12 Ways for Exploring Your Creativity and Unlocking Creative Courage
To explore your creativity with more depth and intention, it helps to build on what you have already discovered about creative courage and how it shows up in everyday life.
In Part 1, Explore Your Creativity and Build Creative Courage in Everyday Life, we explored what creative courage is and how it can support your artistic growth.
This next step brings those ideas into practice.
It offers practical and thoughtful ways to strengthen your creative courage through consistent, meaningful action, while keeping your approach grounded, flexible and encouraging.
Building Foundations Through Practice and Exploration
To explore your creativity in a sustainable way, it is helpful to begin with simple yet powerful practices that support consistency and self-trust.
These first four approaches focus on building a strong foundation for your creative courage.
1. Keep a sketchbook or art journal focused on courage
A sketchbook or art journal can become a private, supportive space where you explore your creativity without pressure or expectation.
Use it not only to test visual ideas, but also to reflect on moments of hesitation, uncertainty and bravery.
You might write about what feels challenging, sketch responses to fear, or document ideas that feel too early to share. Over time, this becomes a record of your creative courage in action.
It allows you to look back and see patterns of growth, resilience and curiosity. This process helps shift your mindset from perfection to exploration, which is where creativity thrives.
2. Commit to intentional creative practice
Intentional practice is about showing up with purpose rather than waiting for the right mood or moment to arrive.
Set aside regular time to explore your creativity, even if it is only a short session.
What matters is consistency and presence. You might begin each session with a simple intention, such as exploring a new technique or revisiting an unfinished idea.
This approach builds discipline while still allowing flexibility. Over time, intentional practice strengthens your creative courage because you learn that progress comes from showing up, not from waiting for inspiration.
It also helps you develop a rhythm that supports both productivity and enjoyment.
3. Return to your art practice after a break
Stepping away from your creative practice can happen for many reasons, and returning often requires quiet courage.
It can feel uncomfortable to begin again, especially if doubt or self-criticism has built up during your time away.
To explore your creativity after a break, start with small, approachable steps.
Reconnect with familiar materials, revisit past work, or spend time simply observing and reflecting.
Allow yourself to ease back in without pressure to produce something significant.
This gentle return helps rebuild confidence and reminds you that creativity is not lost, it simply waits for your attention. Each return strengthens your trust in the creative process.
Calendar of Knitted Wire Bracelet Workshops
Learn how to create your own knitted bracelet in this workshop with Noelene Hammond and enjoy a delightful gathering focused on creativity.
Members’ Reward: Workshop Call Out
Be part of our inaugural Members’ Workshop Call Out as we prepare to launch an entire season of workshops!
Members: Send in Your Artist Profile and Event News Story
It is a joy to be able to share your artist profile, exhibition news, workshops and art retreat stories here on Art Trails Tasmania, on the blog, in the thriving art lovers’ Community newsletter and across Facebook and Instagram. So be sure to send in your stories!
Why Time Management & Workflow are Creative Enablers Part 1
Time management empowers artists. Learn why workflow reduces overwhelm, builds clarity, protects creative energy & supports sustainable creative business success.
Why Feedback and Critique for Artists Are Vital for Growth – Part 1
Discover why art feedback and critique for artists accelerates growth, sharpens skills, and builds confidence in your creative practice.
Why Every Artist Needs a Facebook and Instagram Business Page – Part 1
Discover why every artist should have a Facebook and Instagram business page. Learn how Meta values business accounts, the benefits & how it works for you.
4. Push yourself with a regular sketchbook practice
A regular sketchbook practice offers a consistent space to experiment, take risks and develop ideas over time.
When you explore your creativity in this way, you create room for spontaneity and discovery.
Set simple challenges for yourself within your sketchbook, such as drawing daily, exploring a theme, or limiting your tools.
These small boundaries can encourage deeper focus and inventive thinking.
Importantly, a sketchbook is not about finished work, it is about process.
By allowing yourself to make mistakes and try new approaches, you build resilience and confidence.
Over time, this practice becomes a reliable way to strengthen your creative courage.
Expanding Your Creative Courage Through Experience
As you continue to explore your creativity, it becomes important to step beyond your usual ways of working. These next approaches invite you to engage with new experiences, perspectives and challenges.
5. Take part in workshops to learn and connect
Workshops provide valuable opportunities to expand your skills while also engaging with different ways of thinking.
When you explore your creativity in a workshop setting, you are exposed to new techniques, materials and ideas that may not arise in your usual practice.
This can spark fresh inspiration and encourage experimentation.
Workshops also create a sense of shared experience, where learning alongside others can feel both motivating and reassuring.
Conversations, feedback and observation all contribute to your growth.
Participating in workshops regularly can help you stay curious, build confidence and develop a broader creative perspective.
6. Be part of exhibitions and plan ahead
Exhibiting your work is a meaningful way to practise creative courage, as it involves sharing your ideas with a wider audience.
To explore your creativity through exhibitions, it can be helpful to plan ahead by creating a calendar of opportunities that align with your interests.
This allows you to work towards clear goals while giving your projects a sense of direction.
Preparing for an exhibition encourages you to refine your work, develop a cohesive body of ideas and consider how your art is presented.
While it can feel vulnerable, exhibiting also creates connection, invites feedback and helps you see your work in a broader context.
7. Stretch yourself through creative challenges
Creative challenges offer a structured way to push beyond your usual limits.
Whether you join a community challenge or set your own, these experiences encourage you to explore your creativity with consistency and focus.
Challenges often involve creating work within a set timeframe or theme, which can help you build momentum and discipline.
They also invite you to let go of perfection, as the emphasis is on participation rather than outcome.
Through this process, you develop resilience and learn to trust your instincts more readily.
Creative challenges can be both energising and revealing, opening up new directions in your work.
8. Work with constraints to unlock new ideas
Constraints can be a powerful tool for creative exploration.
By limiting certain aspects of your work, such as colour, materials or subject matter, you are encouraged to think more deeply and creatively.
When you explore your creativity within boundaries, you often discover unexpected solutions and approaches.
Constraints can reduce overwhelm by narrowing your focus, making it easier to begin and sustain your practice.
They also challenge you to use what you have in new ways, which can lead to innovative outcomes.
Embracing constraints helps you see that limitations are not restrictions, but opportunities for growth and discovery.
Art Trails Tasmania: An Artist Led Project
One of the most important features of Art Trails Tasmania is being able to introduce you to a wonderful community of Tasmanian artists, their workshops, exhibitions, creative small businesses, art retreats, events and their stories.
Each month in our free Community newsletter we share their stories directly with you, along side inspiring Creativity Calendar posts and the empowering Skills Sharing Series so you can develop the skills needed to craft the life enriching creative business of your dreams. Enjoy!
Deepening Your Practice with Awareness and Connection
To explore your creativity more deeply, it is important to consider how you support yourself throughout the process.
These final approaches focus on awareness, connection and sustainability in your creative practice.
9. Explore mixed media practices
Working with mixed media allows you to combine different materials, textures and techniques in ways that expand your creative possibilities.
When you explore your creativity through mixed media, you are encouraged to move beyond familiar methods and experiment more freely.
This approach can help you break through creative blocks by introducing new elements into your work.
It also supports a more playful and intuitive process, where unexpected combinations can lead to unique outcomes.
Mixed media invites curiosity and flexibility, helping you develop a richer and more layered creative voice over time.
10. Recognise the role of rest and creative rituals
Rest is an essential, often overlooked part of the creative process.
When you explore your creativity consistently, it is important to balance activity with periods of pause and reflection.
Rest allows your ideas to settle and develop, often leading to clearer insights when you return to your work.
Establishing simple creative rituals can also support your practice. This might include preparing your workspace, setting an intention, or beginning with a brief warm-up exercise.
These rituals create a sense of continuity and focus, helping you transition into a creative mindset more easily. Together, rest and ritual support sustainable creativity.
Peter Ellyard Crafts Living Art from Steel, Glass and Light
Peter Ellyard creates art where steel meets colour and sunlight, crafting lasting pieces influenced by Tasmania’s landscape and shifting skies.
Meet Colourist Robyn Malcolm
Meet Robyn Malcolm, a colourist whose expressive use of colour, pastel and oil reveals a lifelong creative journey from textiles to painting.
11. Be part of a creative community
Engaging with a creative community can provide encouragement, inspiration and a sense of belonging.
When you explore your creativity alongside others, you gain access to shared knowledge, diverse perspectives and mutual support.
This can be especially valuable during times of uncertainty or self-doubt.
A community can take many forms, from local groups and workshops to online networks and collaborative projects.
Being part of such a space helps you stay motivated and connected, while also offering opportunities to share your work and receive feedback.
Over time, these connections can become an important part of your creative journey.
12. Practise mindful creativity
Mindful creativity involves being fully present with your work, focusing on the process rather than the outcome.
When you explore your creativity in this way, you allow yourself to engage more deeply with each step, noticing details, textures and ideas as they emerge.
This approach can help reduce pressure and quieten self-criticism, creating a more supportive environment for creativity.
Practising mindfulness in your art can also increase your awareness of how you think and feel while creating.
This insight can guide your decisions and help you develop a more intentional and responsive practice over time.
Choosing Your Next Creative Step
Creative courage grows through action, reflection and a willingness to stay open to new possibilities.
As you explore your creativity using these twelve approaches, you may notice that some feel more natural than others.
This is part of the process. You are not expected to do everything at once, but rather to choose what resonates and build from there.
Each of these ideas offers a different way of engaging with your creative practice.
Some focus on structure and consistency, while others invite experimentation and connection.
Together, they create a balanced approach that supports both growth and sustainability.
It is also helpful to revisit Part 1, Explore Your Creativity and Build Creative Courage in Everyday Life, where the foundations of creative courage are explored in more depth.
Bringing those insights together with these practical steps can create a strong and supportive framework for your artistic journey.
Which of these ideas are resonating with you, how would you like to explore it more?
Taking a moment to write down your thoughts can help you clarify your next steps and deepen your connection to your creative practice.
How Nature Shapes the Way You See, Feel and Imagine Part 1
Explore your creativity with Nature as your muse, letting it gently shape the way you see, feel and imagine in Part 1 of our series.
12 Practices to Explore Your Creativity with Intentional Joyful Constraints – Part 2
Explore your creativity through thoughtful constraints that reduce overwhelm, build focus and gently support a joyful, sustainable creative practice.
No Results Found
The page you requested could not be found. Try refining your search, or use the navigation above to locate the post.
Read the Latest How To Blog Stories
10 Ways for Creative Workflow and Time Management to be Easy and Practical Part 2
Creating Making Time with Time Management Time management becomes genuinely useful only when creative people shape practical workflow systems that match their personalities, schedules, responsibilities and income streams. In this second part of the series, we focus...
Why Time Management & Workflow are Creative Enablers Part 1
Creating More Time for Making with Time Management & Worksflows Time management may feel counterintuitive to creative people, yet effective organisation genuinely frees artists to produce richer ideas, finish projects and build sustainable creative businesses. ...
How to Give and Receive Feedback and Critique for Artists Effectively – Part 2
Turning Insight into Action Art feedback and critique for artists isn’t just about understanding why feedback matters — it’s about learning how to make it work for you. In Part 1 of this series, we explored the emotional and creative value of critique: how it builds...
Why Feedback and Critique for Artists Are Vital for Growth – Part 1
Why Art Feedback and Critique for Artists Truly Matter Art feedback and critique for artists are essential to every creative journey. Whether you’re a painter in Hobart, a ceramicist on the North West Coast, or a fibre artist in the Huon Valley, thoughtful critique...
How to Make to Your Facebook and Instagram Business Pages Succeed – Part 2
In Part 1 - Why Every Artist Needs a Facebook and Instagram Business Page, we explored why it’s so important for artists to have Facebook and Instagram business pages rather than personal profiles — how Meta treats them differently, and how they can become powerful...
Why Every Artist Needs a Facebook and Instagram Business Page – Part 1
Why It Matters to Have Facebook and Instagram Business Profile Pages There comes a point in every artist’s creative journey where simply sharing your work online isn’t enough. You start to notice that some artists seem to have real momentum – their posts are being...
Read the Latest Blog Stories and Flourish…
Emma Smith Trickett Walks with Trees Through Relational Ecological Art
Meet First Nations Artist Emma Smith Trickett In my arts practice I explore intersubjective relationship with green environments. I am looking to not represent how these environments appear didactically, but my relationship to them and the experience of being in...
Coloured Pencil Workshop with Marilyn Theisel
Marilyn Theisel Advances Colouring Technique Join Tasmanian artist Marilyn Theisel for an engaging coloured pencil workshop exploring advanced techniques through layering, light and colour. Suitable for continuing and curious artists alike, this workshop offers a...
12 Practices to Explore Your Creativity with Intentional Joyful Constraints – Part 2
12 Mindful Practices for Exploring Your Creativity with Clarity and Joy Explore your creativity by intentionally choosing constraints that support focus, mindfulness and enjoyment, rather than waiting for ideal conditions to appear. In Part One, we explored why...
How Amanda Berryman Creates Healing Through Art and Nature
Finding Connection Through Art What brings me the greatest joy in my art is the deep sense of presence and connection it creates. When I paint, my mind quietens, my body relaxes, and I feel anchored in the moment. Each creative session begins with meditation or...
The West Tamar Art Group 6×4 Exhibition
Explore the "6x4" Exhibition by West Tamar Art Groups Members The 6 x 4 exhibition invites you to discover vibrant, original artworks by six talented members of the West Tamar Art Group (WTAG), each presenting four unique pieces at Windsor Gallery, Riverside. Set in...
Peter Ellyard Crafts Living Art from Steel, Glass and Light
Transforming the Raw into Art Making art gives me the rare chance to turn raw, ordinary materials into something that feels alive. I love the moment when steel stops being “just steel” and starts to suggest movement, character, or a story. Stained glass adds another...
The Poatina Tree Gallery Presents “Journey” Exhibition
Be Inspired by the "Journey" Exhibition at the Poatina Tree Art Gallery Journey: Places of stillness and contemplation – Blue Mountains, Tasmania and beyond, is an exhibition of new watercolour paintings by Dorothy Knox. The Poatina Tree Gallery Poatina Village Green,...
Explore Your Creativity Through Boundaries That Strengthen Your Creative Practice – Part 1
How Constraints Can Become Powerful Catalysts for Creative Growth Explore your creativity by looking differently at the limitations that shape your creative practice, because constraints are often misunderstood as obstacles when they can instead act as powerful...
The Launceston Art Society Calendar of Workshops
The Latest Calendar of Workshops with the LAS The Launceston Art Society is delighted to share with you an inspiring calendar of workshops! The workshops are from life drawing to oil painting to watercolour to coloured pencil. The workshops include, Life Drawing...
Read What Our Members Say About Belonging
Join the growing, supportive artists community today and have your Artist story told here.
Belinda is doing a great job creating a professional looking artist hub online. Check out the profile I posted recently to see how well she does them. To all my artist friends let’s help make this THE go to place to discover local artists.
You won’t regret joining Art Trails Tasmania . It’s a welcoming community for creatives at any career stage.Becoming an Art Trails Tasmania member wasn’t a hard decision for me to make as it’s such a wealth of knowledge and support.Being member provides a quality way to showcase your creative endeavours and it’s quickly growing in reach.
We operate a home based picture framing business and recently joined Art Trails Tasmania as a means to giving us exposure to the wider artist community. We have almost immediately seen increase in activity thru our online sites, which I am certain will lead to more opportunities to grow our business.





















