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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 — 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:
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:
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
John Singer Sargent
El Jaleo
The Last Judgment
Moby-Dick
Dracula
The Lord of the Rings
By Eric, George, & Sheldon4.8
66 ratings
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:
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:
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
John Singer Sargent
El Jaleo
The Last Judgment
Moby-Dick
Dracula
The Lord of the Rings