Intuitive art is a method of creating art that emerges from a relationship between an artist and their
intuition.[1] Intuitive art can include different forms of art, such as visual art, poetry, and
intuitive music.[2] Intuitive art has generally been devalued by the Western
art world as inferior,[3] childlike, or as a method reserved for
children's art.[4] Creating art intuitively may improve health and wellbeing.[5]
Category
The
National Gallery of Jamaica has categorized intuitive art as its own artistic canon separate from art that would otherwise be classified by the Western art world as
primitive or
naive.[3] Veerle Poupeye argues that this has given intuitive artists more legitimacy within the art world that has "allowed them to produce work that would otherwise never have existed."[3]
Traditional
Chinese poetry has been connected to the category of intuitive art through the practice of miaowu.[6]
Effects
As an
art therapy method, intuitive art has been noted as a potential method of processing
psychological trauma.[8] Intuitive art has been examined from a
neuroscience perspective for its potential connections to improving human health and wellbeing.[5]
Intuitive art has been claimed to be a method of initiating
self-reflection to realize and analyze one's personality toward the achievement of career and life goals.[9] The practice may be employed from a young age, including in
preschool education, to begin to cultivate the creative needs and capabilities of children within themselves.[10]
The method was connected to the artistic practices
Albert Einstein used to stimulate his scientific creativity, particularly through his engagement in playing
piano.[7] Einstein himself stated "I often think in music. I live my daydreams in music. I see my life in terms of music.... I get most joy in life out of music."[7] Einstein's son
Hans Einstein recorded of his father: "[w]henever he felt that he had come to the end of the road or into a difficult situation in his work, he would take refuge in music, and that would usually resolve all his difficulties."[7]Maja Einstein further noted that he would sometimes reach important conclusions after playing the piano.[7]
^Tang, Yanfang (1993). Mind and manifestation: The intuitive art (miaowu) of traditional Chinese poetry and poetics (Thesis).
OCLC31537063.
ProQuest304083160.[page needed]