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Some time ago, I described the four most important skills every artist

needs in order to succeed. Those skills were:


• The ability to see
• The ability to draw what you see
• The ability to promote yourself and your work
• The ability to say no
At the end of that article I mentioned that there were other skills every
artist should develop. I’ve been thinking about that ever since, and I’ve
realized that skills aren’t the only things shared by most successful
artists—there are also some common characteristics that every
successful artist shares:

1. Persistence
Persistence is the quality that allows someone to continue doing
something or trying to do something even though it is difficult or
opposed by other people. You don’t need a more comprehensive
definition to see how persistence applies to being an artist.
Artists need persistence to:
• Improve and/or perfect skills
• Learn new skills
• Finish individual pieces of art
• Build an exceptional body of work
• Build a successful art career
• Sustain an art career
Most of these are long-term endeavors; some are developed over the
course of a lifetime. (Dali, for example, spent 50 years developing
his Surrealist painting techniques.) If you don’t have persistence to fuel
your dreams, your dreams may never become reality.
If an artist’s goal is to earn a living from art, he or she also needs
persistence to continue improving and creating when the artwork isn’t
selling. Nothing is more frustrating—or more disheartening—than to
turn out the best work of your career only have it go unsold. The
temptation to give up can become very strong, as can the temptation to
paint for the market or chase trends.
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The artist with persistence resists those temptations and stays the
course.

2. Patience
Patience is the quality of calm endurance. The stereotypical artist is
passionate; either enthralled or disgusted with their work. Patience
evens out those highs and lows. It’s similar to persistence, but while
persistence is more of a discipline, patience is more of an attitude. You
can be persistent without being patient.
Most of us have to learn patience. . . I know I did. It’s not an overnight
acquisition, but it is well worth acquiring.

3. Passion
Most of us know about artistic passion—it’s what motivates us to
create. Passion is the driving force that keeps you making art even
when there seems to be no other reason for it.
The dictionary defines passion in several different ways. The
definitions that apply to this discussion are an “intense, driving, or
overmastering feeling or conviction” and “a strong liking or desire for or
devotion to some activity, object, or concept.”
You don’t have to experience a flaming exuberance for your art
(though flaming exuberance isn’t necessarily bad) but you must have
the desire to do the work. Your passion is what fuels persistence and
patience. It’s the gasoline that runs the “car” of your career.

4. A sense of adventure
All of life is an adventure. You start the day you’re born and travel a
winding road until your last day. You never know what may await you
around the next bend, over the next bridge, or through the deep
woods.
Creating art is much the same way. It doesn’t matter how much you
plan your next piece, there’s no guarantee it will turn out the way you
meant it to. Happy accidents happen all the time, and a successful
artist will recognize them and capitalize on them.
An adventurous spirit is also necessary if you want to explore new
subjects or themes or tackle a familiar subject in a different way. Or
even when a well-planned painting or drawing takes an unexpected
turn and you end up outside your creative comfort zone.
Plus, if you’ve never marketed your work, you will need a significant
sense of adventure to take the first steps in that direction. And once
you begin marketing, your sense of adventure will keep you moving
forward, always trying new things.

5. Discipline
Persistence, patience, and passion are necessary, but they need to be
properly harnessed in order to serve you best.
Passion run amok can have you jumping from one project to the next
without finishing anything. You need to discipline it with persistence
and patience in order to finish artwork that can then be promoted and,
hopefully, sold.
Persistence without the discipline of passion becomes dry and
dreadful.
And no matter how adventurous you might be, if you lack the discipline
to keep putting one foot ahead of the other—or making the next stroke
of paint or pencil—you’ll never get anywhere.
Clearly, the artistic life is not boring. . . but it does require many of the
character traits often used by businesspeople, athletes, and others
whose drive and willpower makes them successful. Practice these
qualities (in addition to your art techniques) and you’ll build a firm
foundation on which to create your art.

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