I have two students of similar ability and background. They started taking my Zoom classes around the same time. One retired last year and can devote himself to painting. The other has a high-pressure job that eats up lots of his time.
Which do you think is making faster progress right now?
âI wish I could wave a magic wand and save you from 60-hour weeks,â I told the latter student. Then he did something that surprised meâhe arranged a three-week block of vacation time to stay home and paint.
Over several decades, Iâve seen this pattern: young people paint until they acquire houses, careers and families. Then thereâs a long gap when they never pick up a brush. It isnât until middle-age that most of us pick up painting again.
Thatâs not simply because we have more time; itâs the realization that our time on earth is finite, and if we donât start now, weâll never do it.
Time management is a universal problem
I struggle for time to paint, too. Thatâs absurd, but there are lots of other demands on my timeâlesson planning, writing this blog and marketing.
In fact, thatâs a universal problem among artists. Many of my professional peers work second jobs to afford the time to paint. That can take the form of a day job, running their own gallery, or teaching.
Can you make time to draw?
I take my sketchbook to meetings, to doctorsâ appointments, to churchâanywhere Iâm expected to sit quietly. If youâre sitting with kids, you can engage them in your drawing. Children love telling you what to draw and they donât really care how badly you execute.
You can draw other people surreptitiously, on the subway, in waiting rooms, or in the airport. Start with a fast gesture drawing and fill in what details you can before they wander off. At first, youâll feel self-conscious and a bit sneaky, but most people donât notice and donât care.
Put away the cell phone
Recently, Iâve noticed my cell phone eating up time that I previously used to draw. I need to consciously put it away. Thatâs hard in a culture that encourages us to always feel âon demand.â
Make art a habit
I get up at 5 AM to write this blog, exercise, bathe, make breakfast, answer correspondence, and do a daily marketing meeting. I start projects in the early afternoon. If I maintain this routine, my brain settles into work with minimal hassle. Once the order is disturbed, I spend most of my energy getting back on track.
Our minds crave routine, so letâs give it to them. Itâs easier to squeeze a half hour of drawing in after supper than to block out a week to paint, and youâll improve more with brief, regular practice than with the occasional marathon.
Stop beating yourself up
Our schedules, like our closets, are jammed full. We canât add one more thing without taking something out. Years ago, Bobbi Heath taught me an organizational technique with post-it notes. When youâve filled up your workweek, you⌠just stop adding stuff.
âWhat activity is netting you the lowest return?â my daughter asks me. Thatâs not just a financial question. We collect obligations like boats collect barnacles. Some we can shed, some are ours just for a season, still others are lifelong and non-negotiable. Once youâve eliminated what you can, take a clear-eyed look at whatâs left. If that means you only have four hours a week to make art, stop beating yourself up about that. Four hours is still better than no hours at all.