• AAU Lens
Menu

ART U Lens

  • AAU Lens
48988f_afdd721fc9e3e595ea7a0740757f5f36.jpeg 48988f_498bff9e0efbd8b77f142c4c4dc3437b.jpeg 48988f_fb78c0da0a757e7e3ae0e9a247392bba.jpeg 48988f_38c0315f0464d8ea2e24204f1e339b12.jpeg 48988f_979dbedf8fee85fa8e3931edcb5f891c.jpeg

Getting Past a Creative Block

December 2, 2016

by Sarah Sloneker. Images above © Sarah Joy Photography.

As an artist, we have all been there … when just for the life of us we cannot get our creative juices flowing. We have that dreaded creative block and it usually there to stay for a while. However, over the years, I found and read some interesting ideas on how to “Drano” away that block and get us artist’s back into that creative grind.

I recommend trying one of these four things:

1.     Have an Idea Box or Folder-  Being visual people, we can be inspired by a lot of different avenues such as objects, ideas, notes, sketches, painting and of course other photos. So when you are feel uninspired, I recommend creating a box or an image cloud. A place where you can save things to spark your creativity. I myself have a “mood board” folder on my computer.. That I regularly store anything visual that grabs my eye (of course saving and naming the image properly). One will be surprised how helpful this can be as a reminder of previous ideas and inspirations.

2.     Stimulate Non-Visual Senses- As photographers; most of us work primarily with our sense of sight. Therefore, I recommend resetting your senses. Recently I went into a sensory depravation tank, this is where you are floating in a black void for about an hour or so with no sight, sound, smell or touch and coming out from this tank was amazing. You won’t believe how creative you can be after you reset your body. However, you do not have to go as far as hoping in a deprivation tank to get this experience. Try just taking one sense away, for example: Close your eyes and touch the grass outside or the drywall in your apartment, just pay attention to that ONE sense. Eat an ice-cream cone with your eyes closed or lie on the floor and listen to music in the dark. Anything that gets you experiencing your other senses in a new way, and will help your art by widening your creative outlook.

3.     Write Something or Sketch it- Journaling can be a fantastic creative outlet, I myself have many journals.  Often enough, it is said that handwriting is linked directly to your consciousness, and by writing down your ideas, it keeps your thoughts moving. It’s a way of organizing and remembering things that have affected you, so you can channel that into your art.

4.     Clean Your Work Space- This might sound weird, but having an empty table as an artist can really help your metal mode. For having a cluttered studio space, doesn’t allow much room for new work to develop. I often find it therapeutic and refreshing to start a new image on fresh clean space, to allow my mind to calm down the outward chaos.. so to begin the creative cycle again.

Sample of my mood board folder (grouping of Images, not mine) and my creative journals.

In Learn Tags sarah joy photography, sarah sloneker, creative block, creativity, journaling
← Photographing a Changing Iran Lenscratch Student Prize, Honorable Mention: AAU's Troy Colby →

ABOUT

Academy of Art's School of Photography shares news and insight.

  • Learn 15
  • Look 24
  • Welcome 1

Subscribe

Sign up with your email address to receive news and updates.

We respect your privacy.

Thank you!

Latest & Greatest

Repost from @seraphlia1212
•
“GROWING” From AKA’s wonderland
Visual Version Two
___________________________________________
#seraphlia
MUA @s.y._angelpotts
Model @Jovanmello @lookmodelagency
Jewelry Designer: @Akazhangartwork
P @bai_photographer Xiaodan Bai #student 

Architecture photography class with @pargast Patrik Argast instructor @academy_of_art Repost from @davidarnoldphotography
•
From the series India Streets: bit.ly/IndiaStreets. Rickshaw Driver in Traffic, Varanasi, India.
.
.
.
.
.
#photoproject  #traveldeeper #passionpassport #ourplanetdaily #everydayasia
#street_photography #art Repost from @davidarnoldphotography
•
Cottonwood Stump, Haze, Washoe Lake, Nevada,
.
.
.
.
#infraredphoto #infraredlandscape #infrared_images #infrared_master #infrared #aauphoto #sycamore #photocomposition #fineartphotography #conceptphotograph Repost from @yanamyphotography
•
Second scene from my new project about San Francisco
Model - @mashayun "The eye should learn to listen before it looks." 
- Robert Frank

Repost from @thehopfs
•
Wasted Youth.
@academy_of_art Repost from @brightwood_photos
•Nicholas Shirley #alumni 
I’ve started using a Celestial Tracker which allows me to take longer exposures of the night sky. This is the galactic core of the Milky Way shot with an 85mm lens
#nightsky #nikon Repost from @brightwood_photos
• Nicholas Shirley #alumni 
Point Reyes shipwreck
#stars #nightsky #nikonshooter #sanfrancisco #nikon
Featured
Eddie Edwards.png
Nov 4, 2022
In-Class Guest Speaker: Eddie Edwards
Nov 4, 2022
Read More →
Nov 4, 2022
thumbnail_Wednesday.jpg
Nov 4, 2022
In-Class Guest Speaker: Xiaopeng "Lucien" Liu
Nov 4, 2022
Read More →
Nov 4, 2022
  • Art U Photography
    News from ART U Lens for 11/05/2022 - https://t.co/wxu8UNibHd
    Nov 5, 2022, 2:01 PM
  • Art U Photography
    News from ART U Lens for 08/13/2022 - https://t.co/aIHDGtjBJw
    Aug 13, 2022, 2:01 PM
Photos, articles, and interviews are copyright of individual contributors.