing my works.

This isn’t about distractions.  I’m increasingly becoming better at avoiding those.

Perhaps it’s because I struggle with that common fear that almost all artists struggle with: No one cares!

Okay…that’s putting it very simply.  But there’s truth behind those thoughts.

Consider that today, working as an artist, means living in a world filled with doubt and contradiction.  It means doing something that no one really cares whether you do it or not.  It means creating work that may or may not have an audience and may or may not have any reward.

So I set aside, inasmuch as I can, these doubts so that I can see, not only what I’ve done, but that the path that I’m headed has some sort of fruit to bear.

It means I have to find, however hard it may be, the self nourishment and fulfillment within the work itself.

Sometimes…this is a cat and mouse game.  I’m just not sure if I’m supposed to be the cat or the mouse.


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  • I really do think that there are a lot of people who would care about the work artists make. It's just the challenge of finding them and engaging them that is disheartening. It's the hardest part, in my opinion. With time and dedication, you can have yourself a nice little fan/collector base.
  • I think it's a matter of perception. Most artists, I believe, start out thinking they'll "make a difference" with their art. Then there's the stage where they think "no one cares". It's perceived that no one cares. Perhaps the last stage is finding solace in the fan/collector base that "does in fact care".

    I think most artists quit at stage two in this example.

    No one cares...why continue to push on?
  • This post is spot-on for me this evening, as I wrestle with several unfinished paintings and an increasing feeling of frustration... making art for a living (or attempting to, I should say) can be incredibly disheartening.
  • Push through it. You kinda just have to. This whole "being an artist" has to come from somewhere deep inside that can't be bottled in.
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