Thursday, April 24, 2014

Artists And Sleep (Or The Lack Thereof)



Many artists have the habit of spending hours upon hours on an image. Some even go without eating because they're so focused on finishing or in the zone. When an artist starts to focus too much on art, so much so that they start losing sleep, they start losing productivity and creativity.

What Sleep Loss Does To Artists
  • Sleep loss slows down the brain processing power (AKA art block)
  • Sleep loss becomes a badge of honor. "I stayed up until 6AM to get this piece done!"
  • Sleep loss impairs judgement. That one thing that may be off in a piece becomes harder to figure out.
  • Sleep loss depresses people—this may be why artists tend to face depression more often
Catching Up On Sleep
Regular sleep makes inspiration and learning easier to come by. The sleep deprivation fades away and creativity surges up. Getting regular sleep may be a struggle at first, especially when deep in the throws of the next masterpiece. 
  • Set an alarm to start waking up at normal hours routinely
  • Set a time (not an alarm—you don't want to be jarred awake) to go to sleep every night
  • Take breaks from your drawings to exercise, you will be more likely to fall asleep faster
  • Cut back on caffeine intake within 4 hours before bed
The Artistic Benefits Of Sleep
  • Stopping in the middle of a piece rests your eyes so you can spot mistakes later
  • Ideas come faster and more easily
  • Depression becomes manageable with help from others

Be sure to get some sleep, it could be what inspires your next master piece.

Feature, C. (May 8). 10 Surprising Effects of Lack of Sleep. WebMD. Retrieved April 25, 2014, from http://www.webmd.com/sleep-disorders/excessive-sleepiness-10/10-results-sleep-loss

Saturday, April 19, 2014

Artistic Failure Leads To Artistic Growth

Created in April, 2013 by Kristin Lanier

Many artists let failure completely overwhelm them, to the point of giving up for a period of time or even all together. With failure, every artist has the chance to learn and grow from something that otherwise eluded their understanding.

How To Grow From Failure
  • Ask for a critique if what's wrong with the drawing is hard to find
  • Ask for a critique during the process of the drawing as well
  • Practice, practice, practice what you're having difficulties with in sketches and warm-ups
  • Be prepared to redo that part of your art—think of it as a rough draft
  • Go over past pieces that you used to love but hate now. What does it need improvement on?
If You Feel Like Stopping, Keep Going 
If you stop, you're denying yourself the opportunity to learn. Pushing through that struggle gives a reward far more fun than letting failure get to you and hold you back. 

When you push forward, you continue improving, especially when you focus on improving on the techniques and skills you struggle with. When you push forward, your skills snowball into a massive avalanche. Soon enough, your skills impress yourself as well as others.

Shaking Off The Feeling Of Failure
All artists, and many others outside the creative industry, have experienced the feeling of failure. Coming back from failure always proves difficult. Sloughing off the disappoint to move on to the next best thing takes willpower.

Keep This In Mind To Move Forward
  • All artists have to start somewhere
  • The greats became great by overcoming their failures
  • Failing only means improvement follows
  • Give yourself a break if you feel burnt out
  • On the other hand, push yourself if you're feeling burnt out only because a technique evades you
  • Natural artists may have talent at the beginning start—others can pass them up with constant practice
  • You have a support system you're probably unaware of, seek them out.

Failing Is An Uphill Journey

When an artist fails, it's easy to give up. It's harder to stick with the art, although far more rewarding. You can only improve if you stay at it—the responsibility lies in the hands of the artist.

Created in December, 2013 by Kristin Lanier
Helmigh, s. (2014). Fast lane to becoming a better artist. Retrieved at http://conceptartsessions.com/forum/29/Tips-Tricks/13/Fast-lane-to-becoming-a-better-artist


Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Review: Otherworlds: How to Imagine, Paint and Create Epic Scenes of Fantasy by Tom Kidd


OtherWorlds: How to Image, Paint and Create Epic Scenes of Fantasy by Tom Kidd presents a wonderful read and learning experience in fantasy art. Tom includes many of his pieces to demonstrate the lessons in his book while stressing that learning through imitations of an artist acts only as a crutch. 

He also asks that readers thoroughly read the book instead of simply copying the art. With my read through, the section describing why clouds appear the way they do made me have a huge "a-ha" moment. OtherWorlds has several more gems like this worth reading the actual content.

The Basics of Getting Started
Tom divided the book into three major parts, with The Basics of Getting Started as the first. This chapter covers studio setup with tools and mediums. He also covers how to stay inspired by learning from nature. He encourages to readers to go outside to draw instead of learning through reference images.

Techniques, Theory, and Subject Matter
This chapter takes a look at color theory, and has the tidbit on clouds mentioned earlier. The color theory shows how different colors used creates a mood, even when used in the sky. Tom encourages the readers to use unusual colors in the sky to your advantage—fantasy art permits some artistic licensing.

For me, this was the largest and most informing part of the book. 

Putting It All Together
Here, any misunderstandings on technique are clarified through example. This chapter shows the techniques, theories, and subject matters mentioned in the previous chapter and how Tom Kidd puts them to use. He goes through several pieces he created from sketch to polished painting.

Adding The Book To Your Library
OtherWorlds is available to buy on Amazon, or even through Barnes and Nobles, typically in the shelves in the Art section. If you go to Barnes and Nobles, call the store first to make sure the book is in stock, they normally only keep one on the shelves. 

Amazon Prime Free Trial. (n.d.). OtherWorlds: How to Imagine, Paint and Create Epic Scenes of Fantasy: Tom Kidd: 9781600618666: Amazon.com: Books. Retrieved , from http://www.amazon.com/OtherWorlds-Imagine-Create-Scenes-Fantasy/dp/1600618669

OtherWorlds: How to Imagine, Paint and Create Epic Scenes of Fantasy. (n.d.). Barnes & Noble. Retrieved , from http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/otherworlds-tom-kidd/1112140969?ean=9781600618666

Monday, April 14, 2014

Create Personal Art While In College

Getting a fresh break into the industry as a professional artist seems daunting. Plenty of artists lack to knowledge on where to start, especially those newly graduated from university or the art institute. While colleges teach artists the technical skills, they don't teach the skills to get artwork out on the market and into games and moves.

The pursuit to a creative career needs to start while going through college. College assignments don't impress hiring agents—they've more than likely seen the same assignment before. The artwork created outside of class—personal art—attracts work that an artist would enjoy.

Why Creating Personal Art Gets The Job:
  • Personal artwork typically gets more time and care from the artist
  • An artist stays inspired with personal work instead of burning out on assignments
  • The hiring agent looks for fresh ideas to bring into the company
  • By creating what artists are passionate about, the artists attract work they are passionate about. 
Making A Long Term Project Has Benefits
Cory Godbey suggested in his blog post Personal Work: Making It Count that creating a long term project with a series of pieces shows possible clients what you enjoy. By showing what you enjoy through a long term, you showcase your technical skill, your own creative ideas, and attract work that you enjoy.

Finding the time to create personal artwork may seem difficult while managing classes. Take the time to fill a sketch page a day to generate ideas as a start—the next step to create the piece is just a step away. Continuing with the sketch to finish, the piece has snowballed to completion. Then, create the next piece to your series and you have solid work to put in your portfolio.

While going through college and trudging through the workload, take the time to enjoy personal pieces. Those projects should be fun to attract fun client work. By creating pieces you find fun, you attract and build a network that finds the same subject matter entertaining.

Cooperstein, Page. (n.d.) Artists Share How They Make Money While Doing What They Love. Retrieved from http://www.businessinsider.com/8-ways-an-artist-can-make-money-2013-11.
 Godbey, Cory. (November 13, 2013) Personal Work: Making It Count. Retrieved from http://muddycolors.blogspot.com/2013/11/personal-work-making-it-count.html

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Go Outside! - Learn about the environment and get inspired



In this podcast, I talk about artists spending hours on end inside over one masterpiece saps away inspiration pretty quickly. We need to go outside. Enjoy the nice weather, and learn a thing or two that we can apply to new pieces based on observations. Once we've learned something, we can apply that to new ideas!

Friday, April 4, 2014

Branch Into Different Mediums For Inspiration

Every artist has a favorite medium, whether it's digital, oil, acrylic, ink, or pencils. We get comfortable with our tools—every artist needs to push outside of their comfort zone to create something new and amazing.
 

Switching Mediums Promotes Learning 
Say, for instance, a digital artist takes up a paint brush and tries to paint a canvas. Traditional artwork lacks an undo button, which teaches artists to paint their way out of mistakes. Some tools in the Photoshop suddenly make sense simply because they are traditional tools translated into the technical realm.
 

On the other hand, traditional artists have tools at their disposal that they otherwise lacked. Seeing and changing mistakes in a painting takes little to no effort.
 

Switch mediums for the purpose of learning and getting inspired instead of creating a masterpiece. You may end up creating that something amazing without meaning to.

 Ideas On Applying New Mediums:

  • Play with more than one different medium, one might be more fun
  • Look at how other artists use different mediums
  • If you normally paint digitally, carry a traditional sketchbook with you at all times
  • If you normally paint traditionally, try sketching on a massive digital canvas
  • Get a scanner and convert your traditional art into digital art
See Wylie Beckert's artwork for examples on crossing traditional and digital work. Also see her tutorial in the ImagineFX March 2014 issue featuring her work for further explanation on how to combine the two mediums.

Returning to What's Familiar and Combining New Knowledge 
Hopefully by changing up mediums, there's a discovery of a new idea. That idea could be textures to be applied to a digital painting, or a way to hold the stylus pen. Maybe there was too much pressure when working with graphite.
 

Anything new learned from switching mediums furthers the artistic skill and inspires new creations.


Beckert, W. (n.d.). Wylie beckert: Illustration. Retrieved from http://www.wyliebeckert.com/ 
March 2014 | magazine | imaginefx. (2014, March). Retrieved from http://beta.imaginefx.com/shop/magazine/march-2014



Advice on Inspiration by Guest Blogger Lauren Hidalgo

What can be done to draw inspiration to you when you are in the throws of frustration, which only further blocks your creative mind? This artist has a few suggestions to stir up a little creative storm. I am inspired by stories of people, by cultures different from my own, and tales of far away lands. And I am inspired by children and the way light fills up a space when a child laughs.
  

"You cannot wait for inspiration. You have to go after it with a club.” - Jack London

Daydream. 

Spend a little time in your own head and focus on nothing. Lay in a field and stare at the clouds. Keep your mind blank and relax—see what comes to you. Take a long road trip or ride a train. Read and watch the people coming and going to learn from them.

Search out the work of other artists. 

Plenty of artists often find inspiration from an iPhone application called sketchy that provides reference images for portrait artists.

Start. Just start. 

Start anything. Seek inspiration out. Put pen to paper and begin. 

“The muse visits during the act of creation, not before. Don’t wait for her. Start alone.” - Roger Ebert

Begin by realizing an ordinary thought on the page. Begin by realizing complete nonsense on the page. No rule exists that says art has to make any sense at all. Be inspired by your own lines and enjoy the process. Realize that every work you create leads up to something amazing.

Remember creating art is fun.

It is okay to make ‘mistakes.’ Mistakes can be exciting, wonderful, and even inspiring. Let the idea of imperfection cause you stress. Be brave and take a risk. In fact, if it scares you, do it. That fear, most often, means what you want to create can turn out big.
 

“The seed of your next art work lies embedded in the imperfections of your current piece. Such imperfections are your guides–valuable, objective, non-judgmental guides to matters you need to reconsider or develop further.” - David Bayles
 
Take time to develop your skill...

...and spend at least twenty minutes a day creating without expectations. Paint without sketching out your lines first if that is what you usually do or perhaps create in different discipline. Do something different.

A true artist works more than when inspiration strikes. Sit down, create everyday, and inspiration will come.


Art quotes by david bayles. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://artquotes.robertgenn.com/auth_search.php?authid=2989
 Goodreads - quote by roger ebert. (2014). Retrieved from https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/359677-the-muse-visits-during-the-act-of-creation-not-before 
Jarski, R. (2007). Words from the wise. New York, NY: Skyhorse Publishing.