Showing posts with label Julia Cameron. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Julia Cameron. Show all posts

Friday, June 12, 2015

The Sound of Paper by Julia Cameron

My morning pages journal
and
The Sound of Paper

I find that mornings are the best time for reading anything that has to do with writing or art or creativity in general. I have had a copy of Julia Cameron's The Sound of Paper (I love the title!) sitting unread on my shelves for many years and after revisiting The Artist's Way recently, I decided to use it as a daily meditation.

The chapters are short, personal essays reflecting on the writing life followed by a "Try This" exercise. Before beginning, Ms. Cameron reiterates three creative tools introduced in The Artist's Way: morning pages, artist dates, and walks. 

The essays begin while she is living in an apartment in Manhattan in the spring and continue after she moves to spend the summer at her house in New Mexico. Each essay usually starts out with  a description of the weather or the room in which she is writing or the view out her window. She uses these essays to reflect on staying the course, showing up to the work (no matter if one is a writer or painter or lyricist), being resilient, expanding creative horizons, and so much more. She sometimes ties the subject of the essay to the rain or the dry wind or the temperature outside. 

I rather liked these seasonal reports and glimpses into her life in the city and in the desert. As I sat at my desk each morning reading one of the essays, I could easily picture her at her desk each morning writing it.

Her thoughts are clear and the stories of her experiences and those of other artists are inspiring.

After writing my morning pages I would read an essay and if I wanted to write out one of the exercises I would do it right then. Or, maybe I would just spent a few minutes thinking about it. Here is an example:

Try this: Make a list of five tiny changes you can make to improve the serenity and clarity of your environment.

Or

Try this: List five ways you can increase your commitment to the continuity and structure of your day.

This is not a book that you would want to just sit down one afternoon and read. It is better used as a daily prompt to thinking about your dedication to your art. 

As a bonus, I loved the calming cover of the book with its artwork of soaring white cranes. A pleasant image to meditate upon, don't you agree?

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Letters to a Young Artist and The Artist's Way by Julia Cameron


Lately, I have been on a bit of a Julia Cameron reading binge. I recently picked up from the library and read her Letters to A Young Artist: Building a Life in Art which, as you might guess, is a series of letter lessons on living an artist's life. Ms. Cameron takes on the persona of an experienced male writer and answers questions and gives advice to a younger family friend who is just finding his way in the world as an artist.

What I liked about this book, besides the fact that I am a sucker for its epistolary style, is that she debunks the myth of artist as an alcoholic, drug-addicted, sexually promiscuous cad. (Although admittedly there are a few!) She addresses the many distractions that keep the artist from her easel, writing desk, camera, potter's wheel, workshop, or other places of creativity and labor. And, yes, being an artist is work. It is not about wearing all black and sitting around with friends bemoaning the tribulations and frustrations of Art and Life. It is doing the work even if that means courting the disapproval of and being misunderstood by family, friends, and lovers.

Reading this book led me to pull perhaps Ms. Cameron's most popular book off my shelf: The Artist's Way. When I was working in the bookstore in the 1990s, a group of us attempted to read this and do the weekly tasks to 'uncover our blocked artist.' Most of us made it about halfway through the 12-week course.  So I decided to give it a try again. Part of the journey is keeping three handwritten stream-of-consciousness daily pages, the Morning Pages, which I am doing. She also suggests a solo artist date every week - a visit to a museum, a browse around an art supply store, or just to see a movie. The purpose here is to get out of the house and feed your artist with images and sensations.

Each week focuses on helping the artist recover first a sense of safety, then identity, power, integrity, and possibility (this is where I am now). To come: abundance, connection, strength, compassion, self-protection, autonomy, and faith.

Ms. Cameron is quite the drill instructor but I sort of pick and choose the tasks and writing exercises that she suggests for each week. I have been faithful to the Morning Pages and I don't have any trouble taking myself on solo excursions around town.

Discipline and perseverance are what I am going for by taking on this project. 

The other book of hers that I own and have been dipping into is The Sound of Paper. In this book, each chapter contains a short biographical essay followed by a "Try This" writing prompt. It is one of those books that I can read a chapter a day or a week and be satisfied.  

As I am always on the lookout for creative inspiration, there are others by Ms. Cameron to be explored, most notably: Walking in This World: The Practical Art of Creativity; The Vein of Gold: A Journey to Your Creative Heart; and Finding Water: The Art of Perseverance.

The beginning of the year is a good time to jump-start my creativity with inspirational and motivational books. These seem to be doing the trick.

Have you befriended Julia Cameron and her books? What did you think? Help or hindrance?