A lesson in letting go

An arrangement of cut-outs on my table

On Friday, I decided to let go and see where the “I don’t know” would take me.
I let go of the desire to make good art and embraced the fact that, as I picked up my scissors, cut into my painted papers and pasted them onto a pre-coloured background, I had no idea what I was making or where the work was going. The idea was just to play, to create freely without ideas or expectations.
Now, if the truth be told, this idea of total freedom was not entirely true…
The one expectation I had was that the piece I was creating would be of a size that could fit into a particular box frame I had waiting for it, if I deemed it worthy.
The one idea I had was that I would create something inspired by the work of Jonathan McCree, whose works of “almost symmetry” had so inspired me.

What I was not expecting, when I felt I was coming close to just trying the piece in the frame, was that it would not fit. The background paper which I had cut some weeks earlier was not, as I had thought, the size of the frame. It was a little larger and I had been collaging away without realising that what I was creating would be so much larger than the frame that even a careful cropping to the edges of the image would not be enough to squeeze it in.

After careful consideration, I decided that this was a lesson to me. I chose to see this as a happy accident, pushing me out of my comfort zone, reminding me not to be attached to a particular outcome and forcing me to take the work in a direction I had not intended.

Just before the cut

So, feeling less frustrated by little hurdle than I was excited by the possibilities, I moved forward with the piece, carefully cutting round the shapes with a view to reassembling them on a different background to fit the frame. I loved the new shapes that emerged. I was thrilled by the different configurations I was able to make. It may take a little longer for me to figure out how to finish this, but I am happy to wait. The way the individual elements looked once separated from the background gave rise to a whole stream of unforeseen options that would never have arisen had I stuck with my original path.

Another cut-out arrangement on my table

Today, I am grateful for happy accidents.
I am loving my lessons in letting go.
I am looking forward to seeing where the next step takes me.

Do you have any stories of letting go and how doing so has impacted your life or your art? I would love to hear your experiences. Please feel free to share them here.

With love,
Julia x

3 thoughts on “A lesson in letting go

  1. Julia, this is lovely and very profound! I think it is wonderful that the shapes wound up bigger than the box for which they were intended, and that they themselves are creating their own outcome, rather that having one forced upon them! This is very inspiring to me, as I have rejected having my multi-faceted self squeezed into an ill-fitting career box! I think it would be cool for you to do a whole series of photographs of the cutouts in different configurations on your table. I really like the three-dimensional aspect of the pieces “floating” on the tabletop, looking like they’re going to take off – like butterflies!

    • Thank you Nancy! Yes, the pieces reminded me of butterflies too in some way. I had taken photos in three different configurations, but had trouble posting, so again had to let go of my intended way of sharing. However, I hope to play more tomorrow… to experiment with backgrounds and photographing different configurations in different places. Keep flapping and stretching those beautiful, creative wings of yours. x

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