10 Fascinating Facts About Art from Neuroscience

I am enough of an artist to draw freely upon my imagination.” ~ Albert Einstein

Great article: exploring art in relationship to the brain.

Did you know that creating or viewing art can rewire your brain? Whether you’re an artist, an art lover, or just curious about the mind, the relationship between art and the brain is fascinating. From boosting memory to enhancing problem-solving skills, art engages our brains in unique and powerful ways.

Art can make you a better problem-solver.

Working with clay will calm you down, more so than drawing with a pencil. Note: I can attest to this having worked in plastic arts for years. Nothing like ‘playing in the mud’.

Empathy shapes how we experience art.

Different kinds of art light up different brain areas.

Creating art can boost memory as we age.

Instruction in art-making may make your brain more relaxed.

Art-making activates reward pathways in the brain.

See story here.

All artwork and creative writing is Copyright ©️ of Patricia White. No use of this content or concept may be used without the express permission of the artist/author.

Rolodex Watercolour washes

“Art washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life.” ~ Pablo Picasso

When I closed down my design business years ago, I had a box of blank Rolodex cards in a storage cabinet. As most artists are packrats, I thought , “hmm, maybe I can do something with these”. So they sat for years and then I started trying out watercolour wash combinations on them. Kept in a notebook, these make great colour studies for future works.

I ran across them today and saw that they could be ‘matched up’ to create a kind of segmented landscape work. Here, a skyscape and a foreground.

Where do you find inspiration for art or written works?

All artwork and creative writing is Copyright ©️ of Patricia White. No use of this content or concept may be used without the express permission of the artist/author.

A Little Apple ‘Juice’ Notes Sketch

“If you wish to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe.” ~ Carl Sagan

A quick daily sketch of an apple with a bit of anticipated juice flowing from the fruit.

Drawn on iPad Pro in the Apple Notes app using the Fountain Pen and Watercolor tools native to the note-taking app.

All artwork and creative writing is Copyright ©️ of Patricia White. No use of this content or concept may be used without the express permission of the artist/author.

The Value of Miniature Sketching

“A day is a miniature eternity.” ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson

I try to adhere to a daily practice of creating something—be it a paragraph or two to further a story or verse; a thumbnail sketch, or a quick concept to be used later for a larger work of art. I like the challenge of doing tiny works, making sure they have the same impact and balance as larger pieces.

I found this 2” square seascape in an old sketchbook today. 

I generally list materials used for future reference: In this case, I used Faber-Castell, Grumbacher and Gallery Soft Pastels, plus a few CarbOthello pastel pencils. Created May 24, 2023, 1130am. 


What practices do YOU use to preserve ideas to use for later works?

All artwork and creative writing is Copyright ©️ of Patricia White. No use of this content or concept may be used without the express permission of the artist/author.

L’ORANGE: One of My First Notes App DRAWINGS. created in 2023

“Orange is red brought nearer to humanity by yellow.” ~ Wassily Kandinsky

One of my first experimental Notes App Sketches drawn on November 18, 2023. Then exported to Procreate to optimize and add text and outline. Anyone else out there using these note-taking tools for illustrating or other graphic uses? Tell us about it.

L’Orange Notes App Sketch 11-18-2023

Drawing whether using an HB lead pencil, a set of professional watercolours or digitally using an Apple Pencil and iPad, are all valid tools to express creativity. This simple drawing was one of my first sketches using the iPad’s Notes app drawing tools. The basic sketch was then Imported into Procreate, enlarged, digitally optimized and adding text and outline. 


What is your favourite medium? The ‘go-to’ tools you pick up when a spur-of-the-moment idea strikes your creative funny-bone? Pop them into the comments section.


All artwork and creative writing is Copyright ©️ of Patricia White. No use of this content or concept may be used without the express permission of the artist/author.

Drawing is Putting a Line Around An Idea: Henry Matisse

In spite of everything I shall rise again: I will take up my pencil, which I have forsaken in my great discouragement, and I will go on with my drawing.” ~Vincent van Gogh (1853–1890), Post-Impressionist painter.

Work-in-Progress using coloured pencils

I love both of the quotes above. Matisse’s observation that drawing ‘puts a line around an idea’ is spot on. Sometimes getting an idea from the head to the hand is harder than one might think. Other days it flows easy as silk.

The Van Gogh quote speaks to me at a gut level. The advancing osteo arthritis in my shoulders and hands has been an ongoing block over the past few years leading to great stretches of time where I do little drawing and instead concentrate on writing (often using a voice-to-text app). Still I push on because making art is simply part of my DNA.

Drawing is still my all-time favourite way of expressing myself artistically. Whether as a simple HB lead pencil scribble or a more ‘finished’ example, such as the canine eye study shown here. Drawing is the skeleton that underlies all other techniques. It is the base construction. Here, I was demonstrating how sharpening coloured pencils to an extra long point offers a variety of line and shading techniques to the artist—from fine lines to broad shading.

What is your favourite medium? The ‘go-to’ tools you pick up when a spur-of-the-moment idea strikes your creative funny-bone? Pop them into the comments section.

All artwork and creative writing is Copyright ©️ of Patricia White. No use of this content or concept may be used without the express permission of the artist/author.

Quick sketch of painted Posies in a glass vase

“ I paint flowers so they will not die.” ― Frida Kahlo

This quick sketch, painted in 2022, shows how much movement can be produced in a quick rudimentary study. In this case, I created this concept in Procreate, using oil paint brushes. This process makes it easy to quickly get a concept down which can then inform a later, more detailed, work using analogue materials. It’s quick. It’s better for the environment (fewer caustic materials going into landfill). It’s a great way to test positioning various elements on the page, experimenting with how the elements relate to each other as well as testing various ways to place the elements on the canvas (I’d move the main elements a bit to the right, tho not centred, in the next iteration).



All artwork and creative writing is Copyright ©️ of Patricia White. No use of this content or concept may be used without the express permission of the artist/author.

Painting Sunny and Cloudy Skies

The sky, a perfect empty canvas, offers clouds nonetheless. The shift and drift and beg interpretation. Such in the nature of art.” ~ Jeb Dickerson

Explore light, color and movement in cloud studies inspired by those of John Constable.

Artists Network has a good tutorial on painting skies from Maria Baggetta. Take a look and consider a membership. I’ve been a member for a couple years and, even as a seasoned artist, I constantly find interesting information and techniques to explore. Click the image below to read the article.

by Marla Baggetta

All artwork and writing is Copyright of the artist/author.

Book: ARTISTS WHO CHANGED THE WORLD

“Have no fear of perfection, you’ll never reach it.”  ~ Salvador Dalí

Just picked up this book. ARTISTS WHO CHANGED HISTORY, Kindle version, at 96% off, on Amazon.

Features Manet, Botticelli, El Greco, Leonardo, Degas, Rodin, Bernini, Holbein, Van Eyck, Rubens, Klee, Cézanne, Vermeer, Hogarth, Titian, Michelangelo, Tiepolo, Chagall, Kandinsky, Constable, Cassatt, Mondrian, Raphael, Van Dyck, Goya, Bruegel, et al.

Amazon Canada: https://is.gd/Tuyw1q
Amazon USA: https://is.gd/mOja94