The Monotype of the Day Project Wrap Up

Some photo highlights of the last 900 days:

My daily post of an original monotype print is over and I will be switching to a once a week post: Monotype of the Day Mondays.

This project has transformed me and my whole relationship to making art. I have posted for 900 days, not skipping a single day even when I travelled, even when I was in the hospital for a week three different times. I am a different artist than when I started. So much of the unnecessary angst around my studio practice is either gone or the volume has been turned very low. The major changes fall into a few categories:

Self Judgment: I still judge my work (who doesn’t?), but I move on anyway. Most of the time judgements while working amount to indistinct chatter in the back of my head. After a piece is complete, if I don’t like it, I take a breath and move on. In a very deep way, I know the piece is not for me and my judgment is irrelevant. It is my job simply to work and let the world sort out the rest.

Trust: Failure and mistakes while working don’t faze me. I look at them as the hand of The Artist (universal source of all creativity) gently directing me to a different path. I have come to have an unshakable faith in the value of working, a deep trust that what we do as artists matters even though we may never know how or what effect it has. I never worry or question my purpose anymore. Instead, if those feelings come up, I walk into my studio and get back to work.

Inspiration: Inspiration is overrated. Showing up to work is the most important thing. Most days of this project, I had no idea what I was going to make until I stepped in front of my printing plate. The key thing for an artist is to be brave enough to show up anyway and trust their process.

Process: For an artist process is always more important than product. If you worry about the finished piece, you can’t be in the present moment. If you are not in the present moment it’s hard to fully access the creative flow. 

Partnership: Art materials have purpose and desires of their own. This project taught me to listen to my materials and give them voice. So many times the desires of ink lead me to the conclusion of a piece. The physical world is an inescapable fact for the artist, as is the creative flow. The artist must reach through the veil between worlds to partner with the universal creative flow while at the same time remaining firmly grounded in the present moment. We form a triad, Artist / artist / physical world. This is a partnership that must be honored not dominated.

Meaning: Each piece has two levels of meaning. There is the meaning that the viewer creates as they interact with the piece and there is the more personal meaning for the artist- a tender message from The Artist to the artist. This project has been a correspondence between lovers.

The effect on me: The constant flow of creative energy has opened me up. It washed away so much that was blocking me and enlarged my vessel. It’s even improved my health. As angst in the studio has receded, I have been able to reclaim that trapped energy and my body has responded positively. To an artist, work is life.

Gratitude: Thank you! I am beyond grateful for all the support I’ve received on this project. I am grateful for all your comments, likes, and purchases. It means the world to me. Thank you also to those who follow my progress silently, your presence is felt and appreciated. Thank you to the long suffering :) Barry Echtman who soldiered on through all my late nights, bought my supplies to the hospital, changed his schedule to help me, and so much more. Love you! Special thanks for their support (in no particular order) to Harry Echtman, Dottie Archibald, Tom Archibald, Barbara Archibald, Gayle Mahoney, Liz Munro, Wendy Bellermann, Leslie Goldman, Celene Ryan, Robert Ramos, Kathyrn McGuire, all my fellow Clerestory/4flavors artists (Jorge Larrea, Brian Stymest, Mary Young, Steve Kelly, Nora Murphy, Gayle Mahoney, Armando Outthere Diaz), Ellen Kahaner, Lisa Basile, Miles Shapiro, Poetry Chaikhana (for showing the world of sacred poetry beyond the Middle Ages all those years ago), Ann Strand, and Annemarie Greenwood. THANK YOU!!!

The whole project is viewable on my blog, Art of the Spirit (www.sybilarchibaldart.com/blog), my website (www.sybilarchibaldart.com/the-monotype-of-the-day-project), and on Instagram and Facebook. If you are interested in purchasing I’m happy to do payment plans. Most of the prints from the last few months can be found here: https://www.sybilarchibaldart.com/monotypes-for-sale. Prints before that can be found here https://www.sybilarchibaldart.com/the-monotype-of-the-day-project

 

Lots of love, Sybil

blessed and blessed ghost, Monotype of the Day #820

Day 88 of year 3

Tonight let's just say, this print is not my favorite. I do like the emptiness of the ghost print though. Part of this project is to show what an artist goes through while creating. Not every print can be the best print or even a good print and that's ok because that's the truth and has to be accepted. It doesn't matter that I don't like it, judging only ties up the creative process. The work is not for me to like or dislike, it's for me to make and to trust. I've written about this before, but sometimes I need to remind myself. So I let it go and look forward to tomorrow.

For more information about the process of monotype and the Monotype of the Day project click here.
You can purchase this monotype
here.

the beacon at night, Monotype of the Day #472

Day 106 of Year 2 (Actually Day 107)

Yesterday was interesting. Despite my extreme dislike of the print bubbles, it received a positive response proving once again, an artist is not meant to judge the value of their own work. Work flows through and out. Radical trust is required, trust that though an artist may not learn the true purpose of an individual piece, there is purpose. Tonight I needed this red, I felt it warming my chest, giving me life force. It changed me. But I will never know if it has a purpose after it goes out into the world. That has to be okay because the fastest way to block up creative flow is to become attached to certain outcomes. Creative freedom comes from detachment especially detachment from making a "good" work of art. Every work has a purpose whether it is to change the artist, its viewers, or both. Yesterday was a great reminder to trust, turn off the judgement, and turn on the flow.

ALL
by Wendell Berry
All bend in
one wind.
From Given https://amzn.to/2NgLN0dg

Sybil Responds

I am utterly overwhelmed and humbled by the response to my last post. I received many lengthy letters from people, some of whom I have known for years and some who have never posted a comment before. If I have not responded to your letter yet, please know that I will and that I am just seeking words which are adequate containers for what I feel. There have also been so many beautiful and supportive comments both here and via email.It is a great surprise to me that my words and journey have impacted people to strongly. This is a deep lesson about self-judgment and trust. I guess that none of us understand the wake our vessel leaves as we navigate through life. We may judge our contribution as small or meaningless, but if this has taught me nothing else, it is that we are not meant to judge ourselves.We are meant to wade into the Light and embrace our path, trusting that if we pursuit our calling, we add to what is good and true in this world. Let us leave the judgments, good or bad, to others. In the end we may all be truly astounded, as I am astounded today, by how empty my own judgments were.My heart is filled with love. You have filled me. Thank you.

A fish cannot drown in water,
A bird does not fall in air.
In the fire of creation,
God doesn't vanish:
The fire brightens.
Each creature God made
must live in its own true nature;
How could I resist my nature,
That lives for oneness with God?

- Mechthild of Magdeburg