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The Life of an Artist: Fantasies, Realities, and a Thousand Views of God
Duration: 1 hour 19 minutes
It's not easy being an artist—especially if you are trying to make a living. It can seem at times as if the entire world is stacked against you, forcing you to compromise your vision or surrender it altogether in order to put food on the table. And while the internet has proven to be wonderful for consumers of art, it can be a bit of a double-edged sword for artists themselves. On the one hand, they can find new audiences from around the world that they may never have found otherwise. On the other hand, it seems that today it takes something truly extraordinary to cut through all the digital noise—and even when you do break through, you run an even greater risk of your work being copied, pasted, and distributed across the web. All the blood, sweat, and tears that go into a work of art can instantly evaporate into a fine mist of 0's and 1's.
In today's entertainment-dominated culture, more artists have an opportunity to eek out a living than ever before. A role that was once fit only for misunderstood iconoclasts is now open to just about anybody. As a result we have witnessed an unprecedented explosion of creativity online, as it becomes easier and easier for people to explore and express their own artistic proclivities. At the same time we have witnessed an equally-unprecedented explosion of mediocrity, as any college student with Photoshop installed on their laptop can fancy themselves an "artist", making it that much more difficult for genuine talent to shine through the dreck.
A lot has changed over the years for artists. But one thing has remained true since time immemorial: in order to be a truly great artist, you must live your entire life as your ultimate work, your friends and family as your grand masterpiece, your every breath as your finest creative denouement. Now more than ever, an artist must strike just the right balance between inspiration and occupation, between creativity and commodity, between the idealism of form and the pragmatism of function. It is a dance which, when we see it danced well, lifts us all out of the mundanity of daily life, offering us new eyes and new perspectives through which we can see the world in an entirely new way.
Bryce Widom is an artist facing exactly these sorts of challenges. Already an accomplished painter, designer, and illustrator in his own right (as well as a beloved part of the Boulder/Denver integral community), Bryce is now beginning a new phase of his artistic career, which is already culminating in his beautiful new art gallery 1000 Views of God (featured here at Integral Life.) In this dialogue he and Stuart Davis discuss his own story of cultivating his identity as an artist—an often painful, often exhilarating process of surrendering again and again to his deepest purpose and vision.
Bryce Widom
Bryce Widom was born in Denver, Colorado and raised in both Colorado and Alaska. With a professional artist for a mother and a father who always returned from work with armfuls of recycled paper, Bryce had no lack of inspiration or material to draw on. He won awards and recognition for his artwork throughout his childhood, but when planning his collegiate future, he focused on architecture and then physics before majoring in both psychology and creative writing. Years later while cooking and waiting tables in a brewpub, Bryce stepped into the role of chalk artist for the pub's chalkboard menus. Soon local bands were commissioning Bryce to create illustrated posters, shirt designs, and album covers and he was able to devote his full attention to illustration, design, and fine art. Bryce's current project 1000 Views of God spans one thousand paintings, with a projected completion date of 2013. His website can be found at www.brycewidom.com
Stuart Davis
With eleven full-length albums to his credit, Stuart Davis has carved out a unique wavelength in the musical spectrum. Taking the topics of God, sex and death, and crafting them into inimitable pop songs with lyrical flair and unforgettable hooks, Stuart continues to be one of the great undiscovered singer/songwriters around.
In this interview, Bryce and Stuart discuss these four paintings in particular, all of which are available for sale on www.BryceWidom.com:

Don't miss our debut Integral Life Art Gallery, 1000 Views of God by Bryce Widom.
"I’ve long admired such collections as “Thirty Six Views of Mt. Fuji” (by both Hiroshige and Hokusai, in the 1800’s), and the more extensive “One Hundred Views of Mt. Fuji” (Hokusai). In the past, when I’ve committed myself to an art project defined by similarly strict parameters, I’ve always been floored by the swell of creativity that rushes forth to fill the container.
By painting 1000 Views of God, I’m consciously marrying my work as an artist with my spiritual path. Each painting becomes a meditation, a prayer, a moment of turning all my attention toward the divine with an open body, mind, and heart.
In this exploration, no subject is off-limits, for there is no limit to the domain of the divine. This includes both the “shadow” terrain of my inner landscape, as well as the brightest aspects of Spirit." -Bryce Widom
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