It’s a new year, the beginning of the third year of the pandemic.  Here we are in another spike with a new variant raging.  Over the last two years we have all suffered losses and a great deal of stress. Once again, I find myself not interacting with anyone except my husband and the cat who has survived into 2022.  As the spike goes down and Omicron recedes, I know I’ll see my friends again in person and appreciate them more than ever.  We’ll drink wine and laugh and talk.  I’ll go places other than quiet nature preserves and treasure each moment. Hopefully I’ll travel. But meanwhile…. What has sustained me since March of 2020 has been painting and teaching art. I’ve created a large body of work and much of it is the best I’ve ever done.  I’ve learned to adapt my teaching to Zoom and have grown as an instructor as I share my love of painting and all things art related. The classes have become a community that reaches across time zones and into one another’s’ studios. Painting is, often, joy. Sure, it’s frustrating and often a struggle, but those times when you go down the rabbit hole and you’re in harmony with the muse are magical moments. Someone recently asked me if I make digital art.  I don’t because I love the process of painting. I love mixing colors and making marks, the touch of the brush to canvas, breathing life into imagery.  In my classes I love helping others discover their abilities and creative selves. Sometimes it’s difficult to get motivated to create, especially during hard times.  But perhaps that’s the time we need to do it most with no expectations or judgement except to allow the process of making something to soothe your soul. Make anything!  Use art supplies, words, sounds, movement, plants, food, found stuff.  Don’t worry if it’s “good”. Let go of that and experience how creating something can bring a sense of peace and fulfillment.

21 thoughts on “Joy and Pain(ting)”

    1. Elisabeth Bertol

      Carla, spot on. Here’s to my marvelous art teacher, who never takes the easy way or cuts corners but, on the contrary, goes out of her way to help us grow while at the same time allowing us to be ourselves.

  1. You are a beautiful writer in addition to painter. I’m finding a need to get my hands in dirt – creating woodland plantscapes – my form of creation!

  2. Create something! I can’t imagine my life without music. And yes, like you, that creation is a major part of my survival these past couple years, and always. Thanks for putting it into words and feelings.

  3. I totally agree with you about preferring actual painting to digital creation. There’s something about putting various colors of paint on the palette, mixing them, and applying them to the surface that is enjoyable. Plus creating in three dimensions is so much more rewarding than colored pixels on a screen.

  4. I know what you mean, Carla, about teaching…..any small aha moment is precious and exciting and heartwarming.
    But also I’m with your friend Midge…..my gardens have saved my soul in so many ways! We’ve had snow here.
    I spent lots of energy protecting vegetable plants from getting wet or too cold. Unfortunately I will have to harvest almost everything tonight with the temperature drop and freezing rain but it’s been a good run

    1. Yes, Billie, your gardens are beautiful and so creative. Thinking with the cold wether and having to harvest all the veggies…soups and stews?

  5. Carla, you are such a blessing! You bring so much beauty and love into this world both on and off the canvass.
    We need reminders like you now more than ever!

    May you stay strong and healthy!
    May you experience deep happiness!

  6. I love the phrase “going down the rabbit hole…” The concept of getting lost in creating is very dear to me. As a teenager I had the family piano in my bedroom (!) and I would get lost in playing music… often being brought crashing back to earth by a sibling banging on the door telling me it was dinner time! Now I get lost in my sheshack in the garden… painting, sketching, or just looking out at the lawn and growing veggies, listening to birdsong. These precious moments help me keep my head from exploding. Too much non-joy in the world crowds in and I need the escape of the rabbit hole to reset my inner compass to True North. Your classes are also my time to reset. Your little band of edge dwellers help make life bearable!

  7. I’ve had untold joy from my lessons with you over the pandemic and also prior to that. Thank you for writing these things. It’s very uplifting.

    1. THank you Ian. And thank you for being part of our class community, you bring a lot of joy to the group, or as Beth calls it, “our little band of edge dwellers”.

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