Are you embarrassed to show your art?


Print Alfredo - The Polar Bear
In the photo: Print Alfredo - The Polar Bear

It's a Sunday afternoon. A family lunch, the kind where you sense someone's talking about you from afar. Suddenly, someone makes a public announcement: "She draws really well!" or "You have to hear this girl's poems!" You freeze. Someone asks you to show them your work. Panic. You show it with the greatest unhappiness in the world and spend the next few days wanting to throw it all away and wondering what the hell you're doing with your time.

I speak from what I know—I've found myself in similar situations more than a few times. Every time it happens, I feel exposed, insecure , and caught off guard. Any skills I had seem to vanish, and my confidence in my work, which wasn't the best already, seems to diminish even further. Things shouldn't be this way. If art is a voluntary form of creative expression , it should bring good things or at least release all the bad things that bother us.

So how do we deal with all this insecurity about our art? This post will be written as a manifesto in the hope that not only you, but I too, have a place of escape and comfort to turn to whenever we feel embarrassed about sharing something we've created.

The artist who believes in himself

I am the artist, and I am the one who decides what to do with my own art. If I want to share it with the world, I can. If I want to use it introspectively, I can. It is no one else's job but me to choose how, when, or why I make or share my creations.

My art can have any meaning or no meaning at all. I can use it to share my feelings, portray something that moves me, escape reality, protest, or create experiences—these are valid goals. Receiving someone's approval is not a valid goal.

My art shouldn't be compared to other people's work. Every artist is at a different point on their personal journey. I'm doing things in my own time and within my abilities, and that's all I can do right now. My path will also lead me to evolution, regardless of my pace.

I don't apologize for my work when I show it to someone. I see flaws, as every creator does, but I don't immediately point them out to anyone. I give the other person a fair chance to activate their personal experiences and feel whatever they want to feel. I listen to what they have to say—and it is by being open to their opinion that I take another step on the path of evolution.

I keep in mind that others' reactions to my work cannot define or alter how I feel about it. My work is mine, and I created it with a purpose before showing it to the world. Regardless of the reactions, my work still begins and ends with me.

I won't give up, even when I feel unmotivated. I can and should take breaks to reflect and breathe, but I won't give up. I will continue learning and practicing regardless of my skill level, always keeping in mind that anything I create with my own hands possesses the purest form of magic.

Shall we talk more?

This conversation doesn't end there. In this video, I talked a little more about the importance of believing in your own work. Fe also made a video that was almost like a group therapy session to show that we're all in this together when it comes to artistic struggles. And the comments section is more than open to anything you'd like to share with us. If you have an Instagram account to share your art, how about leaving your username so we can appreciate each other's work too?

As long as we can, we keep creating.

With love,
Re


6 comments


  • esehaxnuw
    On Line[/url] Amoxicillin 500 Mg ilu.lbzf.femingos.com.br.tzu.az http://mewkid.net/when-is-xuxlya2/

  • oobivaojacavi
    Online[/url] Buy Amoxicillin uwy.yyai.femingos.com.br.nap.as http://mewkid.net/when-is-xuxlya2/

  • Adacuus

    Buy Ciprofloxacin Uk SuizViororip [url=https://bansocialism.com/]best generic cialis[/url] imilifleeway Free Trial Pack Of Uprima


  • Triz Aniceto

    Essa é a primeira vez que que eu entro no site.
    Quando li o título desse texto comecei a chorar sem nem me dar conta… Parece que foi escrito pra mim, senti como se alguém tivesse exposto o grande dilema da minha vida sem nem me conhecer. Eu tenho 19 anos e faço arte desde que eu existo. Sempre cantei, mas morro de vergonha de cantar em publico; danço desde antes de começar a andar, mas travo quando o momento de mostrar chega; aprendi a tocar instrumentos sozinha, mas nunca toquei pra ninguém; fotografo, mas só posto as fotos numa conta privada a qual só eu tenho acesso; desenho e pinto, mas guardo todas as minhas telas no armário e as folhas numa pasta escondida no fundo da gaveta…
    A gente aprende desde muito cedo essa ideia erada de que arte é pra ser bonita e agradar, e acaba passando uma vida toda com medo se denominar “artista” pela possibilidade de não cumprir esses requisitos… E nesse vai e vem o verdadeiro significado acaba se perdendo.
    Desconstruir essa ideia é muito difícil, mas eu to cansada de me reprimir e me limitar por conta de uma vergonha sem propósito algum.
    Muito obrigada Re, por me mostrar que não to sozinha e me ajudar a criar coragem pra romper essa barreira. E obrigada Fe e equipe por esse projeto lindo que é o Femingos.
    Vocês não tem noção de quanta inspiração estão espalhando por aí <3


  • Isabella Ferreira

    Eu comecei desenhando faz pouco tempo, tenho apenas 15 anos.
    Às vezes me pego mostrando meus desenhos para ver as reações das pessoas pra eu me sentir mais segura sobre meus desenhos e acaba que isso não acontece. As pessoas podem até elogiar mas sinto que aquilo não ta legal e basicamente esqueço o que eu sentia quando fiz o desenho.
    Ultimamente tenho desenhado pouco por falta de tempo, tenho bastante tarefas pra fazer e quando sobra tempo acabo me distraindo conversando com alguém, mas sinto que desenhar me faz falta e que é justamente onde eu expresso minha alma.


Leave a comment


Please note, comments must be approved before they are published



✔️ Produto adicionado com sucesso.