Yoga

Find Your Inspiration: The Benefits of Yoga for Artists and Creatives

By Suki Zhang┃Posted: May 16, 2019

Creating any kind of artwork is a tough task. Sure, in theory, it should be simple: all you have to do is to pick up your art supplies, put your paintbrush to canvas, and produce something artsy. But what happens when your mind is plagued with countless anxious thoughts, and your creativity is weighed down by your fear of failure or fear of emptiness?

Self-doubt is a problem that so many artists face, but fear not! There might actually be something that you can do to free yourself from the burden of your internalized anxieties, and to unleash your creativity to its highest potential: yoga.

How Can Yoga Help Artists?

Almost everyone in this world has at least heard about yoga. Yoga is kind of meditation practice that takes the form of physical exercise, based upon poses that promote improved control of the mind and body and enhanced well-being. It’s a practice that’s rooted in ancient Indian philosophy and has been around for literally thousands of years. Starting at the end of the 19th century, it’s gained immense popularity in the West. That popularity still hasn’t waned in the 21st century, as seen in the fact that yoga is the preferred form of exercise and meditation for a lot of people.

Practicing Yoga Can Help Your Brain Drop into a Creative State

Yoga aims to promote health and well-being, and that in itself has a great side benefit for artists. As we all know, accessing creativity isn’t an easy thing to do, considering that creativity arises naturally in states of stillness and presence, two states that can be hard to find in our day-to-day lives.

This is where yoga can help: when we practice awareness in asana, pranayama, and meditation, we learn to see and let go of the distractions of the mind. Once the distractions of the mind are gone, you’ll be able to tune in to your aesthetic eye, ear, and mind — and into that inner place where inspiration is always present. This, hopefully, will lead you to pick up your paintbrush, your pencil, or your camera, and create the art you’ve always wanted to create.

Practicing Yoga Can Refine Your Artistic Skills

According to Stephen Cope, author of Yoga and the Quest for the True Self, when you practice yoga, you’re focusing your attention on a more subtle realm than usual, so you’ll most likely experience a different range of sensations in the body. You’ll also feel more perceptive and sensitive to your surroundings, and this deepening of awareness can help you refine your artistic skills.

Painters may now be able to tune into a wider range of shapes, colors, and textures. Photographers may now become more aware of the landscape and the atmosphere of their surroundings. Musicians may now become more masterful at distinguishing between subtle movements of the fingers on their instruments or the sounds that they hear. Basically, by mindfully observing and examining the full range of your experience on and off the yoga mat, you pave the way to creating more genuine and nuanced art.

Practicing Yoga Can Help You Create Conscious Art

Yoga doesn’t just sharpen an artist’s technical skills — it can also influence the way an artist approaches their craft. In other words, the themes that they choose to express, or the type of artwork that they create, or even the intuition behind artwork can change after practicing yoga.

For example, after many sessions of doing yoga, a painter may find that their style has become less traditional and more experimental, or a poet may discover that their voice is now less intellectual and their poems are now more alive in image and detail.

For other artists, they may now be more conscious of the intention behind their artworks, which can influence the kind of art that they will produce in the future. In other words, yoga can steer an artist’s creative growth in a different direction — which is helpful in broadening their creative horizon in the long run.

The Takeaway

Creating artwork is a difficult task when your mind is preoccupied with other thoughts and anxieties. Thankfully, you can get rid of these thoughts and anxieties by practicing yoga, and once they’re all gone, you can tap into your inner inspiration reservoir and fulfill your artistic expression by creating the artwork you’ve always wanted to create.


Suki Zhang has experience as a Marketing Coordinator and an Art Curator Assistant. She has a Bachelor’s degree in Art Design from Donghua University and completed her postgraduate studies in Marketing Management and Professional Sales from Lambton College. She can be followed on Linkedin  and Instagram.

Art of Living Part 1 course: Discover Gurudev Sri Sri Ravi Shankar’s ancient secret to modern well-being.

Subscribe to Art of Living Blog Digest