Who are your favorite artists?
Writing and Creative
When I think about what truly pulls me into art, it’s not just the colors on the canvas or the rhythm of a song—it’s the creative core behind it. I like to think of that core as the heartbeat of expression, the part where imagination meets intention. For me, writing sits right at the center of that space. It’s how I build, question, and express what I see and feel. Writing, in a way, is the art behind all art—it’s the translation of spirit into structure.
Two artists who always remind me of that core are Pablo Picasso and Bob Marley. They were both masters at shaping emotion into language—Picasso through lines and color, Marley through rhythm and words.
Picasso didn’t just paint faces; he painted perspectives. He wrote in form. Every distorted shape was a statement, every unfinished edge a thought left open for interpretation. That’s how I like to approach writing—less about perfection, more about truth.

Bob Marley, on the other hand, used words like brushstrokes. His lyrics were stories, philosophies, and poetry in motion. There’s something powerful about how he made struggle sound beautiful and hope sound inevitable. That kind of writing—raw, human, and timeless—reminds me why I love the creative process.

When I write, I’m not just trying to finish something. I’m trying to find something—maybe a feeling, a rhythm, or a small truth that makes sense of the day. That’s the same energy that flows through all great art: discovery. Picasso explored the world through vision, Marley through sound, and I try to do it through words.
At the end of the day, art is just writing in different languages—paint, melody, movement, scent, or silence. And the more I connect with that creative core, the more I understand how to live with meaning and make something that lasts.
Enjoyed the reflections on creativity and expression. Stay connected.
Until next time.
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