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Tuesday, August 17, 2010

It's good to Procrastinate .. Really!

Thanks to Clint Watson for turning procrastination into a good thing.  Whew, I do have a good habit!  I'm posting this so you don't have to go to Clint's site, but you should subscribe to this newsletter if you don't already.

 

Why Great Artists Should Procrastinate

by Clint Watson

This article is by Clint Watson,  former art gallery owner/director/salesperson and founder of FineArtViews. You should follow Clint on Twitter here.
Update - 8/17/2010 - fixed some typos and reworked some sections of this essay to make my points more clear.

Not long ago in a BrushBuzz discussion thread , I wrote:

I find the best way to be productive is to simply ignore all the stuff I "should" do and just do the thing I want to do [1].

Unfortunately that has resulted in a file cabinet full of months of accounting that is backlogged. But I still feel WAY more productive when I create "art" (code). In the end, it's not that hard to catch up on bank reconciliations - it's a lot harder (impossible) to get that creative spark back if you don't strike while the iron is hot.   - (Clint Watson)


Let's explore that idea further.  I'm often accused of being a procrastinator.  Yesterday, my wife accused me of being "artistic" in my ability to procrastinate.  When she said that, I don't think she meant it as a compliment, but perhaps, if you think about it, it was one.

Consider what Paul Graham wrote about procrastination :

There are three variants of procrastination, depending on what you do instead of working on something: you could work on (a) nothing, (b) something less important, or (c) something more important. That last type, I'd argue, is good procrastination....Good procrastination is avoiding errands to do real work.   - (Paul Graham)


To those whose work isn't creative, that last bit sounds like a hollow excuse, after all, errands and accounting are "real work" in a sense.  But, I suspect that most people, even non-creatives, would agree that errands and accounting constitute "small stuff", which implies that some other types of work besides errands and accounting must be something closer to "big stuff".  So let's distill what Paul said into a more general concept:

"Good procrastination is avoiding small stuff to do big stuff."

Of course, that's meaningless without some definitions.  Fortunately, Paul provides us with a good definition of "small stuff" - "What's 'small stuff?'", he asks, "Roughly, small stuff is work that has zero chance of being mentioned in your obituary. " This statement, necessarily, means "big stuff" must be work that has a good chance of being mentioned in your obituary.

The problem is that none of us really know, ahead of time, which works are going to be "obituary worthy" and which are going to be crap.  We have to invest the time and energy to create them to find out.

Every artist produces some crap artwork.  I've sure written a lot of crap code in my day.

Unfortunately, you don't get to choose to create only the good ones.  If you want to produce the diamonds, you have to produce the crap.  Therefore, your only choice, if you want to do great work, is to produce all of them.

And if you have to produce all of them to get the "obituary worthy" diamonds, then the way to create the greatest art possible is to stop whatever you're doing and create every single time inspiration strikes.  Remember:  It's not that hard to catch up on bank reconciliations - it's impossible to get that creative spark back if you don't strike while the iron is hot.
So, when does inspiration strike and can we control it?

Gwen Stefani says it much more eloquently than I can:

Sometimes it's so hard to find what it is I'm trying to say. people might think you can turn creativity on and off, but it's not like that. It just kind of comes out. A mash up of all these things you collect in your mind. You never know when it's gonna happen, but when it does...it's like magic. It's just that simple and it's just that hard. - (Gwen Stefani)


If what Gwen said above is true, and, in my experience, it is, then the answer is no - we can't control when inspiration strikes.  And that means that when it does, we must be prepared to drop our plans and follow it.


So let's summarize my hypothesis:

If, to maximize your chances of creating great art, you have to pursue inspiration every time it strikes and, if you never know when it's going to strike, then, to produce great work, you will, necessarily have to "blow off" some tasks if you want to take advantage of that inspiration. 

So you tell me - when inspiration does strike, should you head to the studio and start creating or should you run errands?

And the funny thing is, the more you create, the more it happens.  It's a self-sustaining feedback loop.  So, for those who do great work, inspiration strikes a lot. [2]  Therefore, a lot of the stuff creative-types "should" be doing gets "procrastinated." And the more creative one becomes, the more likely the other things (the "small stuff") are to be put off.

And, consequently, the rest of the world thinks that artists are "flakey."

But now you know that's really a compliment.

Go change the world,

Clint Watson

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Footnotes
[1] By "want to do" I meant more broadly - the "great work I want to do."  I'm not saying that you can simply drop everything and drink margaritas on the beach because that's what you "want to do."

[2]  Even with the best of intentions, inspiration still sometimes strikes at the most inopportune moments.  It's impossible to always drop everything and act on it.  I picture a great warehouse out in the cosmos full of great work that was never realized because the spark was not acted upon.  It makes me a little sad to think that those "lost" great works are denied from this world forever.

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This article originally appeared at:
http://fineartviews.com/blog/22217/why-great-artists-should-procrastinate

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2 comments:

Bag Blog said...

When I was in high school, my mom told me to do the dishes. I remember complaining, "But Mom, you are always after me to paint, and now I'm painting! Which do you want me to do?" She let me paint. I was surprised. It was probably not a good lesson, because I would still rather do art than dishes.

Jo Castillo said...

Hi Bag Blog, that is funny. She was hoping you would be a great painter, I bet. And you are.


About Me

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Bastrop, Texas, United States
I Grew up in a small town , Magdalena, New Mexico. I enjoy art and the pleasure other people get from my work. I always donate some of my sales and art to charities, especially for children. That started in Bolivia with Para los Niños. "I cannot pretend to feel impartial about colors. I rejoice with the brilliant ones and am genuinely sorry for the poor browns." -- Winston Churchill

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