Create More Time for Your Art – an in-person workshop
A universal theme among artists is the desire to create more time for their work. This is never not the case, no matter where you are in your career and where you are in life (non-parent, parent, caregiver, healthy, not healthy, in the limelight, not in the limelight, etc.)
Need more time in your day to work on your art?
Join a FREE in-person workshop on specific ways to create more time and space for your important work.
In this 2.5-hour workshop, you’ll learn…
How to decide between competing projects and goals
How to say no and create boundaries that serve you and your art
How to get work done every day (even when the day goes sideways)
How to wrangle your daily to-do list
How to use your values to navigate the big and small decisions of your art practice
If you have too much to do and too little time to do it in, this is for you.
Artists, Actors, Writers, Painters, Makers, Musicians, Humans, and anyone who struggles to find the time in their day to do their ______ (fill in the blank).
You’ll leave with concrete strategies that will make an immediate difference in your day-to-day life.
The workshop is FREE.
Limited to 25 people.
The workshop is not being recorded. It is also not being streamed, nor will it be offered again for free.
Arrive at 9am. We will start at 9:15am sharp. We will end at 12noon sharp.
Bring a notebook, pen or pencil, and a waterbottle.
Workshop leader:
Kate Schutt is an award-winning singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer whose voice NPR calls “glassily clear and glossily sweet.” Kate has shared stages with a who’s who of the jazz world: Terri Lyne Carrington, Bill Frisell, Jon Batiste, and Bernard Purdie. She has been awarded multiple artist residencies at the Ucross Foundation, the Hambidge Center, and the Arctic Circle.
When not immersed in music, Kate is a Change Coach who specializes in helping people navigate pivotal moments of transition in their lives, including starting and scaling artistic projects, navigating job challenges, pursuing high-level athletic dreams, and confronting terminal illness. She spent five years as the primary caregiver of a mother who was diagnosed with and died from ovarian cancer. Kate’s TEDx talk has over 120,000 views and has been called “nothing short of life-changing” for people struggling with grief. She’s a two-time graduate of the National Outdoor Leadership School (Alaska Mountaineering and Canyonlands Executive Leadership Expedition).