Art is not as easy as data.
Data is cold, lifeless, and not emotional. When criticism is aimed at data very quickly the truth is identified, evaluated, and then we move forward.
But art is connected to its creator…the artist. When we create art a small little piece of ourselves is connected to our art. When art is criticized it is easy to take it personally. When our art is questioned often we feel like our very worth is being called to task. It happens to the best of us. We all have moments when our emotions blur reality and we find ourselves so connected to what we make we can’t find the necessary separation for us to move forward. Criticism often cripples artists.
So how can we maximize criticism and keep it from destroying our passion? Here are 5 steps to help us handle when our art is criticized:
- Evaluate – Step back. Take a breath. What is being said? Could there be truth to the criticism? What if what is being said can actually make our art better? Finding the clarity to push back for a moment helps us filter what is being said and measure its validity.
- Adjust – Once we have evaluated the criticism we have to decide how we will adjust. Will we make adjustments, make a case for why we should not adjust, or improve to make things better.
- Transfer – Criticism can be some of the greatest fuel for better art. When we transfer criticism to motivation the challenge to better ourselves, our art, and these projects can propel us. When we avoid allowing criticism to bring us down, but rather use it to make us better, we can accomplish things that may never have happened had we not encountered the criticism in the first place.
- Remember – Even though it is hard to believe this, we have to remember that rarely is criticism personal. Most of the time criticism is passed in order to avoid mistakes not destroy the artist. Obviously this is not always true, but in most of our environments the truth that we find hard to believe is that criticism has little to do with us personally and more to do with getting things right.
- Learn – Take advantage of every piece of criticism. Learn from what is constructive and adapt to the alternative perspectives. When we learn from criticism we make ourselves better and avoid the chances of encountering the same criticism in the future.
As artists we create our best stuff when we are most emotionally connected. Criticism is never fun. It often hurts and rarely is fun but it is part of reality and it is going to happen from time to time. When it does, what are we going to do with it?
I was a tattoo artist for 13 yrs so this happened more than not sometimes, there was many times someone would ask you to draw something and you would ask 1,000 questions before hand so you could understand exactly what they where looking for. I know that this happens in our field of art too, but it does hurt when you pour your heart out in to art and they come back and say, “what about this?”, “can you make this….?” But like you said when you take the time to suck it up and really look at what they are saying and make the changes it will sometimes be some of the best work you have done.
I think what happens is not that they had the most life changing idea for a change, what it usually does is help get you out of your comfort zone and get creative which helps us because we all know that artist can be lazy procrastinators.
So once again thanks for the great post.
Love the 5 steps. Something I needed this week.
Love the quote man! Hit home tonight.
Thanks,