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Art Journalling For Success - stop sabotaging, start scribbling

January 29, 2020 Helen Davis
Julia Art Journal - Kiss -Blog Jan 20.jpg

Forget about discovering other people’s secrets journals can reveal ourselves to ourselves - used effectively your art journal could help you bridge the gap from aspiration to manifestation.

Writer and essayist Joan Didion once wrote:

“I don’t know what I think until I write it down.”

Which is one reason why keeping a written journal can be so revelatory. Yet, as I’ve mentioned in my introductory post on art journalling an art journal can do that too, only through the use of images, symbols, patterns, and more.


So how can a little old art journal help take your goals from wishes to wins?

Let me tell you a wee story about a glittery-green-eyed guy…

When vision boards don’t work

Some years ago, after my marriage ended, I found myself in a quandary. I was deep in a relationship rabbithole with a glittery-green-eyed guy. By day I was employed at soul-sapping central. By night I was living with a group of thirty-somethings carrying on like students. The rocky relationship seemed like my only safe haven.

This wasn’t the way I wanted things. I felt powerless and alone - even in the relationship. So, on one of our ‘breaks’ I attempted to regain some semblance of order by piecing together the flotsam and jetsam that had once been my aspirations by creating a vision board.

As neuroscientist Tara Swart says of vision (or action) boards:

“It is a way of aligning your deep subconscious and conscious brain, so that you can stop wasting energy on priorities that are at odds with the things that you really want, deep down.”

Central to that vision was a healthy relationship, inspiring work, and a place I could call home. Yet, just as I was feeling galvanised glittery-green-eyed guy was back. Poof! Just like that, there I was lounging in the land of the lotus-eaters, where taking action on any of my aspirations - which, to be frank, was a little bit scary - seemed. So. Over. Whelm. Ing.

“Problem is, a vision board which is all style no action is just a collage. ”

And so, my carefully cut-out desires crumpled under the weight of my cold-shoulder.

Art journal your adventure

While you may not be sabotaging your goals by getting distracted by glittery-green-eyed guys, most of us will concede that navigating the uncharted gap between where-you-are-now and ideal-future-you has its inevitable ups and downs.

It’s too easy to get all enthused by glossy magazines urging you to claim your golden future, only to find yourself teetering on the edge of an unfathomable abyss. Then your inner critic chimes in.

What the hell were you were thinking, anyway? Yesterday you were bursting with confidence and self belief. Today you’re harangued by the harpies of self doubt. But why? How come you leapfrog one setback only to be floored by another?

That’s where your art journal comes in to play.

While it isn’t so much a bridge from dream to destination, your journal can become a kind of travel guide. The signs and symbols you discover as you play in your book can help you clarify your desires, and reveal the weird and wonderful things which are holding you back.

As Tara Swart explains in The Source: open your mind, change your life, keeping a (written) journal is an essential component of her goal-attaining technique and helped her uncover her relationship with relationships:

“I found my journalling a powerful way to see that mistrust was leading me into repeated patterns of holding back from or avoiding intimacy that inevitably led to self-fulfilling prophecies.”

A useful insight, eh?

Self reflective art journal prompts

So, how can you use your art journal to help you keep on choosing your own adventure?

  • Create one portrait of where you are now and another of where you want to be in a year or so (you could start with a photo) - try Pinterest or Instagram for inspiration

  • Explore your inner critic - what does it look like / say / do?

  • Make a map of the places, people and things that uplift you and another of those that pull you down - check out Grayson Perry’s maps on Google images

  • Feeling stuck? Ask what would 7 year old you do - get in the flow and use colour, symbol and pattern to reveal the answer

  • Find a favourite quote and illustrate it - see Pinterest for some prompts

  • Start with a Rorshach inkblot and see where it leads - like here, for example...

  • Create an abstract image detailing what wellbeing looks and feels like to you - again Pinterest and Instagram can provide much inspiration

  • Plus, check out Journaling.com for podcasts and articles on keeping a written and art journal for wellbeing

Wishing you a rich and revelatory art journal journey. Say ‘hi’ to me on Instagram (sometimes Facebook) where I’ll be sharing more creative inspiration and details of upcoming events in London or Essex areas.

Tags art journalling, art journaling, art journal, art journal prompts, inner critic, Grayson Perry, Pinterest, Instagram, self empowerment, self portrait, art map, journal, creative journal, self reflection, self discovery, abstract art, Rorshach inkblot, creative flow, creativity, Joan Didion, vision board, goals, desires, self sabotage, Tara Swart, The Source, neuroscience

Creative Journal Course 2016 - The Transformative Process

July 13, 2016 Helen Davis
Creative Journal Course - Imaginary Journeys

How do artists expand their horizons?

“We delight in the beauty of the butterfly but rarely admit the change it’s gone through to achieve that beauty ”
— Maya Angelou

It’s over eighteen months since the Creative Journal Course began and our “visual conversations” have continued - with varied results. 

I mean that both in the sense that producing and sharing work in a group exposes you to the ways other people interpret a direction; as well as the ups and downs of personal exploration.

In Class

Facilitator and artist, Heidi Wigmore, may “suggest” we:

“[Create] a collage of mixed elements from travel brochures to make a ‘dreamscape’ - a non-place. [M]ix up scale / places / cultures to make ‘a landscape of the imagination’ that expresses more how you’re feeling than a ‘real place’– an Escape...”

And the results will be so multifarious that you’re encouraged to question and test your own creative boundaries - the road less travelled and all that.

 

Then, when we go away and work in our sketchbooks or altered books - see Creative Journal Course 2015 - alone the ideas sown in class grow into individual journeys which inspire all over again.

Alone

The other way our creative explorations have varied, results-wise, is through quality and success.

While, there is always the nagging inner critic - I call mine Nosferatu, always lurking in the shadows - waiting to inform you of your rubbishness; there are also, simply, ideas that work for you and ones that don’t.

Lessons:

  • Finding the right altered book

It took me a while to find the right book to work in.

The first - essentially an encyclopaedia - was too big, the second, a book on dreams with some funky graphics, seemed simply too wacky to expand on.

Then came the annual-style book. From vintage editions of Film Review to retro Japanese flower arranging guides the combination of photos, illustrations, text, page count and size is the Goldilocks effect of altered books - to me, at least.

  • Ideas need to percolate

When I first began the Creative Journal Course, although I was open-minded some of the ideas kind of skimmed over me - some positively ricocheted!

This was often evident in my sketchbooks - which range from bare to over analytical. But over the months I began to feel that ideas and suggestions were percolating more deeply.

I felt more able to flex my creative muscles and more confidence in broadening my artistic horizons.

  • There doesn’t have to be a ‘why’

Previously not having enough ‘why’ meant I came to the conclusion my creative pursuits were pointless.

But having come to realise that those creative pursuits are my chicken soup for the soul - meditative, soothing, uplifting - I understand that is reason enough.

  • Relinquish control

Where are these ‘visual conversations’ are taking me? I am in a hurry to know, but I am also endeavouring to relinquish analytical control.

Too self aware and things become forced. As ever creative gems are most often discovered via the unintended: the random ink blot, the reverse side, the one minute sketch…

Remember:

  • It may take time to find the altered book that works for you
  • Sharing your work can inspire both you and others - don't be shy
  • Mistakes can be creative magic

Find: Heidi Wigmore

Locate: your nearest Metal team in Liverpool, Peterborough or Southend-on-Sea 

Discover: more on the power of keeping journals to inspire creativity with Julia Cameron

Get inspired: on Pinterest

Tags creativity, idea, sketchbook, journal, Heidi Wigmore, Metal, altered book, creative journal course

Creative Journal Course 2015 - Learning to Take Risks

May 16, 2016 Helen Davis

Where do artists get their ideas from?

If you’ve ever studied anything creative you may have been encouraged to keep a sketchbook to collate ideas and record your work in progress. Well, the Creative Journal course I attended from February to May 2015, at Metal, took this concept and ran with it as a kind of self contained concept.

There was no final destination, as such -  it was all about riding bareback on the force of your ideas. Facilitator and artist Heidi Wigmore called it,

“...a visual conversation with yourself.”

Taking Dadaist poetry, Surrealist experiments and mandalas as launch pads class participants had their preconceptions challenged and their creative boundaries stretched as Heidi encouraged us to engage in unexpected ways with images, text, music or blank space our creative endeavours became more liberated.

“A journal is a place to take risks,”

she advised.

Overcoming blank page fear

Particularly freeing, for me, was the altered book. To be honest, this wasn’t everyone’s cup of tea. Defacing books is anathema to some folk - with good reason - but ever since we were invited to make notes in our university course books I’ve been happily scribbling over my reading material.

The premise: choose an unwanted book you take a fancy to - preferably with illustrations - and get interacting with it - artistically speaking. The advantage: you’re no longer faced with the daunting prospect of the blank page. Result: yet more ways to access ideas.

Granted, I would suggest choosing something slightly smaller than the Readers’ Digest Book of Facts - which was a bit of a tome, to say the least - but it really fulfilled its role as a kind of chunky creative portal.

“[D]o not consider [keeping a journal] self-indulgent but something worthwhile and important– it’s creative, it may be self-revelatory,”

says Heidi, who cites Jung’s practice of creating drawings he believed corresponded to his inner feelings. If it was good enough for Jung...

Remember:

  • Don’t decide what to do, just start 
  • Draw how you feel
  • Allow yourself to express yourself in unknown ways
  • Embrace mistakes
  • Work through doubt

Find: Heidi Wigmore

Locate: your nearest Metal team in Liverpool, Peterborough or Southend-on-Sea 

Discover: more on the power of keeping journals to inspire creativity with Julia Cameron

Get inspired: on Pinterest

Tags creative, journal, art, ideas, surrealists, dada, Jung, Julia Cameron, sketchbook, creative journal course
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