This is a painting I did last year for my first full art exhibit. It's not my usual style because I have a tremendous capacity for melancholy, heartbreak, and "woe-is-me" in my art. Many of the stories and artwork I've created for Once Upon A City are tinged with sadness and this bluesy overtone spills over into the other creative things I do. The songs I write. The "bigger" stories I'm working on. The things I paint. This is your new blog post. Click here and start typing, or drag in elements from the top bar.
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It's not easy to actually start something that has been in the incubation period for a long time. It takes a certain amount of bravery to allow yourself to move from Wanting to Having. I think we can be so accustomed to wanting that we forget what it feels like to actually have. And, I suppose, there is a certain amount of fear that comes from actually taking the chance. What if I fail? What if "they" don't like it? What if I end up stuck in a big pile of regret? What if it's too much work? What if I suddenly realize that thing I wanted can't bring me all the bliss I thought it would while I was daydreaming about it? What if I'm laughed at, do something wrong, look stupid? What if my friends never mention the spinach in my teeth or the toilet paper on my shoe?
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MusePaper is the place where we will discuss our journey in bringing this project to life.
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