I met Miriam at the USK Symposiums I attended and we have been in contact online fairly regularly lately. Thank you for choosing me to participate, Miriam! It is a great opportunity to take time to reflect on this creative habit that we share.
So how does this Around the World Blog Hop work?
Every week someone is nominated to answer a few questions about their creative process, post those answers on the following Monday and nominate someone else to do the same.
This is my Monday and here comes the challenging part with the questions I'm not sure to have a good answer to.
What am I working on?
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I try to experiment as much as I can. I guess so far it's more visible in my JKPP portraits.
I consider myself to be continually in a learning process and so I "drift" a little.That is why I try to participate in a lot of activities like JKPP, Sketchbook Skool, Sketching Workshop, InkTober, etc.
It's probably something I should work on, actually. I would like to set myself some specific goals from now on.
I'm also trying to get more people together for regular sketchcrawls here in Luxembourg. At the moment our group is quite small, but so far we have managed to be at least 3 people every time.
How does my work differ from others of its genre?
This question implies that I do have a genre and I'm not sure I do. I do urban sketching and a lot of portraits, so can these be considered genres?
If yes, then I think that my work, in particular my urban sketches, is a lot based on line and less on colour. Which I would like to change, for I absolutely want to use more colour in a creative way. I just don't seem to get the hang of it somehow. Or at least I'm not completely satisfied with what I do. Then again, this insatisfaction must be normal, right?
My favourite subject, though, is people. I feel less daunted by people than by buildings. Which is strange because buildings are much more forgiving subjects if only because they don't tend to move so much.
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So I would say that my work differs from some people's work in that I love to draw people and love to use simple lines.
Why do I create what I do?
As I stated before, I'm in a constant process of learning. I only started drawing regularly again a bit over 2 years ago, so I know and feel that I have A LOT to learn in order to improve my skills and one day have my own clear voice.
At the moment, drawing is a process of meditation and self-exploration for me. A way to get to know myself better. For example, I discovered that I am a much more impatient person than I thought I was.
Maybe one day this habit will evolve into something else. I would love to be able to live from it, but it is not a priority for now.
How does my creative process work?
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I'm my most creative when I'm travelling, though, or with other people. Travelling awakens my curiosity and everything I see seems interesting.
I try to push myself to draw at home as well, specially if I haven't worked in a while. In those times I feel slightly constricted in the beginning, but I love to see how my work slowly develops. It's less spontaneous but it gives me more time to see the different stages of evolution and learn from them for future projects.
And now the nominee for next week (drumrolls):
For next Monday I nominate my fellow Urban Sketcher friend Sue Pownall. Sue is an artist and illustrator from the UK whom I met at the USK Symposium in Barcelona and again in Brazil. She has a lovely blog in which she shows her art projects which are quite varied. I'm looking forward to reading her thoughts on her creative process.
Thank you again, Miriam, for nominating me. It has been interesting to reflect on these questions.