Remember the days when you could draw in your sketchbook with
reckless nonjudgmental abandon? You know, those days when you came home
from school and instead of doing homework, you would pull out that Mead
sketch pad given to you for Christmas and your favorite pencil or pen
and draw dinosaurs and horses? The days when the only person you need to
impress was yourself and you were impressed when the drawing you were
working on seemed a little better than the last one you did? There was pure joy
in loosing yourself in that little world called your imagination and you
didn't have to share it with anyone save those that were closest and
most trusted by you.
Well,
I feel like I've rediscovered that joy and that fun by learning to
actually keep a sketchbook. In the days that I attended CalArts,
sketch-booking wasn't required. It wasn't even encouraged. In fact, I
don't remember it ever being mentioned. Since those days, that's
changed, and I remember time and again advising my students, when I was
teaching at CalArts to keep a sketchbook. I do the same with my students
here at BYU. But the word "hypocrite" has always nagged me because
sketch-booking has been something that I rarely have done myself. This
academic school year I decided that I needed to do something about my
sketchless life and I've taken to carrying a sketchbook with me just
about everywhere. Even the bathroom! Okay, TMI. And this is what has
happened: I have relearned the love that would keep me drawing all day
long, not because I had a deadline to meet, but because of the pure joy
of creation. What fun!
If
you're one of those artists that has lost that joy of creation, get a
sketchbook! Don't draw anything in that sketchbook that you feel you
need to because of work or because you think this is what other people
want to see. Draw the things that you enjoy. The things that bring you
joy! And have fun! We learn a lot faster and grow a lot more when fun is
the end result!