I spent this morning in the bright corner of the gallery where natural light washes everything pale gold. The walls were hung with a small series of watercolors—cityscapes, I think, though the edges bled so freely it was hard to say where the buildings ended and the sky began. I stood closest to one that showed what might have been a balcony rail dissolving into a wash of blue-gray, and I noticed how the artist had let a drip run down the paper, then stopped it with a dab of tissue. That tiny interruption—the place where intention met accident—held more life than any careful line could.
I've been thinking about restraint lately, about how much to plan and how much to trust the medium. I tried sketching yesterday and overworked every shadow, smoothing out the rough pencil marks until the page looked sterile. Today I let myself stop earlier. I drew the coffee cup on my desk, its chipped rim and the way the handle casts a small crescent shadow, and I left the background blank. It felt incomplete at first, but when I stepped back I realized the emptiness gave the object room to breathe. Sometimes the hardest part is knowing when to lift your hand.
A woman beside me murmured to her companion, "I could never do that. I don't have the patience." I wanted to tell her patience isn't the barrier—it's permission. Permission to make a mess, to let the paint pool where it wants, to accept that the first dozen attempts might look like nothing at all. But I only smiled and moved to the next piece, a charcoal drawing of a child's hands folded in her lap. The knuckles were barely suggested, just a few quick strokes, yet I could feel the weight of the fingers resting together.