famous Salman Khan – Salman Khan has a strong fan base who love his acting, physique, confidence, and even art. However, fame has its own set of pros and cons.
The Dabangg actor once revealed in an interview with film critic Anupama Chopra that his paintings are often subjected to unwanted scrutiny and analysis by โexpertsโ simply because he is a superstar. While recalling his first stint with art, Khan shared, โThe first painting I made was of my dog, Myson. I didnโt know anything about shading and colours.
I made him in gold and black. And eventually I have learnt it now. It has come to me kind of easy and naturally like auto-pilot, haan.
โ Can art really be made on โauto-pilotโ? Psychologists say this โauto-pilotโ Salman refers to isnโt accidental. According to S. Giriprasad, psychologist at Aster Whitefield, when a creative act is repeated over time, the brain stops treating it as a task of conscious effort.
Instead, it starts seeing it as a familiar routine. โNeural pathways associated with movement, colour selection and emotional expression get thoroughly practised,โ he explains. Over time, this allows a person to slip into a flow state.
โFlow is a mental space where they are deeply absorbed, self-critical thoughts quieten, and actions feel automatic. In this mode, painting becomes almost meditative.
The mind relaxes, emotions find a channel, and the act itself feels grounding rather than effortful. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Salman Khan (@beingsalmankhan) โThere is no single emotional state required for painting. Some people paint to express strong emotions โ sadness, joy, anger, longing โ while others paint precisely to escape overthinking.
Auto-pilot painting often happens when the goal isnโt perfection but presence. On such days, the brush moves before the mind has fully โdecidedโ, and thatโs completely healthy. In fact, many psychologists see this as a form of emotional regulation, where creativity helps the brain process feelings without needing words.
โ Salmanโs description fits this almost exactly. He doesnโt speak of planning, emotional preparation, or intention โ only ease.
But the ease doesnโt extend to how his work is received. The side effects of fame โBecause my name is Salman Khan, I am an actor, so again I have been analysed by artists and psychiatrists for my emotional conditions and my emotional status.
Ki yeh kis mind frame mein hoga jabโฆ inmein kitna angst hai inki work meinโฆ iiske stroke bahut hi galat haโฆโ This, Giriprasad says, is a classic side-effect of fame intersecting with creativity. When a public figure creates art, the audience often stops seeing it as a personal outlet.
โPeople no longer see the art as a simple creative outlet but rather as a โstatementโ made by the artist in the viewerโs mind,โ he says. The work becomes a canvas not just for paint, but for projection โ curiosity, judgment, and imagined psychological depth. Story continues below this ad Salmanโs irritability is evident as he cuts through the analysis with blunt clarity.
โAcchha dikta hai na? Khatam ho gayi baat. โ From a psychological perspective, this frustration and a boundary are natural.
Giriprasad explains that excessive interpretation can slowly strip creativity of its safety. โToo much critical observation is capable of removing the creative play and the feeling of security from the creative expression,โ he says. Over time, the creator may feel watched rather than free โ creating to explain, rather than to feel.


