Mantras for a Sustainable Art Practice (Vol. II)
/The waning days of winter and the end of year nearing always brings a time of reflection. Annie Dillard, in her Pulitzer Prize winning novel Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, describes an urge that comes as the weather changes to dig down deep, shed extra emotional layers, and get to the bare root of her purpose in a process she calls “Northing”. As artists based in South Florida we’ve noticed this same feeling can be triggered by waning hours of daylight or the changing states on license plates as the inevitable snowbird season approaches.
If done correctly, what’s left at the end of a good Northing is a guiding principle, or mantra, that if held on to and repeated can become the habit which fuels a sustainable practice through the thick and the thin. Mantras can be surprising in their simplicity or specificity; sometimes they hit you in the gut or stick to the back of your thoughts and they can even fall completely flat but still be helpful in revealing what doesn’t drive you.
As this complicated year comes to a close, it presents a crucial time to set intentions in the studio. It’s been our pleasure to check in with five more artists for Volume II of this series, asking them to share the mantras that have helped guide their work ethic during critical moments and offer snap shots of what they’ve been working on lately. Perhaps these insights from Carol Prusa, Michelle A. M. Miller, Jesse Shaw, Elysa D. Batista, and Kristin Miller Hopkins will prove useful in your own Northing this winter.
CAROL PRUSA
“Wake up every day and learn something new.”
I learned video editing this year after COVID shut-down and am working on a proof of concept using AI/machine-learning, and am working on learning book structures and making image studies for upcoming time at IS Projects making a book.
www.carolprusa.com
“‘Many Moons’ is the set of paintings I finally completed this summer but have been working on since 2017”
MICHELLE AM MILLER
“This is not permanent, this is right now.”
www.mammiller.com
JESSE SHAW
Recently I keep thinking of two sayings: In regard to my work "it makes as much sense as anything else" and with work ethic and studio practice "slow and steady wins the race". I tend to over work myself.
www.americanprintmaker.com
ELYSA D BATISTA
“It's not the space, but the ideas and work that matters.”
www.elysabatista.com
KRISTIN MILLER HOPKINS
“Keep going even if you are not sure”
www.kristinmillerhopkins.com
I’d like to thank Carol, Michelle, Jesse, Elysa and Kristin for generously inviting us into their studios. If you’re an artist who would like to share your mantra and some studio updates with us, please email sammi@isprojectsfl.com to be featured in this series.
Make work and be well,
Sammi & Ingrid