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Thoughts on Thinking Differently About The Arts
Eliminating the National Endowment for the Arts may look like a budget cut on paper, but the consequences reach far deeper. Arts funding isn’t just about paintings or performances — it supports jobs, strengthens education, fuels innovation, and helps build vibrant, connected communities.
Thoughts on Art and Spirituality
If you’ve ever lost track of time sketching, painting, or even doodling on the margins of your grocery list, you already know that making something with your hands and mind can be a different kind of meditation. You don’t have to be a monk with a paintbrush or a poet on a mountaintop. You don’t even have to consider yourself an “artist” in the capital A sense.
Thoughts on The Artist as Art
Andy didn’t just make art; he was art. His carefully curated public image — the silver wig, sunglasses, monotone voice, and mysterious persona — became as iconic as his famous soup cans and celebrity portraits. Today, in a world dominated by social media, like it or not, you are often the product too. Following Warhol’s example means realizing that how you show up and present yourself is important.
Thoughts on what makes something a work of art
What makes something art? It's not a simple question to answer. It’s one of those questions that opens up a much bigger conversation about what we value, how we see the world, and who gets to decide what counts as meaningful.
Thoughts on Life’s Small Windows
There are moments in life that open like small windows. They're brief, fleeting, and rare. The older we get, the more we understand how limited these windows are. When we’re young and dumb, summer nights feel endless and you believe that they'll always be there for you. When we're young, we don’t appreciate about how many more nights like this we’ll get, or whether they’ll feel the same again. But the truth is, they don’t come around nearly as often as we think.
Thoughts on The Benefits of Revisiting Your Past Artwork
When you’re in the middle of making something, it’s easy to get wrapped up in the details. In the moment, each piece is like one of your children. You're obsessing over whether a brushstroke is in the right place or if the color choices make sense. Your mind is wrapped up in the techniques and tools and mediums that you're exploring.
But when you step back, especially months or years later, you can see the bigger picture. You’re no longer caught up in the tiny decisions or whatever headspace you were in at the time. You can appreciate, and even get inspired by what worked and learn from what didn’t.
Thoughts on The Power of Simplicity in Abstract Art
Abstract art gives artists a certain freedom from the confines of realism. Not every brushstroke or splash of paint always leads to a masterpiece. Sometimes, less is really more.
In a genre already focused on emotion and essence over literal representation, simplicity is a way to cut through the noise and static, allowing the artwork to hit its mark with elegance and impact.
Thoughts on Strengths and Weaknesses
I was recently required to take the CliftonStrengths test as a part of a leadership program that I’m participating in. I have taken the test before, and I was curious to see what it would tell me about myself now, more than a decade later.
On the surface, it’s an appealing idea: answer a series of questions, and in return, you get a snapshot of your greatest strengths. But, as I took the test, and the more I sat with the results, the more I slowly started to ponder the real downsides.
Thoughts on Being Thankful
What if, instead of replaying frustrations, you made it a habit to notice what’s going right? What if the last thought before sleep wasn’t about something annoying, but about something good? Gratitude isn’t just a pleasant feeling—it’s a tool. When we stop each day, even briefly, to look for what we can be grateful for, it changes the way we see our lives. The challenge, of course, is remembering to practice it. And what does that actually mean anyway?
Thoughts On Thoughts
Have you ever felt like your mind is full of static? Just attempting to make a simple decision can sometimes be a challenge because your own mind literally gets in the way. This struggle is often referred to as your monkey mind. There are many ways to quiet your mind. Meditation is one popular way, and I can personally say that it works at times. The practice of writing and actually exploring my thoughts is another.