Pathway to Purpose

 

Slide1

“Find purpose, means will follow.”  Mahatma Gandhi (from The Painter’s Keys)

Do artists need to have a purpose?  Many artists will say they just want to make art.  Purpose doesn’t matter as long as they can make art.  But is that really true?  If an artist is jumping from one subject to another, one style to another, does the end product of creation mean anything to anyone?  The final creation appears similar to the bouncing pattern of the pathway of a jackrabbit.  The rabbit may know where he’s going, but nobody else does.   What good is jackrabbit art to anyone?

Those who see art as having a higher purpose than just making pretty pictures have spent a bit of effort determining what the higher purpose is. Artist Ann Rea says on her website, “Our purpose as artists is to shift the perception, the feelings of the viewer, of the listener, the reader.”  To shift perception requires a focus.  A focus requires a purpose.  It is up to each artist to find that purpose.

In an article for the Artist’s Network, artist Lee Hammond is writing about the “Creation of Art with a Purpose.”  Hammond states, “Having a calling as an artist is a true gift.”  Being an artist is a gift.  Each artist determines what to do with the gift.  A search of the heart will eventually turn up where the gift becomes a calling.  Along with the calling comes the purpose.  Once the purpose is found, the means reveals itself.

Artists can follow in the path of the bouncing jackrabbit or they can seek out the path to a higher purpose.  The idea of a higher purpose is a pretty awesome goal.  Artists who have followed that path are creating wonderful art.  Besides, all that zigzagging around in the wake of the rabbit just brings on a headache.  And who wants that?

Author: MaryGwyn

Artist-Art Educator-Art in Healthcare

8 thoughts on “Pathway to Purpose”

  1. I read a yoga guru years ago who suggested that art should always offer upliftment to the viewer which is how I happen to feel about the art I create. However, in saying that I don’t believe art should always be airy-fairy as challenging, dark art can also lift your senses if it leads you into new ways of thinking or viewing the world.

  2. There is a Winslow Homer painting set in the Adirondacks and mostly in shades of blue that I have always loved. It takes me to different places each time I look at it. This painting has the same effect. I like it very much and feel a definite perception shift.

    1. Thank you so much!! That means so much to me! This painting is of a place where I spent a large part of my childhood. It was magical to me and I was hoping to share that magic through the painting.

Leave a Reply

Discover more from Mary Gwyn's Art

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading