CALL FOR HELP
Help us Promote Human Artists and Push Back Against AI
Please support artists and help us get more exposure for the artists featured in this newsletter by clicking the “Like” icon ❤️, by clicking the “Restack” icon 🔁, or by leaving a comment. The more engagement we get, the more widely these images get shown. Help us support human artists and push back against the encroachment of AI!
Call for Art
We’re Looking for Art to Feature in these Newsletters

We do not use AI to generate images. We support human artists. And we’re always looking for great art by real artists to feature in our newsletters! If you are an artist (or know of one), please leave a comment with a link to your art. Each piece we feature goes to more than 100,000 inboxes and is properly attributed with backlinks to the artist’s website. We discovered some great art from artists who commented on our last article.
(See Clintavo’s Curated Corner after the article)
Mastery

"[Artistic] mastery is the best goal because the rich can't buy it, the impatient can't rush it, the privileged can't inherit it, and nobody can steal it. You can only earn it through hard work. Mastery is the ultimate status."
— Derek Sivers
Why Mastery? I talk a lot about "Mastery." and its importance, both in cultivating a joyful life, but also in developing a realistic and workable plan to make a living doing things that bring us a joyful life. What is Mastery? Why do I consider it to be such an important piece of this life's puzzle?
What I mean by mastery, in one sense, is classical mastery - learning one's craft under an accomplished master, practicing hard, and developing an impressive level of technical mastery. That is all well and good, it’s important, and it certainly might impress your friends, but it’s not an end unto itself.
Resonance
The real goal of mastery is wu-wei as the Chinese say - effortless action. The goal of mastery has never been to achieve impressive technical proficiency for the sake of impressiveness, though that is a laudable goal, and it certainly helps draw attention to your work. But the real goal is to achieve a level of technical proficiency that allows the artist to fully and effectively express, in his chosen medium, the inspired experience of The Mystery with resonance.
That means ultimately you decide, to some degree beyond the basics, what mastery means for you. To share that resonance, in your unique way, might involve breaking a lot of rules, it might involve redefining a category, it might involve creating a new medium. Mastery is an ongoing process of continually improving and refining your ability for the sake of being able to effortlessly channel The Mystery’s resonance and communicate the noncommunicable.
For most people, most of the time, however, one must master the rules of their chosen medium before being able to effectively transcend them. As you learn the rules, and practice, and expand your abilities, the process of Mastery contributes to the process of finding and expressing your true self. You want to be able to play with childhood abandon while you work and explore inspired ideas without having to stop and think about technique. Create like a child, but with mature and refined abilities.
It took me four years to paint like Raphael, but a lifetime to paint like a child.
— Pablo Picasso
A guitar player can’t be bogged down with remembering chords while channeling the muse. Likewise, you must achieve mastery to be able to take the muse’s inspiration, enter flow with effortless action, and bring to fruition a work of art with deep resonance.
The whole point of Mastery is to get so good that the technical side of creating becomes such a part of you, that your main conscious focus is upon expressing your own uniqueness along with the resonance. You can be the most technically proficient artist that ever lived, but if you don’t share meaning, the work will be flat.
In other words, through his art, an average painter shows me what he painted, but a master artist shows me why.
The viewer needs your inspiration. The listener needs your attitude. The reader needs to feel your soul.
“Anybody can play. The note is only 20 percent. The attitude of the motherf*ck!r who plays it is 80 percent.”
— Miles Davis
So, how do you achieve Mastery?
We’ll dive into that in an upcoming article!
PS — Editor’s Note: Please support artists and help us get more exposure for the artists featured in this newsletter by clicking the “Like” icon ❤️, by clicking the “Restack” icon 🔁, or by leaving a comment. The more engagement we get, the more widely these images get shown. Help us support human artists and push back against the encroachment of AI!
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Clintavo’s Curated Corner



We’re Looking for Great Art!
If you know of a great piece of real visual art (no AI art) that we should consider for future illustration of our articles or to feature in Clintavo’s Curated Corner, please click the button below and leave a sentence or two explaining what you like about a piece with a link to it on the web. It may be your own art or someone else’s (please do not send via email as we are much less likely to see or respond to those, thank you):
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Click the button below to start working with an art website host that actually cares about art.
No AI Zone: Everything written in this post (and all our posts) is written 100% by flesh and blood humans
We do not use AI images with our writing. We prefer to feature and provide more exposure for human artists. If you know of a great piece of art we should consider, please leave a comment with a link to it. All featured images are properly attributed with backlinks to the artist’s website. You can help support human artists and push back against AI by liking or restacking this piece by clicking the “Like” icon ❤️, by clicking the “Restack” icon 🔁 (or by leaving a comment).
That's a great quote by Sivers. Nobody can take your mastery away! Love the Steve Martin quote, too. My experience is that, as things become more and more second nature, I don't have to think. And that's when I can truly paint.
Here's a link to my art: https://www.robertjsimone.com/
Great ‘food for thought’! Thank you ;)