Forward Motion

Fantasia. These Preston Blair drawings present a masterful application of the concept of forward momentum. Each pose shows constantly brewing forces and is brimming with life.

“The secret of change is to focus all of your energy, not on fighting the old, but on building the new.” — Socrates, Philosopher

In animation, forward motion is everything. Both in pose and action the audience must get a sense of life in our characters because living things are always progressing, always advancing forward. Even the tree that look so still isn’t as its sap transports its nutrients inside while its outer branches twist, turn and grow towards the light. Everything living has an intention and thus keeps on changing and adapting to new conditions. It’s the very definition of survival. Even military experts say that if you’re in dangerous pursuit by hostiles, don’t remain a stationary target; move and keep on moving. As all fighters know, it’s hard to hit a moving target.

The motto of moving forward also prevents us from sliding psychologically into the past — the should’ve, could’ve, would’ve stuff that haunts the obsessively analytical mind. Too often in art, as in life, the temptation is to go back in time, to rewind and undo or redo it all. But time only moves forward and so we must also. Conservative clinging on to the past and longing for the good ol’ days for the sake of nostalgia is hardly pragmatic. Obsessing over past results, both success and failure, is futile and wasteful. The professional artist knows he must always move on from the last piece of work so he can set his sights on the next piece.

Jurassic Park was a bold new experiment, fraught with risk and uncertainty, but director Steven Spielberg (and ILM stalwart Dennis Muren) knew it had to be tried.

As a teacher I don’t allow my students to go back to constantly repair old shots; the new ones they make will be better. I tell them to stop obsessing about the reel. We improve by applying what we’ve learned from previous challenges to new challenges. Quantity of output works together with improved quality of output. We don’t need to worry about quickness because that comes afterwards, as a by product of an improved skillset and greater levels of experience. Rushing gets us no where faster and we don’t want to be caught spinning in circles.

From the Simpsons, perhaps the best satire on TV.

Here are some tips on maintaining a forward motion mindset:

a) Keep your mind on the target. Whether it’s performance (acting), better mechanics (weight), or garnering greater interest (appeal) with your work, keep your focus clear and simple. Once we got lost in details, the eye goes blind and the mind stalls.

b) Work orderly. Approach your list of duties like a checklist. Tackle once section, one layer, one scene at a time. Watch for continuity and back up periodically to see the big picture, but don’t scramble all over the place. Never noodle.

c) Don’t aim for perfection. If you try to be too perfect, you’ll never move on. And you’ll never finish.

d) Know when to stop. When it’s done, it’s done. If you’re done, it’s also done. Sometimes projects just need to end, even if they don’t succeed.

e) Accept the outcome: Too often we dwell on just finished work and end up making last minute additions or changes that don’t improve the work but are just rash emotional reactions. It’s hard to trust oneself when the mind, body and heart are tired and spent. It’s ok to say we’re done and to not know for sure.

“Doubt is not a pleasant condition but certainty is absurd.” — Voltaire, Philosopher

Going Pro

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ep2rZTgnJho&ab_channel=OnyxGold
Master animator James Baxter’s little gig for Cartoon Network shows how fun going Pro can be!

“The amateur tweets, the pro works.” — Steven Pressfield

If you’ve not read Steven Pressfield’s two excellent books on creating, The War of Art and Turning Pro, I highly suggest you do so. Pressfield captures perfectly what it means to go pro. Whenever I feel like I need a little ‘pick up’ I know he’ll deliver the goods to get me going again. Why? Because he and I think the same way; we know we’re always susceptible to giving way to resistance. And when that happens, we stop making art.

For me, going pro is not just about building a career or succeeding in reaching our dreams. It’s about so much more than that — what’s at stake is not merely a job. All too often the word professional means being associated with distinctive groups or high incomes but that’s a very limited interpretation. Going Pro effects our entire lives and how we live; our happiness, health and social interactions all depend on it. When we turn pro we’re no longer the same person we were before our ascension from amateurism and mediocrity.

So today — as it relates to being visual artists — I want to share four simple fundamentals that guide me daily. These four principles are pasted on the wall directly in front of me where I work. This is also how I coach my own students/clients to becoming pros. (I’ll try to refrain from regurgitating what Steven Pressfield has already stated so succinctly in his books).

VISION:

Going Pro means being aligned with something greater than us and our egos. We know the ability to capture a vision is both a privilege and a duty that we must fulfill otherwise we’ll never be happy; life always turns out wrong when we’re not straight with ourselves, when we don’t honour our truth. And the vision — key derivation being it’s a visual — is what we work off from. The only path that’s joyful and meaningful comes from working towards its physical realization. So we never dive into a project unless we know why it matters AND what it might look like. Until then, we don’t risk going all in. A clear vision sets the way for a clear path and more fruitful journey; no energy is spent until a direction is well-defined. Pros know that it’s also a waste of time being preoccupied with whining, complaining or blaming. They’ve got sh*t to do.

PREPARATION:

Going Pro means being prepared. We don’t skip the research. We do thumbnail sketches and layout tests. We explore all avenues. We also have our tools working and ready. We practice hard and regularly to the point of knowing our craft so well, we don’t freeze during the performance. Hence, our preparation is both physical and psychological. And we know we’re ready when we have a solid road map and we’re dying to jump into the water. Pros don’t embarrass themselves; they never go into the pool without their swim trunks.

ORDER:

Going Pro means being organized. Besides the lack of preparation, disorder is probably the single most dominant trait of the amateur. I’ve witnessed this for decades. Amateurs work chaotically, jumping from one thing to another, and change their minds constantly. They love to noodle. Pros, on the other hand, don’t screw around. They have a well-designed and orderly workflow. They stay the course. They also live and approach things the same way — simply and effectively — yet they always respect the uniqueness of the situation. They show up everyday but don’t depend on formulas. And because Pros are ready, they can adapt on the fly and come out looking like geniuses. Working procedurally and with discipline and deep attentiveness throughout the process prevents them from being sidelined by distractions or their own ego.

FINISH:

Finally, Pros finish what they start. This doesn’t mean perfection or necessarily achieving outside recognition but Pros finish things and do so with care. All things end and so, too, must creative endeavors. Amateurs leave many things and most things unfinished. We all know this and we’ve all been there, after all, we’re all amateurs at most things. And there’s nothing wrong with being an amateur, whose root word comes from the same word meaning love. Now, sometimes when we find ourselves not finishing what we’ve started because this ‘thing’ might not be our calling and what is true for us might be still waiting for us to take recognize and take hold of. Other times, it could just mean that we’ve failed on this one particular occasion and that’s okay, too. We end it and move on to the next challenge. Some projects serve only to become lessons — and this is impossible to know beforehand — so don’t let it become a sunk cost that takes up any more of our time and energy.

Blue II by Joan Miró. All art arrives at a finish line, then we stop and it’s done.

SUMMARY

It’s clear that it’s neither natural nor easy to become a pro. It takes commitment and a complete changing of our mindset. We can learn it and earn it by simply taking it one step at a time.

“In proportion as he simplifies his life, the laws of the universe will appear less complex, and solitude will not be solitude, nor poverty poverty, nor weakness weakness. If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost; that is where they should be. Now put the foundations under them.” — Henry David Thoreau, Philosopher