Color the Emotion

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Weekly Art – Creating Regularly in Any Mood

This week, I talk about making weekly art and the feelings behind creating regularly.

"Elämää alavilla mailla - Life in the Lowlands" - a watercolor painting by Paivi Eerola, Finland.
“Elämää alavilla mailla – Life in the Lowlands”, watercolor, size: A3

I feel that although artists talk a lot about techniques and creative process, something gets left out. It’s a time perspective. I don’t mean how much time it takes to make one piece, but what it’s like to make art week after week. If you create art, you will surely recognize this: sometimes you feel excited, sometimes you don’t. People’s moods vary and you can’t always choose the best day.

Not the Ideal Mood

I felt nervous when I started doing this watercolor. The best part of the morning was already over and I was splashing color very fast. My weekly art session had a messy start.

Playing with watercolor. Starting an intuitive watercolor painting. Creating weekly and regularly.

I found an unopened bottle of granulating medium in my stash and thought it might speed things up.

Spraying water over a watercolor painting.

But I found the medium a useless acquisition. Some of the pigments are naturally spreadable and the spray bottle works better for them. All this took time, and my nervousness was still present and there was a new feeling too: self-doubt.

Not Feeling Confident

When you make art week after week, success is based on self-confidence more than mood. It’s easier to be confident at the beginning than later.

Intuitive watercolor painting. Painting in progress. By Paivi Eerola, Finland.
How to dig out the flowers? Buy the course “Freely Grown”

I usually paint with intuition and don’t use any models, so I often end up feeling hopeless. All I can say then is something like: “Keep going!” with a fake smile, and I don’t know if that helps at all.

Different Mood – Different Ideas

But art doesn’t put one mood above the other. Different mood brings different ideas. For example, if I am feeling nervous, there is an opportunity to be less conventional and express something that I would not otherwise come to mind.

Painting weekly. Struggles and rewards in regular creating.

The idea of ​​this painting culminated in the Finnish expression “alavilla mailla hallanvaara.” It means “the danger of frost in the lowlands” in English, but the beauty of the statement is not in its content, but in how it sounds in Finnish. While painting, I began to think about those lowlands that suffer from rain and cold. Similarly, as painters paint week after week, flowers bloom constantly there, also in bad weather.

Creating art weekly - finishing a watercolor painting.

For me, in art, it’s not important in which mood it’s started, but that the end result contains both a trigger and a solution. Here, wind and rain bend the grass and break flower petals, but at the same time they make room for light.

Who Are You Creating Art For?

Within time, the mood evens out and focus is on the finishing. Then I also change who I think as a recipient.

I often start the weekly art by saying that “this piece is for me,” but when I finish I try to reach “for us.” There “we” includes all who like my art, both old and new friends in art. I don’t want to make art only “for you”, because then I lose myself while doing it, and not ” for them”, because it’s hopeless to hope that maybe someone would like the work even if we wouldn’t.

A detail of "Elämää alavilla mailla - Life in the Lowlands" - a watercolor painting by Paivi Eerola, Finland.
See more pictures and a video of this painting at Taiko.art!

So, weekly, this happens again: the wrong moment, the wrong mood, the choice of brushes and colors, calming down, “I’m just doing it for myself”, uncertainty, slowly emerging ideas, concentration, triggers and solutions, happiness, and a feeling of gratitude that I can do this again for us.

Do you too create art regularly?

4 thoughts on “Weekly Art – Creating Regularly in Any Mood

  1. Paivi, I love your Life in the Lowlands. How do we keep white areas white, without the colors bleeding into that area? So, we need to join another class to see how you did it in Life….Lowlands”? those flowers with the little streaks towards the middle are awesome!

    1. Thank you, Nark! The solution is the technique called “negative painting” where you paint the background around the shape instead of the actual shape. I teach this technique in most of my watercolor classes because it’s so essential in watercolor painting. If you like the style of this piece, then I recommend the course “Freely Grown” https://www.peonyandparakeet.com/freelygrown/
      Magical Forest is also a fun course to learn the technique: https://www.peonyandparakeet.com/magical-forest/

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