Thursday, February 16, 2017
How do you find time for personal art
How do you find time for personal art
I was asked this question by another professor during the interview for my job at BYU. Now that Ive been at BYU for almost a year, I understand that his question wasnt a test for the job, but an honest question about how to fit one more thing into an always-full schedule. The thing about being a professor is that you never clock in or out---your teaching and prep time, personal time, and freelance time all blend together and youre left to make your own calls about how to balance it all. I think I actually stammered my answer, something like "Well, uh, I just do it." That was a useless answer and I wish I could have a do-over.
I get summers off at BYU, which sounds awesome and laid-back, but in reality Im spending that time working on freelance character design, illustration, preparation for my classes, and various tasks around the house. I get to set my own schedule, but its always full no matter what order I put things into. What I thought would be a great break where I could do a lot of my own work has been just as busy as the semesters when Im teaching.
So Ive been thinking a lot about an answer Marcelo Vignali gave in a great interview with Bobby Chiu a while back. Answering a question about how he finds time for figure drawing, he said he makes figure drawing non-negotiable. In other words, he schedules time for it, and when that time comes, no other task takes priority, no matter how urgent (of course this doesnt apply to the house burning down scenario. Or maybe it does: guess I dont know Marcelo well enough to say for sure).
Ive taken that "non-negotiable" mindset with my personal art these last few months, and Im so glad I did. I have a block of time scheduled for it every morning---not much, just an hour---but its enough for me to chip away at stuff that comes out of my own head. I cant say Ive gotten to the point where its non-negotiable yet; there have been days when Ive skipped it for a big deadline, but Im getting pretty consistent. And amazingly, even slowly chipping away at it is deeply satisfying, and I find more energy for the jobs I have to do afterward. For me personally, it works best to not overthink what I use that time to paint on---sometimes an idea works out and sometimes it doesnt. Thats not the part that matters.
One of the paintings Ive been slowly chipping away at. Not because its worth painting, but because its good for me to sometimes paint stuff just for fun. |
And while youre at it, go read this article.
Available link for download