This is a selection of books I find useful when I'm looking for inspiration or to browse through for a general injection of creativity.
1. The Creative Artist by Nita Leland
This book is crammed with ideas and activities to try -- its actually awesome how much there is in here. The information is presented through text descriptions, sketches, finished paintings, and some step-by-step examples. Its a book for sitting down to read when youve time, for flipping through when youve only a moment, and for opening randomly when youre stuck creatively. There chapters with ideas specifically for realistic and abstract artists. (View some pages from the book.)
2. 100 Creative Drawing Ideas
Dont get distracted by the fact that this is a drawing book, the 100 ideas can easily be applied to painting. The creative ideas were sourced from art teachers (mainly in the USA) as alternatives to familiar and overused art exercises. Each gets two pages: one for an example drawing and one for the description of the idea. The ideas are arranged into chapters from ice breakers to self portraits to unusual subjects to reconsidering traditional issues. With 100 ideas, which are usable whatever level your painting skill, there are sure to be enough that appeal to you to keep you busy for some time!3. Painting as a Language
The blurb for this book says it places as much emphasis on your development as an artist as on the work of art itself that it will help you discover content for your paintings while you are acquiring basic painting skills. Its a book packed with information and ideas, though at times it can be slightly heavy reading and its a pity that most of the illustrations are in black-and-white (color is limited to two color sections). Read it slowly, spending the time to absorb it, and youll be rewarded with all sorts of fresh and unexpected ideas.4. Photo Idea Index
If youre after ideas for composition or fresh perspectives, this is it. Its aimed at photographers and graphic designers, but isnt a how-to book but a rather book of what if ideas presented as a photo with a short paragraph of explanatory text. Youll find ideas for intriguing still lifes, for radical cropping of landscapes, for portraits, for backgrounds. Page through here and youll quickly have ideas for paintings and renewed inspiration. And if you take your own reference photos, youll find the photography tips helpful too.5. Art and Fear
I believe every artist should have a copy of Art and Fear, to be opened whenever you face a creative block, a confidence crisis, or just a general dip in your creativity. Why? Because it gets straight to the issues that matter so much and hinder our development as artists, such as why youre not painting, the gap between the potential of a canvas and what you produce, the belief that talent is essential. It'll renew your motivation and get your back at your easel with enthusiasm.6. The Creative License by Danny Gregory
This isn't a book to read while relaxing on the sofa or before you go to sleep. It's a book to read when you've time to draw, sketch, paint... I think it makes your fingers itch to be doing art yourself, with page after page after page of ideas and examples.




