It is has been almost 2 years since I moved to India. I left San Francisco in 2014 and traveled the world with my husband for almost 1.5 years. We each wanted to find out what we were good at. I finally found my passion — arts. However, I also learned that keeping up with your passion is a difficult thing. It’s not easy to be motivated every day. Moving to a whole new country and starting it all from ground zero is a whole new ballgame. It is quite difficult. So here’s my journey so far.
When I moved to India, I was extremely thrilled and promised myself that I will paint or draw every day. The initial months were awesome. I always found new subjects to paint from and ideas to explore. I was super excited to wake up every day and paint. I made a painting a day and took progress shots and posted it on social media. I got kudos from my friends and likes from people I did not know. I was happy and carefree.
However, as time passed, I started finding it very difficult to continue painting each day. I was getting accustomed to my new location and was unable to find a flourishing art ecosystem. There were no art meet-ups or conferences that focused on contemporary artists who wanted to paint from live models or places where artists could just go to see other artist paint. I also couldn’t find artist grade art supplies and materials, which were so easily available in San Francisco. Slowly I grew frustrated and my painting hours reduced. New ideas started dying and I couldn’t even pick up my brush to paint something simple. I started making excuses for the day and stopped painting altogether. However, I was still not comfortable. There was this lingering feeling of doing something about it because I was still in love with arts and I wanted to find my way back.
What got me started again was something simple. I decided I would restrict my posts on social media and would just spend my time learning from the artists I admired. I picked up one of my favorite artist “Richard Schmid’s” book on Alla prima and spent a few days just reading and understanding it. I knew many artists who admired his books but I never understood why until I read it a few times. It was brilliantly written and gave me the much-needed boost that I was missing. I started copying his work and now spent hours painting. I don’t post on social media as regularly as I did and I am pretty happy about it.
Here’s a sneak peak into what I learned:
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| Portrait in oil. Image courtesy: onairvideo.com |
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| My copy of Richard Schmid’s painting “The Professor” |



















