Find your creative voice – what do I draw next?

I’ve found the best advice is to keep it simple. I am lucky enough to live in Dorset which is full of inspirational views. There are so many views and places that it can often be overwhelming. 

You may ask yourself, what will make a beautiful view or subject? Most recently, I’ve tried to simplify my process, so that I avoid wasting time. If I am out for a walk and the light is just right, I challenge myself to take a few notes, make a quick sketch and capture more information using my camera phone. Later, I use this as the inspiration for a colour study. It might work or it might not but I know I always learn from the experience, either way.

I hope that my workshops encourage you to look for inspiration locally, giving you opportunity to see your local views with fresh eyes and making the ordinary extraordinary.

My students often find they struggle for time. Juggling life and art can be a tricky balance. “Little and often” is a very good approach to your art practice. Working in a small sketchbook keeps your eye in and can be inspiration for larger works of art. Keeping your art kit in order means that when you have time, you will be able take advantage easily.

Working in a sketchbook with soft pastels

If you like the idea of sketchbooking with pastels. Here’s how I do it. Prepare a simple selection of colours, suited to the colours of your landscape. I like using pastel pencils and sticks, with a little liquid and a brush, soft pastel returns to pigment so I paint a wash of colour. The same binder that keeps the pigment as a stick form then fixes it to the page. I then spray it with fixative when I get back to the studio. I guess there’s slightly less pastel on the paper as I use liquid to create a wash of colour with it. Like all things new, it will take you a while to find the correct balance but it’s worth persevering. I also like using watercolour pencils and you can use water paints. There are no rules, just do what suits you.

Getting your art kit ready is as important as doing the artwork. Whether painting outside or doing a workshop, I recommend selecting your colours ahead of starting. Selecting your colours ahead of starting and keeping them stored in a pot, it means you can just focus on creating the artwork. I have a little back pack that is always packed with my art kit, ready for a creative day out with my flask of tea. That way you are always ready to grab some time for happy pastelling.

3 TIPS TO CONSIDER.

1. DEVELOP YOUR OWN ARTISTIC VOICE.

I emphasise developing a working practice to my students. I help them develop a process that they can follow to enable them to find their own artistic voice. The secret to success is planning. The work that goes in before the pastel hits the paper. Most important, is your choice of subject. I think it’s important to develop your unique themes. What makes you happy? Is it a favourite place, walk or view. Are you a sea person or a mountain person, animals or townscapes? Start to create your own reference images using your own photos and sketches. You’ll find that your artwork develops to new levels from this authentic approach. Your minds eye will have captured so much more information you will imagine it has. All of that and more will be in your artworks which you will use alongside sketches and photos.

2. START WITH A COLOUR STUDY.

A smaller scale and using a scrap of paper means I can be freer with my marks and explore colour too. I think of it like a, ‘getting to know you’ sketch, a chance to explore the image a little before starting the final artwork.

This preparation is essential, choose your colours carefully. If the colours look good together ahead of starting, they’ll make a gorgeous artwork. This process means I keep my colours clean and luminous rather than grabbing too many colours and creating a muddy mess. For my seascapes, I know that St Ives is always beautiful but the light, well that’s a special thing. I knew it would be the ideal scene to demonstrate some of my favourite soft pastel painting techniques. I hope that by sharing these views, I inspire my students to see their own views with new enthusiasm.

3. IT’S A CUP OF TEA FOR ME!

It’s so important to take a break and come back to your artwork with fresh eyes. Boil that kettle and savour your artwork over a favourite brew or even tipple. Especially after the initial drawing out stage. You’ll be able to spot areas in your artwork that need a tweak or something that’s distracting or just in the wrong place with ‘fresh eyes’ when you return. It’s also helpful to turn artworks and reference images upside down, and then compare. This new way of seeing your artwork will help you compare angles, shapes and proportions much more effectively. It’s also important to remember, taking regular breaks avoids eye strain and neck and arm aches and pains that are all too often forgotten.

If you take away one tip, “Little and often” is a good approach to your art practice. Oh and the reassurance that if life does get busy, your pastels will be ready when you are for more happy pastelling. 

Nina Squire

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7 Comments on “Find your creative voice – what do I draw next?”

  1. Great advice
    Do you use pastels and fix or use with vodka to avoid smudging in the sketch book or use watercolour pencils for colour ?

    • Thank you. You can do either but I like using pastel pencils and sticks, with a little liquid and then spray it with fixative when I get back to the studio. I guess there’s slightly less pastel on the paper as I use liquid to create a wash of colour with it.

  2. I consider myself to be very fortunate to have the opportunity to have such a talented tutor. Nina is always there to offer guidance with comforting words when things do not always go to plan. Thank you.

  3. This is great advice, Nina. I’ve just recently realized that what often stops me from going to my studio is uncertainty about what to paint next–I have SO MANY THINGS I want to work on, but where to start? I sit and dither and pretty soon my window of time has shrunk to nothing.

    What I’m going to try, following your advice, is keep my little sketching set (what I would use to sketch outdoors) in my kitchen, so that while the stew is cooking or the cake baking or whatever I can bring up an image, sketch it in colour or even charcoal pencils or aquarelles (which I love but haven’t used for years). Practice AND inspiration for the next larger window of time.

    Thanks SO MUCH for this! <3 <3 <3

    • Hi Kay, Thank you! Your enthusiasm keeps me creating! I think its helpful to create a folder of images you like and then challenge yourself to draw one, just whichever you are drawn to at first glance, that way some of the indecision around what to draw, is taken away. Just do it, rather than worrying if it is the right image or similar. Hope that helps. Happy pastelling till next time. Nina

  4. Great advice Nina …I feel like Kay – never know which of my many images to do next…if and when I have time from classes…
    So I’ll organise what I have and try to be more decisive!
    Thankyou for all your guidance and especiallyfor creating this supportive group of pastellers!
    Enjoy St Ives.
    Cheers
    Sue x

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