A look back at 30 Paintings in 30 Days challenge
It's over now. 30 days of experimenting, and brainstorming, and creating, and daring, and pushing through the daily life, and seeing just how much mom and house work I can get out of before my family hates me. It was intense. I want to step back now and reflect. Analyze. One of my favorite things to do, analysis. You know the phrase "paralysis by analysis"? It's about me. It's how I never had my projects in architecture school done on time. There was just so much more to do with them.
Anyway, back to 30x30. Here is what I think about it:
1) It was great to try new (or just forgotten) things and experiment. It definitely freshened me up after non-stop commission painting. I should do it more often. Maybe, something like first five days of every month, I get to play with whatever art supplies strike my fancy.
2) I loved the virtual presence of all the other artists who participated in this challenge. I found some extraordinary artwork, followed about a dozen of blogs, and connected with quite a few awesomely talented people. Artists are such a friendly bunch.
3) It was also very cool to have a buddy closer to home. One of my former students did the 30x30 challenge with me! He doesn't have a blog yet, so we kept in touch on Facebook.
3) I had very little difficulty coming up with stuff to paint. It may be because I opted out of having a theme or limiting myself in any way.
4) It was a fragile balance of pushing through with the daily painting and not being too tough on myself.
5) The "work-life balance" did not work at all. I felt very frustrated. I need to be "in the zone" when I'm making art and it's impossible with the kids and lunches and dinners. I only have a few hours a day after the kids go to bed and I'm usually wiped by that time, so...need to figure something out here.
6) I liked blogging every day and seeing increased engagement both here and on my Facebook fan page and Google Plus. It made me feel loved (or at least liked :) ) and motivated me :)
7) I did not make 30 paintings. And I'm fine with that. I lowered my expectations at the very beginning of the challenge. I still pushed myself, but when I had days when I just couldn't fit a painting time, I let it go. No reason to stress yourself out, you know? :) I liked Crystal Cook's setup, with scheduled weekends off. Smart thing to do.
8) In the middle of the challenge, I took an online Right Brain Business Plan course. It should be a 30 day challenge in itself. I spent quite a lot of time on it and two of my "painting days" turned into collaging-for-RBBP days. My work on the business plan is in full swing now.
That's pretty much all. Would I do it again? Oh yes. But not this month :)