I have been thinking this week about studio spaces. That precious piece of the world that exists just for an artist, our own little hovel of self doubt, self expression and self absorption. Our brain outside our brain. I have been contemplating on how our studio space, and our feelings about that space, affect our artistic practice.
I’m going to tell you something I hate telling people. And I am scared, because above all things this is what I have been judged on the most, and it usually hurts!
When I was at university we had a lecture on the outstanding inspiration that is Nora Fok. I remember clearly somebody saying ‘She works from home as a full time mother and artist”. I thought, “Bloody hell, I bet that is great.” but I knew I would probably end up married to another artist, and let’s face it, unless I married Damien Hurst there was no way in hell that one artist’s wage could support a family. No, I resigned myself to the fact that I was not going to be betrothed to an art world superstar and I would just have to do a job like everyone else. My teenage dreams were crushed ten minutes after I had them.
I met my artist partner, a blacksmith and by no means a businessman. We are a pair of idiots to say the least. And I got my job, selling soap and bathbombs and dressing as Rocky Balboa. And then IT happened. The thing that changed who I was as a person to most of the outside world, or so it seemed.
We inherited a house.
There, I said it. We own our own home.
I consider myself one of the luckiest people I know. I am so grateful that I don’t know what to do with my feelings, I never have. And I’ve never known how to explain them without thinking as though I sound like I am bragging. I was so excited when we moved in, and when I moved my supplies into the little studio that had once belonged to an author who lived here (I am getting to the point, here, don’t worry).
The thing is, that excitement very quickly turned into guilt. People I love, people who deserve a home of their own far more than I do, were struggling. And I was comfortable. All that went through my head was “We shouldn’t have this”, “We don’t deserve this house”, “This is wrong”. And I still feel that way.
So I had my dream (sort of, I still work part time for minimum wage and we are still so poor that we check down the back of the the sofa cushions for food money, who knew paying bills on a whole house was so expensive?), I had my studio and my garden to look out onto, I had security. But when I sat in that studio I just thought about how hard my friends were working, paying for their little space and going there right after work and working their butts off, and I felt worthless. Being in my studio made me feel guilty, and my work felt like it lacked all integrity and passion.
It struck me last week, when I finally stood up to someone who judged me as privaleged and dismissed me, that I was being the worst kind of ‘privaleged’ person I could be. I was being the kind of person who pretends they are not, whilst feeling sorry for themselves. I can’t do anything about this house, it happened, it is a part of our lives now, and how bloody wonderful is that?
I came from nowhere, and I will probably always feel like I don’t deserve anything, but I do. We all do. My life won’t always be roses and I might still lose everything, but at least I will have made the most of it.
Sometimes it feels hard to justify living as an artist, to yourself, and to others. And I don’t really have any answers, I wish I did. But I know what feels right in my heart, and making artwork, no matter how, it just that thing.