
Why Being an Artist Is a Responsibility - Bonus ep. w Eric J. Drummond
May 6, 2026 - 0:20:31
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Part 3 of our conversation with Eric J. Drummond begins in a place most artists avoid talking about directly: not inspiration — but blockage. After finishing a major piece, Eric finds himself stuck. The ideas are there —...
Creative Block, Memory, and the Lonely Work -- with Eric J. Drummond (Part 3) is an episode from War with Art by Eric, George, & Sheldon. Part 3 of our conversation with Eric J. Drummond begins in a place most artists avoid talking about di...
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Published Apr 1, 2026, 0:25:57 long, audio available.
Part 3 of our conversation with Eric J. Drummond begins in a place most artists avoid talking about directly: not inspiration — but blockage. After finishing a major piece, Eric finds himself stuck. The ideas are there — murals, allegories, portraits — but they won’t translate. They exist as a kind of “fog,” just out of reach. What follows is a clear look at how work actually resumes: Study leads to a new direction. Portrait evolves mid-process. One idea hands off to the next. The process isn’t linear — it’s iterative and reactive. From there, the conversation shifts into portraiture and memory. Not just capturing how someone looks, but whether the work feels like them. Eric shares the experience of painting his grandfather from memory — and the moment it was recognized as true through a single detail. That opens into a broader set of ideas: Art as a way of preserving something intangible — presence, gesture, memory — and carrying it forward. The final stretch turns to the bigger tension: How to build something meaningful with your skills How to draw from the past without being trapped by it And how to make work that feels rooted in your own place and time We close on the reality underneath it all: The gap between what you feel and what you can make The isolation of carrying that internally And the understanding that this tension never fully goes away Timestamps 00:10 — Part 3 begins 00:20 — Creative block and the “fog” of ideas 02:14 — Too many directions, no clear start 04:00 — Starting small: studies and momentum 05:21 — The process as a relay, not a plan 07:23 — Returning to ideas with new clarity 10:31 — Why likeness isn’t enough in portraiture 11:45 — The gap between feeling and ability 12:51 — The moment a portrait feels true 15:00 — Art as memory across time 16:33 — Working with history in a modern context 18:03 — Taste, exposure, and composition 20:28 — Moving toward something distinctly Canadian 22:20 — Once you have skill — what do you make? 24:28 — The loneliness of being an artist 25:28 — Risk, uncertainty, and no guarantees Referenced in this episode John Singer Sargent El Jaleo The Last Judgment Moby-Dick Dracula The Lord of the Rings
You can listen to Creative Block, Memory, and the Lonely Work -- with Eric J. Drummond (Part 3) online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.
Creative Block, Memory, and the Lonely Work -- with Eric J. Drummond (Part 3) is an episode from War with Art by Eric, George, & Sheldon.
This episode is 0:25:57 long.
This episode was published on Apr 1, 2026.
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Creative Block, Memory, and the Lonely Work -- with Eric J. Drummond (Part 3) is from War with Art by Eric, George, & Sheldon.
Published Apr 1, 2026 and 0:25:57 long