The first episode of 2026 begins not with acceleration, but with attention on the power of mastery.

While painting Janine Jansen, immersed in the music of Jean Sibelius, there was a moment in which the work aligned. Technique, listening, and observation converged. The distinction between musician and instrument dissolved. What remained was embodiment.

This episode reflects on mastery as a lived condition, not as rigidity, but as liberation.

Across cultures and genres, disciplined practice has always enabled artistic freedom. The deep internalisation of craft allows interpretation to move without obstruction. When technique becomes embodied, imagination is no longer anxious; it becomes precise.

The lives and practices of John ColtraneThelonious MonkNina SimoneElla Fitzgerald, and Michael Jacksonremind us that mastery does not belong to one institution, one tradition, or one culture. Even where access was denied, discipline and imagination forged new paths.

In the studio, this same principle holds. Silence, repetition, and containment are not isolation; they are integration. The visible work rests upon long unseen immersion.

As we enter 2026, this episode invites a reorientation:
To honour skill.
To protect depth.
To stay with practice long enough for freedom to emerge.

For those wishing to strengthen their own foundation in drawing and painting, the courseĀ Mastering Light and Shadow offers a structured path into tonal depth and visual vitality, with lifetime access and personal feedback options.
https://onlineartseducation.co.uk

May this year be grounded, attentive, and generative.