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Article Title:
==============

Do you flirt with freedom or cling to control?

Article Description:
====================

Are you are pulled in two directions at once, needing structure
and technique, but longing for a fluid looseness? It can be
disorienting, intimidating, and even crippling. There are some
balancing tips in this article.


Additional Article Information:
===============================

809 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2007-04-19 12:00:00

Written By:     Celeste Varley
Copyright:      2007
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]


Celeste Varley's Picture URL:
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Do you flirt with freedom or cling to control?
Copyright (c) 2007 Celeste Varley
Heartsong Studio
http://www.heartsongstudio.com



Do you long to make meaningful art with feeling?  You might be
comfortable making free forms only because you believe you can't
make anything look real.  Or, you could be well versed in the
techniques and principles of art, but hampered by the rules and
afraid to tap into your feelings.

I once captured a wounded baby raven which couldn't fly.  She
had broken one wing on her fledgling flight, and was hopping
around and starving.  She was taken to a wildlife sanctuary, and
after the wing healed, she learned to fly in a big cage.  A month
later, "Fledge" was released to her waiting family.

Making meaningful art is like learning to fly.  An artist and a
bird have to exercise both wings equally: the wing of control and
the wing of freedom.  In order to fly successfully, both wings
are necessary in a fluid balance.  We need both extremes in
making art that holds any feeling.

In creative writing, the two extremes might be: a flat matter of
fact style with no adjectives, only short clips, and then
hyperbole with flowery descriptions, and exaggerations.  Both
extremes hide real feelings.

Too much flapping of the control wing in art making and the
result feels rigid, exact, lifeless, bogged down.  Too much
flapping of the freedom wing results in chaos, confusion,
pointless noise, numbness.

Funny thing is, they're both illusions!

Control in art making is necessary.  You need some structure to
start, some direction.  In order to communicate with viewers, you
have to have something to communicate.  Viewers need connection
and so does the artist.

Actually, real control isn't possible.  Can you control the air
you breath?  What about gravity?  We all know what it is, but we
don't know how it works.  Explanations about bodies' masses
attracting only describes gravity.  It doesn't explain it.

So too much control in art, while intending to depict something
out there, communicates rigidity instead.  We may admire the
draftsmanship or exactness of the work.  There's a selfish focus
in it, because it believes in itself.  The feeling it holds is
lifeless and sterile.

Is there such a thing as too much freedom in art?  Artists who
think they are letting it all hang out, and avoiding control,
actually emit chaos and confusion.  "Anything goes" gives no
reason to connect, because this approach begins and ends with me,
the artist.

We need a certain freedom in art in order to identify.  We're
attracted to a certain lovely looseness or lyrical grace which is
often called freedom.

Too much freedom in art, while intending a jaunty, devil-may-care
attitude, can actually feel uncaring, self-indulgent.   Nothing
is totally free.  Lyrical looseness which goes too far, becomes a
dog's breakfast that no viewer wants to clean up.

Flapping too much with any one wing, will drive you in circles
around yourself.  So why would you need freedom?  Why would you
need control?  What good are the extremes?

We're on the path between control and freedom all the time in
making art.  Like a  bird, we have to keep a fluid balance in
order to fly successfully.  Too much chaos is the trigger to trim
our control a little.  Too much rigidity is the signal to loosen
up a bit.  One wing acts as a check on the other.

Here's a classic Japanese exercise in finding a fluid balance
between control and freedom.  This is deceptively simple, and
very, very challenging.

============================================================

You'll need one plain sheet of paper, and 8 identical dots.  The
task is to arrange the 8 dots on the paper so that they are
aesthetically attractive and interesting: not too symmetrical and
not too chaotic.  You can leave it sitting on a table and work on
it from time to time, like a chess board.

Though we may have some notion of the ideal balance "once and for
all" that too would be contrived, controlled.  Flight requires
continual movement and re-adjustment between these two wings. 
Sometimes the movement is vigorous and sometimes it is almost
still.

When you start a long metal shaft to vibrating, it starts with
wide momentum, becoming ever, smaller and smaller, until it
appears to stop.  But it never does.  There is no end.  This is
called "movement in stillness" in Oriental philosophy; one of
those paradoxes of life.

Becoming a more seasoned artist has no end.  You can practice it
all your life.  It's natural to be changing all the time within
the spectrum of freedom and control.  We experience progressive
freedom of - as well as from - the mind.

This is both our task and our gift.  You have to be controlled
enough to be healthy and free enough to be happy.

To be human is to be blessed with consciousness, as well as
instinct; mind as well as heart.  Rejoice!  Would you have it any
other way?




---------------------------------------------------------------------
Hello, I'm Celeste Varley and have been an artist at 
heart all my life. It is my privilege and passion to 
help seekers move beyond self-expression, to access 
the seeds of wholeness within. If you like this 
article, you may want to see more “Fresh Horses” 
articles on my website. Check it out and see if 
it's right for you. http://www.heartsongstudio.com   
Celeste Varley, Heartsong Studio, Helping 
the Creative Spirit to Soar.


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