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March: Wisdom
 
Happy March!
 
Today is not just the first Friday of the month, meaning that it’s Creative Fuel day, but it’s also the opening of my Women’s Wisdom Project exhibit at Vashon Center for the Arts. This feels serendipitous, all of my creative paths converging at once.
 
I walked into the gallery last night for the exhibit preview, and saw the 100 framed papercuts on the wall for the first time.
 
There was an immensity to them. A power that hadn’t come across to me previously, when the papercuts were simply collected in a portfolio.
 
I teared up.
 
I devoted last month to sharing the wisdom of some of the women that I had profiled, but this month I wanted to share what they have all taught me. 
 
These are lessons from making papercut portraits of 100 women, which in the end, are all life lessons. And what are life lessons but creative lessons too?


 
100 is a lot. But it's also very little. 
Making 100 portraits is a large endeavor. But the number 100 is miniscule compared to how many inspiring, insightful women have come before us, are around us today, and who will lead us tomorrow. What do we lose when we disregard their stories? When we don’t give them a platform? 

To me, these have become essential questions as I have worked on this series. Our stories carry power, so do our questions.

I have started applying that same thinking to creative work in general. What do we lose out on because we think that a project is too big to tackle? What do we miss when we are too afraid to even begin?

To quote Elizabeth Warren, "Nevertheless, you must persist."
 
Life is made up of complexity and nuance
History, stories, and wisdom are complex and nuanced, in stark contrast to the simplicity of my medium’s black and white nature. We do not live in this simplified duality. Our lives are messy, gritty, chaotic.

Each of these papercuts has involved quotes, and I have also constantly been reminded of what we lose when we only focus on tiny snippets of what someone once said. After all, quotes are simplified, clean versions of otherwise complex stories. Not to mention how many quotes are misattributed, or entirely fabricated.
 
It is important to do our homework. To not take everything at face value. Certainly, there is power in a condensed statement of wisdom. But there is always so much more behind.

I hope this work sparks a conversation, that it is a springboard for learning more, not just about women in history, but about the stories of women around us. And that it also serves as a challenge to dive into complexity and nuance instead of avoiding it. That’s exactly what creative process is for.
 
You need a support team
We often view art as the work of an individual. We have a cultural vision of the lone, struggling, tortured artist, one who uses their medium to work through their pain and emotions. But art doesn’t only come out of pain, and it’s certainly not created in a vacuum.
 
Creativity can require solitude, but it also needs collaboration, and it certainly needs support, some emotional scaffolding if you will. If you are going to embark on a creative journey, you need people to love and support you, to cheer you on when you can’t cheer on yourself.
 
Thank you to those of you who have serve on my support team. You know who you are.
 
We have so much to learn and so much share
The word “wisdom” can feel loaded. Something that’s unattainable, something that requires a lifetime to achieve. And yet as I have asked women where they have gotten memorable pieces of wisdom, it is often from the people closest to them. A parent, a sibling, a friend, a teacher.
 
It is perhaps natural that we look to changemakers and leaders for guidance. After all, these are the people who have a fantastic and beautiful ability to distill the human experience into bits of understanding, be it through words, through pictures, through film, through speeches. But most often, the answers that we seek are nearby. They are held by people close to us. Available just by asking.
 
If so much wisdom is carried in those around us, imagine how much lies with ourselves? How much do we have to offer?
 
Life is a series of asking questions
There is so much that we don’t know, and so much that we’ll never know. Every time I have sat down to research another woman to profile for this project, it has led me to many other stories, many other threads. It is physically impossible for me to pursue all of them, just as it is physically impossible for us to have a grasp of everything around us.
 
We can’t read every book, we can’t watch every film, we can’t keep up on every current event, we can’t have a deep understanding of every moment in history. But what we can do is to constantly ask questions.
 
We can sustain the curiosity to continually drive us to ask questions. This is what creates progress. It’s what keeps us alive.
 
The Anonymous and the Untitled have power
I debated a lot over the 100th piece in the series. Who would it be? What wisdom did I want to showcase?

Several years ago, my mother and I were at an art museum, and I started paying attention to the number of “anonymous” labels. In an exhibit devoted to folk art, there were several quilts, some of them attributed to the artist, but many of them by “anonymous”—the stories of their creators (most likely women) lost to history. The same was true in a gallery with pieces of Native American art. Stunning pieces of art and craftsmanship, simply with “anonymous” on the label below.
 
#100 in Women’s Wisdom Project is therefore devoted to exactly that: the unheard, the unseen, the unrepresented, and the stories, wisdom, and power that they have carried, do carry, and will carry.
 
You may or may not identify as an artist. You may or may not be well-known. You may or may not feel confident in your creative work. But you DO have stories to tell, you DO have a perspective to share. 

You DO have the right to creativity.
You DO have the power to ask questions, to explore, to learn.
You DO have the right to fail.
You DO have the right to begin again.
You DO have the right to let go of expectation.
You DO have the right to create how you want to create.
 
And that my friends, is the true creative path.
 
-Anna
 
p.s. the Women’s Wisdom Project exhibit is up March 6-29, 2020 at Vashon Gallery for the Arts. If you are in the Seattle/Tacoma area I would be thrilled if you went and visited! If you can't go, you can see all of the illustrations here

p.p.s. a few people have asked if originals of Women’s Wisdom Project are available. Yes! You can give the gallery a call or reach out to me and I can put you in touch if you are interested in purchasing one.
Creative Fuel is a monthly newsletter intended to provide the tools to reawaken your creative self. Subscribe here.

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