August 14, 2019

First, we make the clay

When a sculptor sets out to sculpt something, the material sits in front of them. An inert hunk of clay, stone, or bronze that has already pulled from the earth. The starting point is a given, it already exists, they have something to work with. To respond to.

But writers have to make their own clay. That’s what a first draft is; the malformed, misshapen, big hunk of clay. It’s not until any writer has toiled through hacking out a beginning, middle, and end from the pit in their mind, that they can sit it on the table in front of them and begin to respond to it – to slowly chip away, or push and pull it with their hands, to make it into something that they themselves will be proud of, and perhaps, will touch someone else one day.

When you know that all you have to do is get the big chunk of clay on to a page, first drafts become easier. The point of a first draft isn’t perfection, it’s about existence.

Other observations
March 24, 2026

I have to work today

What if, on the days we don’t feel like making art, we do anyway? In the same way that we show up to our day jobs when we don’t fee like it?

March 17, 2026

Scared of progress

The problem with progress is that we’re likely to learn that we’re either not good enough or not ambitious enough. But maybe there’s no other way?

March 3, 2026

The ancestors are speaking

What might we be able to tell ourselves and listen for in order to provoke more positive energy and action in our art practice?

February 24, 2026

Can I do this?

Where does the motivation for beginning mark making come from? Why would I even try in the first place?

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