I prayed earnestly and innumerable times to God , to control my thoughts, actions and speech and also to control me forever even after this life. Therefore God controls me even when I paint, God paints real fast and I am just his instrument that He controls.
How spiritual progress improves creativity, intuition, and artistic expression. A unique perspective on art, spirituality, and inner growth.
Spiritual progress enhances creativity, intuition, and art. Discover how surrendering to God transforms the artist into a divine instrument of creation.
Spiritual progress leads to higher creativity and intuition, where the artist becomes an instrument and God paints through the artist.
Explore how spiritual surrender deepens creativity, intuition, and art, allowing God to express creativity through the artist.
Discover how spiritual surrender transforms creativity, allowing God to express art through the artist as a divine instrument.
Explore how spiritual progress enhances creativity, intuition, and art, where the artist becomes an instrument of divine expression.
Spiritual progress leads to intuitive creativity, where art flows naturally as the artist becomes an instrument of God.
Spiritual Progress and Creativity in Art
Spiritual progress plays a powerful role in improving creativity, artistic expression, and intuition. For artists, inner growth directly influences the quality, depth, and originality of art. When the mind becomes calm, focused, and disciplined through spiritual practice, creativity flows naturally.
Creativity in art does not come only from technical skill or practice. True artistic creativity arises from inner clarity, silence, and awareness. Spiritual practices such as meditation, prayer, self-observation, and surrender reduce mental noise, fear, ego, and confusion. As these disturbances decrease, artistic inspiration increases.
A spiritually developed mind strengthens intuition, which is essential for art. Intuition allows an artist to create instantly, without overthinking. In intuitive art, the hand moves faster than logic. This is why many great artists and creative geniuses throughout history were deeply spiritual.
Spiritual growth also improves emotional balance. Art created from a peaceful and balanced inner state carries harmony, depth, and authenticity. Such art connects more strongly with viewers because it reflects truth, sincerity, and inner stability.
As spirituality deepens, creative blocks reduce. Ideas emerge effortlessly, and artistic expression becomes faster, purer, and more confident. This applies to painting, drawing, abstract art, speed art, writing, music, and all creative disciplines.
Spiritual practice also enhances concentration and focus. A focused mind allows precision, speed, and accuracy in artistic creation. This is especially important for intuitive and speed-based art, where hesitation reduces quality.
In essence, spirituality refines the mind, and the mind is the primary tool of every artist. When the mind is refined, creativity naturally improves. Better spiritual awareness leads to stronger intuition, stronger intuition leads to better creativity, and better creativity leads to better art.
For artists, spiritual progress is not separate from creativity—it is its foundation. When inner growth deepens, art becomes a natural expression of higher awareness, intuition, and inner discipline.
God as the True Creator Behind Art
When an artist sincerely prays to God and surrenders completely, a transformation takes place. God gradually becomes the controller, and the artist becomes an instrument. In such a state, thoughts, actions, and creative impulses no longer arise from personal ego or effort, but flow according to divine will.
At this stage, the artist no longer feels like the creator of the art. Instead, art happens through the artist. The hands move intuitively, decisions occur instantly, and creativity flows without conscious planning. The painter does not paint; God paints through the painter.
This divine surrender enhances intuition, speed, and precision in art. Fear, doubt, and hesitation disappear, and creativity becomes effortless. The mind becomes silent, receptive, and aligned with higher guidance. Art created in this state carries depth, purity, and a spiritual vibration that connects deeply with viewers.
When an artist becomes an instrument of God, creativity reaches its highest potential. Art is no longer an act of personal achievement but a divine expression. This is where spiritual progress and artistic excellence merge, and creativity becomes a sacred process rather than a mental effort.
On 10th December 2015, Parijoy Saha achieved three historic milestones by creating the world’s fastest realistic painting in a 1/5th fraction of a second, the world’s fastest abstract painting in a 1/5th fraction of a second, and the world’s fastest landscape painting in a 1/6th fraction of a second on 38 cm × 32 cm sized papers, using only bare hands. Earlier, on 12th July 2013, he demonstrated 11 novel methods of painting with bare hands, with each method taking less than 30 seconds to complete a painting on 37 cm × 28 cm sized papers. On 11th December 2011, he further created 51 paintings in just 35 minutes using bare hands on 37 cm × 28 cm sized papers. All these paintings were made using white glue, watercolors, and ivory paper.
According to Parijoy Saha, the techniques, ideas, and timing behind these record-breaking achievements were not planned intellectually but arose spontaneously through spiritual intuition. He believes that spiritual progress sharpens intuition to such an extent that creativity flows instantly, without conscious effort. In such a state, the mind does not struggle to think or decide; actions happen naturally and effortlessly.
Through sustained spiritual practice, prayer, and surrender to God, the sense of personal doership gradually diminishes. The artist no longer feels that “I am creating,” but instead experiences creation as happening through him. In this state, the artist becomes an instrument, and creativity becomes an expression of divine will rather than personal effort. According to this understanding, God becomes the controller, and the artist becomes a medium through which ideas, speed, and execution flow.
Parijoy Saha attributes his unprecedented speed, originality, and intuitive precision in art to this spiritual advancement. He believes that when creativity is guided by higher awareness, limitations of time, fear, and doubt dissolve. Art then becomes a form of surrender rather than struggle.
The methods of painting through which I set my world records were not intellectual inventions of my own mind. They were ideas given by God. It is God who made me the world’s fastest painter. The credit for these achievements belongs entirely to God and not to me. While painting, I could clearly perceive that everything was happening automatically by God’s grace, as if God Himself was controlling my hands, my thoughts, and my actions.
My spiritual journey began over thirty-three years ago, when I first prayed to become worthy of being God’s beloved child. Later, for the past twenty-five years, my prayer has taken a deeper and more complete form. I have been continuously praying to surrender myself entirely to God—so that I may think, speak, and act exactly according to God’s will. I have prayed to be an instrument in God’s hands rather than an independent doer.
As this surrender deepened, creativity began to flow effortlessly. I no longer felt that I was the artist; instead, it felt as though God was painting through me. My hands moved with speed, clarity, and precision beyond conscious planning. The paintings emerged spontaneously, guided by intuition rather than technique. This state of surrender transformed art into a spiritual experience, where creativity became an expression of divine grace rather than personal skill.
True artistic excellence is not achieved merely through practice or technique alone. To become a truly inspired artist, one must first surrender to God. When the ego dissolves, creativity expands. When the artist steps aside, divine intelligence begins to operate. This surrender opens the door to higher intuition, originality, and effortless creation.
For those who wish to understand the spiritual foundation behind creativity, intuition, and surrender to God, I invite you to explore my spiritual teachings blog:
https://teachingsofparijoy.blogspot.com
When an artist prays to be controlled by God, creativity rises beyond technique and speed. The artist dissolves, and God becomes the true creator. In such moments, art is no longer made—it happens.
Spiritual Progress as the Foundation of Creativity in Art
Creativity in art does not arise only from technical skill, practice, or imagination. True creativity arises when the mind becomes silent, receptive, and aligned with a higher intelligence. From my own life and artistic journey, I have experienced that spiritual progress directly enhances creativity, intuition, speed, originality, and artistic clarity.
Art created from the ego is limited. Art created from surrender is limitless.
Spiritual Progress and the Artist’s Inner State
When an artist progresses spiritually, the mind gradually becomes free from fear, doubt, comparison, and overthinking. These mental disturbances are the biggest obstacles to creativity. As spiritual awareness increases, the artist begins to work from a state of inner stillness.
In this state:
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ideas arise spontaneously
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decisions become effortless
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movements become natural
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time appears to slow down or disappear
This is not imagination. This is direct experience.
God as the Source of Creative Ideas
The methods of painting I used to set my world records were not intellectual inventions. They were ideas given by God. I clearly witnessed how everything happened automatically by God’s grace, as if God Himself was controlling my hands.
It is God who made me the world’s fastest painter.
The credit goes to God and not to me.
I did not feel that I was painting. Rather, I felt that God was painting through me, and I was only an instrument.
Prayer, Surrender, and Divine Control
Initially, around 33 years ago, I prayed only to become worthy of being God’s loved son. Later, for the past 25 years, my prayer has been continuous and focused on one thing alone:
To be according to the desire of God —
that I may think, speak, and act exactly as God wants me to.
I have been praying continuously to be controlled by God. When this surrender deepens, personal will dissolves, and divine will begins to operate. At that stage, creativity no longer comes from effort. It flows.
How Surrender Transforms Art
When an artist truly surrenders:
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fear of failure disappears
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attachment to results ends
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originality becomes natural
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speed increases effortlessly
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intuition replaces planning
At this stage, the artist no longer tries to create art. Art happens.
This is why spiritual progress does not limit creativity — it liberates it.
Why Spiritual Discipline Matters More Than Technique
Techniques can be learned. Brushes, colors, and materials can be acquired. But intuition cannot be manufactured. Intuition arises only when the ego steps aside.
Spiritual discipline purifies perception. As perception becomes pure, creativity becomes refined, original, and powerful. This is the foundation behind my ability to paint in fractions of a second using bare hands.
The Artist as God’s Instrument
When you pray to God to control you, God becomes your controller, and you become His instrument. You end up thinking, speaking, and doing everything according to God’s will.
In art, this means:
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you are no longer the doer
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the painting is not forced
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creativity flows naturally
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the result carries divine harmony
At this stage, the artist disappears, and only creation remains.
Final Reflection
To become a truly creative artist, one must first become spiritually receptive. And to become spiritually receptive, one must learn surrender.
Spiritual progress leads to:
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better creativity
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deeper intuition
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effortless originality
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faster execution
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art infused with higher intelligence
This is not theory. This is lived experience.
For those who wish to understand the spiritual foundations behind creativity, surrender, and intuition, my spiritual teachings are documented separately in my teachings blog.
Those who wish to understand the spiritual foundation behind this creative process and explore the path of spiritual advancement are encouraged to visit his teachings blog:
https://teachingsofparijoy.blogspot.com
Intuition vs Technique in Speed Art
In the world of art, most artists are trained to depend heavily on technique. Technique involves learning brush control, colour theory, composition, perspective, and repetition through practice. While technique has its place, speed art—especially extreme speed art—operates on a completely different plane.
In speed art, intuition plays a far more important role than technique.
The Limitation of Technique in Speed Art
Technique requires time.
It requires conscious thought, planning, correction, and refinement.
When a painting is created in a few seconds, there is no time to consciously apply learned techniques. The mind does not get the opportunity to calculate proportions or correct mistakes. If an artist tries to depend only on technique while painting at extreme speed, hesitation arises, and the flow breaks.
This is why technique alone cannot produce true speed art.
Intuition as the Real Driving Force
Intuition works instantly.
It does not calculate—it knows.
In intuitive painting, the hand moves before the mind interferes. Colours are chosen instinctively. Forms appear naturally. The artist does not think about what to do next; the action happens automatically.
This intuitive flow is what makes speed art possible.
In my own journey as the world’s fastest painter, I clearly observed that during record-setting performances, I was not consciously deciding anything. My fingers, nails, and palms moved on their own, as if guided by a higher intelligence.
Where Does This Intuition Come From?
True intuition is not merely a talent.
It is the result of inner silence.
When the ego reduces and the mind becomes quiet, intuition rises naturally. This inner quietness cannot be forced by technique—it comes through spiritual discipline, surrender, and prayer.
As spiritual progress deepens, the artist stops “doing” art and instead allows art to happen through him.
Speed Art as a Spiritual Process
Speed art is not just fast painting.
It is surrender in action.
When the artist surrenders completely, there is no fear of mistakes, no attachment to outcome, and no self-consciousness. In this state, creativity flows freely and effortlessly.
This is why many of my fastest and most innovative painting methods emerged spontaneously. The ideas did not come from planning or experimentation. They arose intuitively, in moments when I was deeply surrendered to God.
Intuition vs Technique: Not Opposites, but Levels
Technique belongs to the outer level of art.
Intuition belongs to the inner level of art.
Technique can be taught.
Intuition must be awakened.
For ordinary painting, technique may dominate. But for speed art—especially painting done in seconds—intuition must lead, and technique must follow silently in the background.
Spiritual Growth Enhances Artistic Intuition
As spiritual awareness increases:
intuition becomes sharper
decision-making becomes effortless
fear disappears
creativity becomes spontaneous
speed increases naturally
At this stage, the artist no longer feels like the creator. He becomes an instrument.
Becoming an Instrument of the Divine
When an artist prays to be guided, controlled, and used by God, art transforms into a divine expression. The painting is no longer an act of personal skill but an act of grace.
This is the highest form of speed art—where intuition flows unhindered, technique obeys silently, and creativity happens without effort.
Final Thought
Technique can make an artist skilled.
Intuition can make an artist extraordinary.
Speed art is not about how fast the hands move—it is about how silent the mind is.
For those who wish to understand the spiritual foundations behind intuition, creativity, and surrender, my spiritual teachings are shared separately.
Related Reading
For deeper insight into spiritual surrender, intuition, and divine guidance, visit my spiritual teachings blog:
https://teachingsofparijoy.blogspot.com
Art Blog
https://parijoysaha.blogspot.com
Silence, Speed and Divine Flow in Art
When Art Happens Beyond the Mind
In true creativity, art does not begin with noise. It begins with silence.
Silence is not merely the absence of sound; it is the absence of inner disturbance. When thoughts slow down and the ego recedes, a deeper intelligence starts operating. In this state, speed is no longer chaotic. Speed becomes effortless, precise, and meaningful. This is what I call divine flow in art.
In my experience as the world’s fastest painter, silence, speed, and divine flow are not separate elements. They are three stages of the same spiritual process.
When ever I start speed painting I let myself to be controlled by God and the art is created in mental silence. Even otherwise whenever I think that all is God's will and that I have prayed to be in God's control, worry disappears and there is silence.
When I paint, my hands move freely as if guided by intuition, my mind doesnot work or plan, everything happens on its own and a gift of painting from God is created.
Silence: The Foundation of True Creativity
Most artists try to create through effort, planning, and mental control. But the mind is restless by nature. When the mind dominates, art becomes forced.
Silence arises only through surrender.
When an artist surrenders to God, the inner chatter gradually dissolves. In that silence:
Fear disappears
Doubt disappears
The need to impress disappears
What remains is purity of action.
In silence, the artist no longer asks, “What should I paint?” Instead, painting begins to happen on its own.
Speed as a Spiritual Outcome, Not a Skill
Speed in art is often misunderstood as a technical achievement. In reality, true speed is a byproduct of inner stillness.
When the mind is silent:
Decisions are instant
Movements are spontaneous
There is no hesitation
This is how extreme speed becomes possible without loss of quality.
My record-setting paintings were not created by conscious planning. They happened automatically. My hands moved faster than thought. I could clearly see that I was not controlling the process—something higher was.
Speed emerged naturally because there was no resistance inside.
Divine Flow: When God Becomes the Artist
Divine flow begins when the artist stops claiming ownership.
At a certain stage of spiritual surrender, one realizes:
“I am not the doer.”
When this realization becomes permanent, God starts working through the artist.
In that state:
Thoughts arise exactly when needed
Hands move with perfect coordination
Creativity unfolds without effort
The artist becomes an instrument.
In my own journey, the methods of painting that led to world records were not learned, practiced, or planned. They were ideas given by God. I could see everything unfolding automatically, as if I was being guided moment by moment.
Silence Creates Accuracy, Speed Creates Power
Silence brings clarity.
Speed brings intensity.
Divine flow unites both.
This is why spiritual art can achieve results that technical training alone cannot. When silence and speed merge, art gains a living energy that viewers can feel instantly.
People often ask how paintings made in seconds can carry such depth. The answer is simple: depth does not come from time; it comes from consciousness.
Why Technique Alone Is Not Enough
Technique belongs to the mind.
Divine flow belongs to surrender.
Technique can be taught. Divine flow must be received.
Without silence, technique becomes mechanical. Without surrender, speed becomes empty. But when God controls the process, even the simplest movements produce extraordinary results.
The Path for Artists
For artists who wish to experience this state, the path is not external.
It begins with:
Prayer
Surrender
Inner purification
When the artist prays to be guided rather than glorified, creativity transforms into devotion.
Art then becomes a form of worship.
Conclusion: Art as a State of Grace
Silence prepares the ground.
Speed becomes the expression.
Divine flow is the source.
When these three unite, art transcends skill and becomes grace.
In such moments, the artist disappears—and God paints.
Why God Chooses Speed for Expression and Art Beyond Ego
When God expresses through an artist, speed is not an accident.
Speed is chosen deliberately, because speed leaves no space for ego.
Ego survives in delay.
Ego needs time to interfere, to judge, to plan, to claim credit.
Speed removes all of that.
When art happens at great speed, the thinking mind cannot keep up. The artist does not get the time to say “I am doing this.” What remains is pure action without ownership.
This is why divine expression often chooses speed.
Speed Bypasses the Thinking Mind
The human mind operates slowly. It calculates, compares, doubts, and corrects. These processes are useful for learning technique, but they block divine flow.
God does not operate through analysis.
God operates through direct knowing.
When speed increases beyond the capacity of thought:
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planning disappears
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fear disappears
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self-consciousness disappears
The hand moves before the mind can interfere.
In this state, art does not come from the artist — it comes through the artist.
Speed Destroys Ego Ownership
Ego requires a narrative:
“I decided this.”
“I planned this.”
“I achieved this.”
Speed destroys that narrative.
When a painting is completed in seconds, the artist himself is surprised. There is no time to build pride. The result feels given, not manufactured.
This is why true speed creates humility instead of arrogance.
The faster the action, the clearer it becomes that the doer is not the individual.
Divine Expression Is Instantaneous
God does not need rehearsal.
God does not need correction.
God does not experiment.
Divine intelligence is complete the moment it expresses.
Speed reflects this completeness.
When art flows instantly, without hesitation, it mirrors the nature of divine creation itself — effortless, precise, and whole.
This is why divine creativity often appears sudden, spontaneous, and astonishing.
Why Slow Ego Cannot Imitate Divine Speed
Ego can imitate technique.
Ego cannot imitate surrender.
An ego-driven artist may try to paint fast, but without inner silence, speed becomes chaos. Divine speed is not rushed. It is calm, accurate, and inevitable.
The difference is simple:
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ego speed is forced
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divine speed is natural
One exhausts the artist.
The other carries the artist.
Speed as Proof of Surrender
When God controls the artist, speed becomes a sign of trust.
There is no second-guessing.
There is no self-correction.
There is no attachment to outcome.
The artist allows life to move through him completely.
In my own journey, I could clearly see that the methods, movements, and timing were not being decided by me. Everything unfolded automatically, as if guided step by step. The faster the action became, the more obvious it was that I was not in control.
That realization itself dissolves ego.
Art Beyond Ego Is Always Immediate
Ego art asks:
“Is this good enough?”
Divine art simply happens.
When art moves beyond ego, it becomes immediate because there is no inner debate. There is only obedience to the moment.
Speed is not the goal.
Speed is the result of obedience.
Conclusion: Speed Is God’s Signature
God chooses speed because speed leaves no room for false identity.
In speed:
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the ego cannot claim authorship
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the mind cannot interfere
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the artist cannot boast
Only truth remains.
When speed, silence, and surrender unite, art crosses the boundary of skill and enters the realm of grace.
In such moments, the artist does not create art.
God expresses Himself.
Why Slowness Belongs to Learning and Speed Belongs to Surrender
In art, slowness and speed are often misunderstood. Many believe that speed comes from practice alone and that slowness is a sign of depth. In reality, slowness belongs to learning, while true speed belongs to surrender.
When an artist is learning, the mind is active. One thinks, plans, corrects, hesitates, and evaluates. Every movement is controlled by effort. This stage requires time, repetition, and patience. Slowness is necessary here because the ego is still present—the artist is trying to do something.
But when learning is complete and surrender begins, something changes.
Speed is not effort. Speed is absence of interference.
When the mind becomes silent and the ego steps aside, action flows naturally. In this state, art does not come from calculation or technique. It arises spontaneously. The hands move before thought. The painting completes itself. The artist becomes only a medium.
This is why speed in art is not a technical achievement alone. It is a spiritual state.
In my own journey, the methods of painting that led to world records did not arise from deliberate planning. They came automatically, as if given. I could see how everything happened on its own, without conscious control. It felt as though God Himself was guiding my hands.
Slowness belongs to effort.
Speed belongs to surrender.
When one surrenders to God, one no longer decides what to paint, how to paint, or how fast to paint. One only allows. In that allowance, speed happens naturally. There is no hesitation, no correction, no fear of mistakes—because there is no “doer” left.
Speed, in this sense, is beyond ego.
Ego wants recognition, perfection, and control. Ego slows things down. It doubts. It interferes. It corrects. But surrender removes the ego entirely. When the ego disappears, action becomes immediate and precise.
This is why divine expression is often fast.
Nature itself moves with effortless speed—light, growth, transformation—all without hesitation. When art aligns with the same principle, it flows in the same way.
Slowness teaches.
Speed reveals.
An artist may learn slowly, but when surrender happens, creation becomes instant. At that point, the artist is no longer creating art—art is happening through the artist.
To understand this deeper dimension of surrender, spiritual discipline is essential. Creativity and intuition do not grow only through technique; they grow through inner silence, devotion, and alignment with the divine will.
For deeper insight into spiritual surrender, intuition, and divine guidance, visit my spiritual teachings blog:
https://teachingsofparijoy.blogspot.com
Art Blog
https://parijoysaha.blogspot.com
Speed, Surrender, and Divine Expression in Art
This series explores how creativity moves beyond ego when the artist surrenders. These reflections arise directly from my lived experience as a speed painter and from the inner spiritual process behind the work.
Why God Chooses Speed for Expression Beyond Ego
Speed, in divine expression, is not haste. It is not rushing, proving, or showing off. Speed is what remains when the ego has no time to interfere.
The ego needs time. It plans, judges, hesitates, compares, corrects, and seeks approval. All of these movements slow creation. God does not function through such fragmentation. Divine expression is whole, immediate, and complete.
When speed arises naturally in art, it is a sign that the personal self has stepped aside. The hand moves before thought. Decisions are not made—they appear. There is no internal dialogue asking whether the stroke is right or wrong. The painting happens as a single flow.
In my own experience of speed painting, record-breaking speed never came from ambition. It came when the desire to control vanished. The faster the work became, the less I felt present as a doer. Speed was not something I achieved; it was something that overtook me.
God chooses speed because ego cannot survive there. Speed leaves no gap for pride, fear, or doubt. It demands surrender. What remains is obedience to an inner command that does not explain itself.
When God paints through the artist, speed becomes silence.
Why Slowness Belongs to Learning and Speed Belongs to Surrender
Slowness has a sacred place—but that place is learning.
When we learn technique, discipline, and control, slowness is necessary. The body needs time to understand form, balance, proportion, and movement. Mistakes are corrected slowly. Awareness is divided. The mind participates actively.
But surrender is different.
Surrender is not gradual. It is instant. Either the self interferes, or it does not. When surrender happens, speed appears without effort. The hand already knows what to do because learning has dissolved into being.
Speed does not belong to practice. It belongs to trust.
When learning is complete, slowness naturally drops away. If slowness continues beyond learning, it often indicates fear—fear of making mistakes, fear of losing control, fear of disappearing.
Speed arises when the artist stops protecting the self. The moment effort ends, creation accelerates.
Slowness perfects the hand; speed reveals the soul.
Speed Art and the Disappearance of the Artist
To an audience, speed art looks dramatic. To the artist, it feels empty.
In true speed art, there is no sense of performance. There is no awareness of time passing. Often, there is not even a clear memory of the strokes made. The body moves, but the mind does not comment.
This is the disappearance of the artist.
The ego usually claims authorship: I created this. In speed, that claim collapses. The artwork arrives as if it already existed and merely passed through the hands.
The faster the process, the less personal it feels. Pride cannot keep up. Fear cannot catch hold. Identity dissolves into movement.
Speed is not evidence of skill alone. It is evidence of absence—absence of self-consciousness, absence of ownership, absence of resistance.
The fastest art is created when no one is there to create it.
Intuition vs Technique — When Skill Steps Aside
Technique is learned. Intuition is revealed.
Technique trains the body. It gives structure, control, and reliability. Without technique, intuition cannot express itself clearly. But technique alone is not creation—it is preparation.
Intuition does not ask how. It already knows.
When speed enters art, intuition has taken command. Technique steps into the background and obeys. The artist is no longer choosing strokes; strokes are choosing themselves.
Overthinking slows creation. Analysis fragments the flow. Intuition operates as a single movement, not a sequence of decisions.
Mastery is not control. Mastery is availability.
Technique asks questions. Intuition answers without speaking.
Silence, Speed, and the Divine Flow in Art
Speed is born from silence.
When the mind is noisy, creation hesitates. Thoughts interrupt movement. Doubt inserts pauses. Evaluation breaks rhythm.
Inner silence removes resistance.
In silence, there is no argument with what arises. Action happens as a continuous stream. Speed is not forced—it is the natural state of an unobstructed flow.
Divine intelligence does not move slowly. It moves completely. What appears as speed to the observer is simply wholeness expressing itself without delay.
The quieter the mind, the fewer obstacles remain. And when nothing blocks the flow, time becomes irrelevant.
When the mind is silent, creation does not need time.
Why Speed Cannot Be Practiced, Only Allowed
Speed cannot be practiced in its true sense.
One can practice technique. One can train coordination. One can reduce unnecessary movement. But speed itself is not manufactured.
The moment one tries to be fast, tension appears. Tension creates friction. Friction slows everything.
Speed arrives only when effort ends.
It comes as a permission, not an achievement. The body relaxes into movement. Trust replaces control. The artist allows the process to happen rather than managing it.
Grace moves faster than discipline ever can.
Speed is not achieved. It is permitted.
Art Beyond Ambition — Creation Without Desire
Ambition keeps the ego active.
When art is driven by success, recognition, or comparison, the self remains at the center. Desire constantly checks results, measures progress, and adjusts behavior. This monitoring slows creation and burdens it with expectation.
Devotion is different.
When art becomes an offering rather than a pursuit, desire loosens its grip. The outcome no longer matters. What matters is faithfulness to the moment.
In devotion, speed emerges naturally because nothing is being protected. Failure and success are equally irrelevant. The artist becomes transparent.
At this point, art is no longer a product. It is prayer.
When art is no longer about success, it becomes divine.
This series continues the exploration begun in my post “Spiritual Progress and Creativity,” where art is understood not as self-expression, but as surrender to a higher movement.
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