The Artist's Journey: Bold Strokes To Spark Creativity (The Art Of The Possible Series)
K**L
A guide to creating from your true self
I have been a closet painter for years while working as an RN. After retiring I started painting full time and struggled with self-criticism. I have heard that when the student is ready the guide will appear. Nancy Hillis and her new book are my guide. I have taken classes from her and agree with one reviewer who complained about no pictures in the book but Nancy does provide a link to free videos. This book is about painting from who you are as an artist. Since this is a journey of self it is for the reader to determine their marks and path and Nancy provides the map to find your own buried treasure within. Each artist is unique and Nancy helps guide the way. The combination she makes available provides a gentle supportive road map to creating with joy. I paint abstracts so added a recent image titled "Genesis" based on her teaching and support.
C**M
I will look back and remember this book was the start of something new in my art-making
It’s finally here! I follow Nancy on Instagram and pre-ordered my copy of “The Artist’s Journey.” It arrived today and I must say, I am enchanted. I sat down to immediately begin devouring it and as I began to read, I felt equal parts, terror and relief.Terror because I have a feeling I’m about to do a deep dive into a new part of art-making. And relief, because I want to go deeper and can tell she gets the resistance and is the person to help take me there. She gets all of it, the process and the avoidance of the process. It’s like reading my own diary as she talks about the perils of being an artist.So far her book is much-needed encouragement to keep crawling through the unknown. To find what I am certain is waiting for me on the other side of the willingness to be brave and do it anyway.Nancy is a psychiatrist and artist and has interesting dialogue about how the two are connected. I love her writing voice as well as her rich, heavily-marked abstracts. I am into chapter 3 already and excited to continue. Nancy offers online courses too, which I am now seriously considering. Looks like she will be my new guide to “terra incognita,” as she likes to say. Yay!I fell in love with “The Artist’s Way” by Julia Cameron years ago and still refer to it today. I can see “The Artist’s Journey” becoming a new staple of my creative library. 😊
M**K
There are no examples of art work.
She repeats the same messages over and over, paint every day. Well everyone says that. Nothing new here. No clear step by step process.
C**E
Don’t waste your money
This book was a disappointment. Easily read in an hour. The book is basically an advertisement for the author’s video workshops and classes. I’m sure the author has extensive training and experience; her workshops are expensive( well over $1000) and not everyone can afford them. Don’t waste your money in purchasing this book.
S**S
Insightful and Delightful!
If you've ever approached a blank support --be it canvas, paper or panel -- with fear in your heart and the certainty you'll never find the right marks, notes or words, this book is for you. Nancy takes you by the hand and shows you the way. She is uniquely qualified to do so. I took one of her on-line classes two years ago. My work improved, my spirit soared, and though I still get butterflies every time I enter my studio, I know I'm not abnormal, a phony, or a fraud. Just a creative spirit in search of a beautiful thing.There are exercises throughout, and wonderful videos you can access. All were beneficial, but one swept me off my feet. As an art historian and former museum curator, I recognize "the signature" of many well known artists, but I failed to recognize my own. Until I did the exercise on page 33 and discovered that my marks are also unique -- the same gestures and squiggles and wiggles appear throughout my abstracts without my knowing. They've always been there. They're "ME!" Nancy Shaw
M**D
Very disappointed
I really wanted to like this book. I planned to add it to my collection (which I still refer to time and again). You see, I'm an avid reader and artist. On my quest to find new inspirational creative voices, I've acquired an impressive library of books that were thoughtfully written to inspire creatives like myself. My collection includes books by authors such as: Julia Cameron, David Bayles, Austin Kleon, Steven Pressfield, Tom Kelley and Twyla Tharp, to name a few. So this is why I'm disappointed:1. No images. Nada. Zip. Zero. Ms. Hillis does not share any of her artwork nor does she share the artwork of other artists. The book feels...well...uninspired. Even if she's not sharing art techniques, it would have been nice if she'd at least spiced up the pages like a true creative soul would.2. Heavy sales pitch. There's one thing Ms. Hillis has figured out...how to get her name out there. Unfortunately, her book boils down to one big sales pitch. This feels, contrived, insincere and morally wrong.3. Too repetitive. She uses a lot of fluffy, useless jargon to convey her main points. While she has a couple of nice points here and there, she basically repeats the same concepts: Believe you are creative and practice, practice, practice. Golly. I never would have thought of that!4. Too short. I read this book in about 45 minutes. Well, I guess if you're advertising your website/classes and repeating the same pitch over and over again, the book will be short.If you're looking for true inspiration, do yourself a favor. Save the money and check out the authors I've mentioned above.
L**N
Trusting my true self
With lyrical prose The Artist’s Journey takes the reader on an exciting adventure of overcoming the internal roadblocks to creativity by increasing vulnerability and learning to trust the true self.Nancy’s keen use of literary knowledge coupled with practical exercises in each chapter helped me begin to move beyond my fears and into my art in a whole new way. A way that cares less about what others think and more about what is true to who I am and what my soul longs to create. I look forward to seeing how The Artist’s Journey continues to shape my growth as an artist!Leigh Hudson
A**S
Designed as a teaser rather than the main event
Great text and an interesting, engaging and original approach developd by this artist-psychiatrist, definitely worth reading if you are on a creative journey, and struggle with your relationship,to your art, inability to see it clearly, and self criticism. Buying the book is much cheaper than enrolling on one of her courses. There are many good ideas, such as that your ugly paintings are the most important as they contain the seeds of your new direction. Although the book has an attractive square format like an art book, in fact it does not contain any art at all and there is absolutely masses of unused white space on every page. It is a much smaller book than it looks. It does spend a lot of its very limited text on referencing videos on her website that you cannot in fact see, because these are mainly part of paid courses and you cannot access most of them. Her approach is very interesting but she is not as generous as many artists who give a lot more information away.
L**W
Exactly what it promised to be.
After reading so many books on 'how to get unstuck as an artist', 'overcoming creative block', 'finding your way forward' etc. I've never actually got any further forward in real terms: still stuck, still finding it hard to work out why it's all so difficult, still not producing the work I really want to be producing and still feeling like I haven't properly even got off the ground yet. I was encouraged by reading the reviews to think maybe this book was the one that would actually really help, and it was - the difference in the way I'm working is amazing. I agree with other reviewers that the lack of illustrations is a plus point. Although there are other books out there with beautiful examples of their author's work, which are inspiring to read, it's actually easier to find your own way with this book because although there are practical exercises to follow, there are no examples to distract you or make you start comparing your work to other people's and either losing heart or losing your way. This book is much more about making progress by actually doing; no overthinking, no unnecessary steps - just straight to the heart of the problem and then onward into making the art you always wanted to be able to make.
M**X
Very hard read and not much help
After reading all the glowing reports on this book, it’s hard to know where to start. Firstly, the book goes hand in hand with a website that (presumably) helps you to understand some of the psychobabble that the book is littered with. I’m sorry, but if I’m spending £15 on a book, it should tend alone not require me to access most of the content online. It’s clearly aimed at the abstract artist who is creating from within, rather than more visually realist firms. There’s a lot about ‘learning to trust yourself’ but not much help in understanding how. She uses terms like “make six marks - these will be your marks”. Well, yes, but what does that actually mean? No illustrations are given to show what she interpreted as ‘marks’. Or how about this extract - “this is where it happens, a meeting with the ineffable, the mysterium at the intersection of the unknown known”. Look, I’m an amateur artist struggling with who I am and what I want to be - this philosophical discourse isn’t really helping. Sorry - two stars at best.
A**R
No pictures?
Haven’t started reading it yet, and I’m sure it will live up to the other reviews, but am a bit surprised to find there are no pictures... in fact that’s a first, buying an art book with no pictures...
W**N
Bought the kindle version of this book
This is an inspirational book for any artist, amateur or pro, who is suffering from 'artist's block', aka 'resistance'. Nancy Hillis is both artist and psychologist and uses both skills to help us identify what stops us from making art as well as what to do to overcome the block. A book to go back to often.
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