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Vermont Studio Center Residency: Those Who Teach Don’t

Originally posted on 05-06-2019
Today concludes the last day of my residency at the Vermont Studio Center.  This is their 35th year of offering Vermont residents a week to create and follow their artistic inclinations.  I was lucky enough to be accepted this year and even luckier to have permission to take a week off of teaching.  This is my first residency program and frankly, it was long overdue.

In the few and short years that I have been committed to getting my teaching license and getting my career going, my artistic practice has taken a back seat.  I can count the number of the paintings I’ve made in the last three years on one hand.  Don’t get me wrong, I make art all the time, but it’s small things: a drawing here, an oil pastel there, an example for my students’ assignments mostly.  Yet, it has been a significant amount of time since I was as creative and productive as when I was in art school.

Monday, I arrived with a project in mind, 6 large canvases, and a head cold.  Still, I committed to making the most out of my time here and not letting this opportunity go to waste.  I quickly stepped back into the life of a studio artist.  I painted from 8am-8pm like there was no tomorrow.

I created a body of work unlike anything I’ve previously made.  I wasn’t sure were I was going with things, yet I trusted instinct.  At the end of the week, I had a studio visit with a guest artist.  She asked me basic questions that I’ve been asked dozens of times before: what is your work about? what is your practice like? and who are you looking at?  I looked at her dumbfounded.  After all these years, I didn’t have answers.  I talk art all the time and it is my job, but since becoming a teacher, I have lost track of who I am as an artist.  It didn’t hit me until that moment.  In the past, I’d be able to list off at least a dozen artists I admired and who influenced me.  This week, I couldn’t name more than two.  But these were artists I was looking at 3-5 years ago.  I didn’t know who I was looking at today, because I wasn’t looking at anyone!  Who am I as an artist now?

The question left me shook.  For years, I had been questioning myself as an artist.  Was I still one?  Was I any good to begin with?  Was it worth still pursuing?  This week, I made the decision that it was.   I was still an artist.  I loved being back in the studio; it felt like home.  Furthermore, I decided that I didn’t want to loose the practice that I had re-found.

Today, as the this residency comes to an end, I re-commit to my practice.  I do not want to lose this side of me.  Working on my practice will also help me as a teacher.  If I can re-connect with my artistic side more, I can help my students connect with their’s as well.