Artists
Related: About this forumHow do you break out of a rut?
I seem to be doing a lot of the same types of paintings lately. Mainly watercolors of landscapes and mountainscapes I've gotten from images from books and the internet. Not that they're bad, but I like new challenges and exploring new themes.
Thoughts? Suggestions?
Blues Heron
(8,050 posts)drray23
(8,508 posts)or paint a model from life. Try other subjects that may be challenging like portraits.
Plein air painting in particular (my favorite) is exciting. You get to discover a place, look at it for a few hours, and try to capture it. It's even more fun if you do it with fellow painters who become friends. No doubt, there is a plein air painting group near where you live.
fierywoman
(8,478 posts)on composition although I don't find him terribly useful for watercolor), Paul Wang, Louise Fletcher (very abstract but many thoughts about getting out of a rut), Gabriella Buckingham (still lifes and abstracted landscapes), Nicholas Wilton (especially for getting out of ruts plus abstraction) , many others (once you get the algorithm going more will pop up.)
Goonch
(4,115 posts)
ret5hd
(21,992 posts)i use ropes and pitons
ymmv
fierywoman
(8,478 posts)has his class assignments for 12 years on blogspot (https://hoffmannwatercolors.blogspot.com/) --- I took some of those classes over a few years -- he ALWAYS gives challenging stuff, and his energy was so kind ...)
underpants
(193,902 posts)I know canvasses cost money but it would alter your brain patterns a bit.
Im not in anyway an artist so
justaprogressive
(5,902 posts)You paint in oil go watercolor pen and ink or charcoal!
You do still-lifes do a landscape etc. Heck paint a sports contest
Ruts are a normal part of an artist's progression !
Some great suggestions here.
Ocelot II
(128,293 posts)I got to being uninspired and hating my oil paintings, started fooling around with gouache. It's enough of a challenge that I look forward to painting instead of discouraged or bored.