You want to be an artist. it is a wonderful goal, very satisfying and yet very
It is a wonderful goal, very satisfying and yet very elusive. To be an artist requires self-awareness and understanding of what excites and motivates you to be a creative soul.
“Artist” requires creative inputs beyond the simple mastering of paint, pencil, and brush because to truly express yourself, which is the goal of an artist, you must go beyond the foundation of great skills and begin to find the voice or language you need to use to tell your story. It is not enough to paint like someone else or mimic their style. You need to stake out your own position and follow your own path. This doesn’t mean that the art that has come before you is not there for the taking in terms of composition, technique, and color chords. All quality art is to be looked at, studied and understood, even if at first glance it doesn’t make you want to paint in a similar style.
Look to those artists whom you like, who challenge you, and try to stay in their heads and expand your own view of what is art. Sometimes we are drawn to a style of art because it is what we feel we can do and can sell and then, without further exploration, we believe this direction to be the only satisfying way to paint. If that were the case, how sad! Most of the great art we look at so fondly today would have never come about. Monet would have painted in the accepted style of the French Salon, and Van Gogh would have been a Dutch cobbler and scribbler.
Jumpstart for the day:
Find a biography with illustrations of an artist that is unfamiliar to you and read it. Get to know the artist, their era, their motivations, and work routine. I guarantee you that if you begin to study artists, your own work will flower. Move past your comfort zone.
Lesson Follow up:
Look at several illustrations in the book and make sketches of these works and try to get a feel for the decisions they were making and why.
Dear Steve. It’s been 4 years since you posted this jumpstart tip. Then I was starting to paint, and I was only attracted by your articles in which you presented one of your beautiful watercolors and explained it so magnificently. Today I have read it very carefully and, with the maturity that I have now acquired in my painting, I recognize that you are very right in what you say and I am applying it as if I were starting. Thanks for posting it then and keeping it public today. Mercedes
Dear Mercedes, I have been working to get more lessons for you. Check out the new step by step demonstrations and also see how I have organized my jumpstarts. I’m trying to get back on board. Steve