Or, I could ask “What’s your poison?” because painting and art in general gets into your system and insidiously affects all you think and do. Motivation for most artists is so strong that at times nothing else matters, except perhaps a fire in the studio.
What’s my motivation?
Getting awards and selling a couple of pieces has prompted me to think a little more rationally and less emotionally about why I paint.
Emotion in the how is what we want folks. But, the wrong emotions taking over the why can lead you down many paths that won’t necessarily be good for your art or you.

The “please buy my art” path will most likely be the undoing of some of the enjoyment in making your art. I’ve experienced this first hand and believe me, it’s soul destroying. I think I have partially let the need to sell go. Sales here and there are certainly great, but that’s a byproduct of painting and exhibiting, not a major reason for doing it.
There’s also the “Why didn’t I/when will I win?” mindset. This whole scene is quite fickle. Wondering whether you might win an award is counter productive. It stops you making art in a relaxed way. You tend to adjust what you think or do to suit judging at the expense of your own preferences. And, funnily enough it can detract from the art you create.

Judging awards is really down to the judges and is difficult to predict. Even if you have three judges, they are all going to have differing opinions about the work being judged. I know from experience that there are always other works as good as the winners, but for some reason, mostly unknown to the artists, a particular piece is chosen. Some years ago, a judge told me I won an award mainly because I had collage in my graphite drawing!
As for my personal motivation, I could ramble on with some arty garb, but I just want to paint, learn and improve my art. For me, the need to be creative, to paint or draw, comes before the subject, medium and techniques. My art (process and product) is, first and foremost, for me!
With that in mind, these two paintings are the newest additions to the catalogue of art I have available. They’re two works from a small series where I recall really relaxing into painting and, as they say, “just doing it”!


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Motivation is so personal isn’t it. I do it mostly for something to do when home. I like a challenge, something to master, a problem to solve.
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I’m not sure I can put my real motivation into words Sarah. (Something to revisit!) I’ve always made art, always will. There’s probably some journaling on it amongst my stuff from Find Your Joy. When I wrote this I had in mind how those things can affect your real internal motivation. I know mine has been tossed around like a leaf in the wind at various times in the past!
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Lovely article WW, loved it!
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Thank you Ricky. I need to get back to making art so I can write about that! I seem to be having “gap” time, for action at least.
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Look forward to the next chapter Wendy
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Me too!
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