The essential principle for learning is to keep on doing it until the light clicks on.
Samantha East just started painting this year. So far, so awesome. |
I try to link my Monday Morning Art School blog posts to what my students will be studying in the coming week. This week, weāre working on color mixing. Everything I want to say about the subject is here. Since I wrote that just six months ago, I want my students to reread it. Meanwhile, I will address a more important question: how to succeed in painting.
There are many reasons people quit art classes, including overload in other areas of their lives. Most commonly, however, they either need time to integrate what theyāve already learned, or they realize that their interest in painting isnāt a passion.
Itās all about process. Samanthaās thumbnail, about which she writes, āloving this tool, itās already saved me from myself several times.ā |
My classes have been full all year (and yes, that opening in the night class was snapped up). That has caused a kind of winnowing effectāthe people who stay are very focused. That in turn raises the rate at which weāre learning, which in turn increases the pressure. Itās exhilarating.
The amount of time students can invest in painting varies, of course. Some are working and some are retired. But all of them are highly motivated.
And, yeah, I make them work through the subject in monochrome first. |
That means they often solicit my opinion after class is done. Iām happy to comment, although sometimes my responses may seem terse. (Iām not that good at typing on my phone.) Often, the student knows the answer before they hit āsendā but it helps to have me verify it.
Ask questions. Lots of them.
Nobody writes more frequently or extensively than Samantha. We met aboard the good ship American Eagle during one of my Age of Sail watercolor workshops. She was not in the class, but she buzzed me with questions. Iāve since learned this is her modus operandi, and itās key to her success in life.
We had very little contact again for more than a year, when she signed up for a Zoom class and then my workshop in Tallahassee. Samantha has since thrown herself into painting. Most weeks, she sends me a precisof her work. Thatās in lieu of posting in our class group on Facebook, because she doesnāt do social media. Which leads me to tip #2:
Seek and accept criticism.
My students have a closed FB group. Itās where they share their finished work. That requires that they trust others to be kind but honest. Thatās relationship, and it doesnāt come from social media.
Samantha’s watercolor, which she didn’t like but I did. |
The students who will stumble are the ones who take correction with, āyes, butā¦ā I wince when I hear it, because I have a very strong streak of that in myself. It impeded me for many years.
Play your scales
Samantha was recently unhappy with her trees and shrubs. She sat down with Google and YouTube to methodically investigate what others say about painting trees. Then she practiced them, over and over.
āDern useful, I must say,ā she concluded. āI feel like my chances of producing an aesthetically-pleasing and reasonably-accurate tree are now a lot better.ā
If your trees are poor, then study trees. |
Revel in your own successes
āIām pretty happy with this painting,ā Samantha told me recently. Then she told me that she didnāt like her watercolor version at all. I strongly disagreed, because I felt the second painting had compelling atmosphere and cohesion. Part of learning is being able to see through someone elseās eyes.
Itās fun to do something well. Too much humility can suck the joy out of anything.
Rinse and repeat
āI remain grimly undaunted,ā Samantha told me. āI figure if I keep plugging away at it Iāll eventually get it.ā Iām amused by the āgrimlyā in a woman who’s so full of joy, but she just stated the essential principle for learning: keep on doing it until the light clicks on.