The Complete Artist's Way: Creativity as a Spiritual Practice

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Authors: Julia Cameron

Tags: #Creative Ability, #Creative Ability - Religious Aspects, #Etc.), #Psychology, #Creation (Literary, #Religious aspects, #Creativity, #Etc.) - Religious Aspects, #Spirituality, #Religion, #Self-Help, #Spiritual Life, #Artistic

BOOK: The Complete Artist's Way: Creativity as a Spiritual Practice
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Table of Contents

 

Title Page

Copyright Page

Dedication

Introduction

 

WEEK 1 - Recovering a Sense of Safety

WEEK 2 - Recovering a Sense of Identity

WEEK 3 - Recovering a Sense of Power

WEEK 4 - Recovering a Sense of Integrity

WEEK 5 - Recovering a Sense of Possibility

WEEK 6 - Recovering a Sense of Abundance

WEEK 7 - Recovering a Sense of Connection

WEEK 8 - Recovering a Sense of Strength

WEEK 9 - Recovering a Sense of Compassion

WEEK 10 - Recovering a Sense of Self-Protection

WEEK 11 - Recovering a Sense of Autonomy

WEEK 12 - Recovering a Sense of Faith

 

EPILOGUE

The Artist’s Way Questions and Answers

Creative Clusters Guide

APPENDIX: TRAIL MIX

READING LIST

INDEX

About the Author

ALSO BY JULIA CAMERON

 

NONFICTION

 

The Artist’s Way
The Artist’s Way Morning Pages Journal
The Artist’s Date Book
(illustrated by Elizabeth Cameron)
The Vein of Gold
The Right to Write
God Is No Laughing Matter

 

Supplies: A Troubleshooting Guide for Creative Difficulties
(illustrated by Elizabeth Cameron)

 

God Is Dog Spelled Backwards
(illustrated by Elizabeth Cameron)

 

Heart Steps
Blessings
Transitions

 

Inspirations: Meditations from
The Artist’s Way
The Writer’s Life: Insights from
The Rightto Write
The Artist’s Way at Work
(withMark Bryan and Catherine Allen)
Money Drunk, Money Sober
(with Mark Bryan)

 

 

FICTION

 

Popcorn: Hollywood Stories

 

The Dark Room

 

PLAYS

Public Lives
The Animal in the Trees
Four Roses
Love in the DMZ
Avalon
(a musical)
Bloodlines
The Medium at Large
(a musical)
Tinseltown (a
musical)
Normal, Nebraska
(a musical)

 

 

POETRY

 

Prayers for the Little Ones
Prayers for the Nature Spirits
The Quiet Animal
This Earth
(also an album with Tim Wheater)

 

 

FEATURE FILM

(as writer-director)

 

God’s Will

 

Most Tarcher/Putnam books are available at special quantity
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Jeremy P. Tarcher/Putnam
a member of
Penguin Putnam Inc.
375 Hudson Street
New York, NY 10014
www.penguinputnam.com

 

Copyright © 1992, 2002 by Julia Cameron The Artist’s Way is a registered trademark of Julia Cameron.

 

All rights reserved. This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission. Published simultaneously in Canada

 

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

 

Cameron, Julia.

The artist’s way : a spiritual path to higher creativity / Julia Cameron. p. cm.

eISBN : 978-1-101-17488-3

I. Creative ability—Problems, exercises, etc. 2. Self-actualization (Psychology)—Problems, exercises, etc. 3. Creation (Literary, artistic, etc.) I. Title.

BF408.C175 1992

153.3’5—dc20 92—5906

CIP

 

This book is printed on acid-free paper.

 

http://us.penguingroup.com

MY ARTIST’ S WAY GRATITUDE LIST

 

AT THIS POINT, WELL over a million people have contributed to
The Artist’s Way.
It is truly a movement. There are, however, people without whom its safety and growth could not have occurred. I wish to thank some of them here.

Jeremy Tarcher, for publishing my work, editing and caring for it so carefully with his characteristic brilliance and vision.

Joel Fotinos, for nurturing and guarding my body of work—husbanding not only my work but my deepest heart and truest dreams with clarity and strength.

Mark Bryan, my gratitude for fighting to protect and defend my body of work, for his innovative and visionary thinking and capacity to understand and forgive our frequently—and necessarily—divergent paths.

My daughter, Domenica Cameron-Scorsese, for sharing her mother and bearing the dual pressures of second-generation fame and first-rate talent. My gratitude for being always the kind of artist and person for whom I want to write good and useful books. With admiration for her shrewdness, tenderness, and sheer creative “guts.”

Emma Lively, with gratitude for her visionary strength and her bold and daring conviction in her work both with my music and my books. A true friend, not only to my creativity but also to my dreams and desires. We met through
The Artist’s Way
and my musical
Avalon,
and have enjoyed combining our Artist’s Ways as musical collaborators over the last four years.

Susan Schulman, with gratitude for her long years of devotion and commitment to
The Artist’s Way,
with admiration for her vision and with humility for her courage throughout our parallel and difficult trials.

With gratitude to Pat Black and company, for holding a steady course as
The Artist’s Way,
and I myself, grew in fits and starts.

With gratitude to David Groff, for his fine writing and thinking.

To Johanna Tani, for her graceful and acute editing.

And to Sara Carder, for her deft and careful assistance above and beyond the call of duty—all three of these creative souls.

James Nave, for his loyalty and generosity as a long-term teaching partner.

And to Tim Wheater, a special thank-you for his musical brilliance and creative and teaching partnering through multiple years and projects.

Gratitude also to Mauna Eichner and Claire Vaccaro, for their inspired and fastidious design work, remembering always that form follows function—to make my books embody that artist’s formula—“Beauty is truth, and truth is beauty.”

Gratitude always, too, to my sister and frequent collaborator, fine artist and cartoonist Libby Cameron, whose wit and whimsy allowed me to create additional tools to support
The Artist’s Way.
She well knows the truth that laughter is the best medicine, and helped me in administering creative first aid with a spoonful of sugar to make the medicine go down. My deepest thanks for her inspired work on
The Artist’s Date Book, Supplies, God Is Dog Spelled Backwards,
and the upcoming
How Not to Make Art
—or anything else that really matters.

My gratitude to Sonia Choquette and Larry Lonergan, for their love and clarity of vision as I labored to bring into fruition large dreams from small seeds.

To Edmund Towle and Robert McDonald, for their creativity and chivalry as they both protected and inspired me to do all forms of my creative work.

Finally, I wish to thank those who have gone before me and shown me the path, most especially Julianna McCarthy, Max Showalter, John Newland, and all who hold a spiritual lantern to light our Artist’s Way with their artistry and generosity.

THIS SOURCEBOOK IS DEDICATED to Mark Bryan. Mark urged me to write it, helped shape it, and co-taught it. Without him it would not exist.

INTRODUCTION TO THE TENTH ANNIVERSARY EDITION OF THE ARTIST’S WAY

 

ART IS A SPIRITUAL transaction.

Artists are visionaries. We routinely practice a form of faith, seeing clearly and moving toward a creative goal that shimmers in the distance—often visible to us, but invisible to those around us. Difficult as it is to remember, it is our work that creates the market, not the market that creates our work. Art is an act of faith, and we practice practicing it. Sometimes we are called on pilgrimages on its behalf and, like many pilgrims, we doubt the call even as we answer it. But answer we do.

I am writing on a black lacquer Chinese desk that looks west across the Hudson River to America. I am on the far western shore of Manhattan, which is a country unto itself, and the one I am living in right now, working to cantilever musicals from page to stage. Manhattan is where the singers are. Not to mention Broadway. I am here because “art” brought me here. Obedient, I came.

Per capita, Manhattan may have a higher density of artists than anywhere else in America. In my Upper West Side neighborhood, cellos are as frequent and as ungainly as cows in Iowa. They are part of the landscape here. Writing at a typewriter, looking out across the lights, I too am something Manhattan knows very well. I write melody on a piano ten blocks from where Richard Rodgers, a gangly adolescent, climbed a short stoop to meet a short boy who became his longtime partner, Larry Hart. Together they dreamed through drought and flood.

My apartment is on Riverside Drive. At this narrow end of the island, Broadway is a scant block behind my back as I face west across the river, inky black now as the sun sets in colored ribbons above it. It is a wide river, not only dark, and on a windy day—and there are many—the water is choppy and white-capped. Cherry-red tugboats, as determined as beetles, push their prows into the waves, digging their way up and down the river, pushing long barges with their snouts. Manhattan is a seaport—and a landing for dreams.

Manhattan teems with dreamers. All artists dream, and we arrive here carrying those dreams. Not all of us are dressed in black, still smoking cigarettes and drinking hard liquor, still living out the tawdry romance of hard knocks in tiny walk-up flats filled with hope and roaches in neighborhoods so bad that the rats have moved on. No, just like the roaches, the artists are everywhere here, tenements to penthouses—my own building has not only me with my piano and typewriter but also an opera singer who trills in the inner canyons like a lark ascending. The neighborhood waiters are often—not always—actors, and the particularly pretty duck-footed neighborhood girls do dance, although you wouldn’t imagine their grace from their web-footed walks.

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