Typically, three types of creatives join this practice:
1. Blocked creatives // the listless
Blocked creatives often work in creative-adjacent fields: think agents, managers, art dealers, entertainment lawyers, etc. Perhaps you have a project you've been working on, but feel embarrassed because you already represent highly successful clients doing the same work? Let us help you move beyond shame and restraint.
If you find yourself consistently asking who am I and what am I doing? you need a practice for cultivating self-expression. Creativity is the path back to the essential self.
Often, people in caregiving roles suffer this loss most acutely. If you are a parent or caregiver who feels withdrawn or disconnected from your deepest self, please consider making art--and joining us.
2. Working artists who need structure and community
Many artists doing their 'dream' work experience loneliness and withdrawal. Creativity can be amorphous and unscheduled, which can make it hard to focus. Working with the BCC will give you accountability, structure, and even scheduling guidance. Perhaps you just want an assignment and a pat on the head: we are generous with both.
3. The deeply ambitious
Most artists suffer internalized, limiting blocks about worth, money and exposure. You cannot get the recognition and valuation you desire without examining the beliefs that hold you back. Artists of great, un-expressed or non-actualized ambition benefit from shadow work and archetype-identification, which we can tackle privately or in an appropriate group setting.
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Joining the BCC requires agreeing to our mission and community guidelines. Discretion is the keystone of our work. Many members of the BCC are well known in their fields and protecting the privacy of this space is non-negotiable.
Meetings take place on zoom, and in person in Bedford, NY.
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