Inspiration: How Does That Actually Happen?
Inspiration is often spoken about as if it arrives fully formed. A sudden idea. A clear direction. A moment of certainty.
That version makes for a good story. It just doesn’t match reality.
For her, inspiration rarely announces itself. It doesn’t knock. It doesn’t explain. More often, it appears as a slight shift in attention—something noticed before it is understood.
A color that lingers longer than expected. A texture that suggests something unresolved. A feeling that refuses to move on.
That is where it begins.
Not with clarity, but with curiosity.
Attention Comes First
Inspiration is less about finding something new and more about noticing what is already present. It requires a kind of attentiveness that resists distraction—something increasingly difficult in an environment shaped by constant input and algorithmic suggestion, as explored in The Internet Is Loud (and It Has No Plans to Lower the Volume).
To notice anything subtle, something else has to quiet down.
That is why inspiration often appears in slower moments. In the studio. In between actions. In spaces where nothing is being demanded.
In that sense, inspiration is less a spark and more a condition.
Process Reveals What Wasn’t Visible Before
Once she begins working, inspiration doesn’t lead—it follows.
A mark is made. Then another. Something unexpected happens. A tension appears. A possibility opens. What felt unclear begins to take shape through interaction.
This is not about executing an idea. It is about discovering one.
That unfolding dialogue between artist and surface is something she explores more directly in When an Abstract Painting Starts Talking Back.
Inspiration, in this context, is not the beginning of the work. It is something that develops within it.
It grows through attention, adjustment, and response.
There Is No Shortcut to It
The idea that inspiration can be summoned on demand—or optimized through productivity—misunderstands its nature. It doesn’t respond well to pressure. It doesn’t perform on schedule.
As noted in discussions of the creative process, meaningful work often emerges through periods that feel uncertain or unproductive before they become necessary.
Those stretches are not interruptions. They are part of the work.
Inspiration often hides there—in the parts that don’t immediately resolve.
What You Call Inspiration May Be Recognition
There are moments when something suddenly “clicks.” A painting shifts. A direction becomes clear. It feels like arrival.
But often, that moment is less about something new appearing and more about something finally being recognized.
Something was already there. It just wasn’t visible yet.
That idea—that meaning emerges through perception rather than instruction—connects closely to how abstract work is experienced, as described in modern abstract art.
Inspiration, then, is not a gift delivered from outside. It is a moment of alignment between attention and awareness.
It is noticing something at the exact moment you are ready to see it.
It Has to Be Protected
Inspiration is fragile—not because it is rare, but because it is easily interrupted.
Noise competes with it. Speed overrides it. Constant input drowns it out.
Protecting inspiration means protecting attention.
It means stepping back. Slowing down. Allowing space for something to emerge without forcing it to become something too quickly.
That space—where something is allowed to develop without immediate definition—is part of what gives the work its value, a theme explored in The Value of Her Work.
In the End, It Isn’t Mysterious
Inspiration is often framed as something unpredictable or elusive. But in practice, it is grounded in something very simple.
Paying attention.
Staying with what appears.
Allowing uncertainty to remain long enough for it to become something else.
It doesn’t arrive fully formed.
It reveals itself gradually—through the act of working, noticing, and remaining open.
And when it does, it feels less like something discovered…
and more like something that was waiting all along.
