Originally Posted by
MystyrMystyry
Ah but if you knew how much I get paid for them you would soon develop all the patience in the world ;)
Picasso said: 'Every child is an artist - the trick is to remember to be one when you're an adult' (a child he meant)
It's fun Beau - it's totally calming down and tapping into your inner daydreamer and translating it into whatever you want. You don't have to make yourself do it (or anything), but in answer to both you and Max, there's no trying harder about it, if anything it's trying less - ignoring all the rubbish in the world like what's this person doing, what's that one? What's on the news? Who's going to win Survivor? Forgetting all the electronic stimulation of the internet for a few hours and filling it with something satisfying instead.
If you don't have time for whatever reason, you only have to bother about it when you do. And as I've said you soon make time - the thing is you find you have to make time for the normal essential nothings which become meaningless after awhile.
Shopping? It becomes a few wasted hours in the day to think about what you're going to try next. The beach because it's too hot for anything else? A few more wasted hours, but you'll be ready for a new challenge when you get home.
I keep a small notebook with me so I can write and sketch ideas when I'm away from the work area (when they come - sometimes nothing for days), and it's because of them that I've tried different things. Without them I might be closer to a traditional sketch artist/illustrator.
I need the big challenges, and I want to see the big ideas in reality - out of my head into the real world where others can see them (and buy them so I can afford to do more). But also I like the materials - creamy black paint fresh from the tube sends shivers up my spine. Rich turquoise, vermilion and cadmium yellow and I get easily lost in lush possibilities. They're just such fun to mess around with. Even titanium white, which is the most light reflective surface known, gets to me.
With Bryce and Photoshop stuff, I don't actually spend much time fiddling with the program. I have the idea first and then try to work out the quickest most effective way to do it, and on the way it may be improved with a better idea or colour palette.
But the main thing is it's fun, has to be, and the farthest thing from work I can imagine :)
Anyway, I enjoyed no #7, even the Cyclops :) which brings me to a final point: Scott Adams said, "Creativity is allowing yourself to make mistakes. Art is knowing which ones to keep." which is cool because it's sort of true - you're doing something that hasn't actually been done before, so of course you're going to make mistakes.
Making mistakes is the point, the fun, they're the important bit. But they have to be your own. Whatever you do, do it for yourself first and foremost, and only if you're happy enough to show it, then show it.
(I didn't realise how long this was - it's quite long)