11 Aug 2020, 18:41

@Griffin said in Stuck in the taste/skill gap:

I get an idea of something I want to create and I set out to do it. Then I hit a snag, I come across some aspect of the piece that I realize I am just not yet skilled enough to properly create

This is me! All.The.Time. My solution is typically to step away for a moment and mope and get frustrated haha, then suck it up and power through as @Annabishop said. If it doesn't turn out at least I've learned something and get a new benchmark. I also like to tell myself that I can always redo it in the future when I've picked up more skills and that there's always going to be another piece. On the flip side, if I never finish anything, I don't ever find out how good it could get!

I'm still trying to figure out how much time to spend practicing and how much to spend on finishing pieces. Practicing provides a lot of volume, which is great but can get a bit boring. Or maybe boring's not the wrong word - it doesn't provide a sense of urgency. Finished work on the other hand is great for putting all the pieces together and for really working through the kinks. Personally I find it impossible to see if I actually learned something from a class or exercise unless I put it through the test by applying it to my own piece. Until then it's somehow too abstract. But when I have so many gaps in my knowledge it can also feel overwhelming at times.

When that happens I try to break the piece down into smaller chunks and get back to the sketch book, with the intent of solving the particular problem I'm working on, to the best of my ability. If something's particularly challenging or I get stuck for a very long time, I do the best I can with the knowledge I got and add it to the (long) list of things I need to study in the future.

One last thing to end this wall of text haha - when you do finish a piece look at the good parts too! It's easy to see all the mistakes and fall further down the gap, but it's equally important to celebrate what you did well, all the little improvements and even the fact that you finished something.