Robert Genn's Twice Weekly Letter
Insight and inspiration for your artistic career.

Dear Artist,

When I was a teenager I read a book by a hugely successful baseball player. He hadn't always been successful, though. Early in his career, reporters referred to him as "poky" and "slow off the mark." While he was talented and capable, he was on his way to the bush leagues when he saw the light. He got the idea that if he just started jumping around and looking active, he might build enthusiasm and proficiency. Reporters started saying he had "ants in his pants," calling him "Fireball," etc. Fact is, his game improved when he started jumping around.

Recent research at the University of Central Florida in Orlando indicates that children with ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder) may appear to be distracted by all that jumping and wiggling, but it's really an effective method of keeping themselves focused. Teachers are now being advised to let the ADHD kids fiddle. While only about 3 to 5 percent of kids have ADHD, lots of others have it to a mild degree and many creative adults have it in spades.

While I'm a guy who mostly sits at an easel, I've always recognized the value of standing. Standing gives a painter more kinetic opportunity. Body movement and physical action become part of the creative act. At the same time, even an easily-propelled rolling chair can add to the art energy.

Artists' studios may be sanctuaries of soft music and prevailing peace, but artists themselves need to be whirling dervishes within them. A little calmness is a dangerous thing. Elbows out and flailing, back and forth, here and there, the active artist keeps the adrenalin flowing, the ideas evolving and the work falling from the easel. Curiously, the artist who jumps around is less likely to fiddle with his work.

Teddy Roosevelt, late of the Rough Riders, advocated "the active life." He had the idea that mankind needed sheer movement to thrive and evolve. Not just a matter of jumping on the horse and riding off in all directions; human action also needed self direction and self management.

In their observation of remote cultures, anthropologists often find wild action and compulsive movement to be the precursors of skills and proficiency. It stands to reason this might work in our relatively sedentary culture. We may get better at what we do when we keep moving.

Best regards,

Robert

PS: "Everything is in motion. Everything flows. Everything is vibrating." (Dr. Wayne Dyer) "Learning is movement from moment to moment." (Jiddu Krishnamurti) "It is difficult to steer a parked car, so get moving." (Henrietta Mears)

Esoterica: The physicality of "plein-air" work is a good example. Getting the equipment out of the car, dragging it to the location, setting up and fighting the elements are all part of the action. In a way, every new set-up is out of the comfort zone. I've found that simply moving around magnifies the sense of event and stimulates quicker thinking. Last summer in the Rockies, we spied a young woman who was jogging in a tight circle around her easel. "It clears the brain," she told us later by the fire. "We have to keep moving. Otherwise we're slugs."

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