Finished Art Challenge

As promised, I am writing about the art challenge that Katie Moody held in celebration for the publication of her new book, Sketchbook Joy. It’s such a pretty book and gives tons of ideas on how to fill those pesky blank pages.

I was able to finish this challenge, perhaps with some struggle, but I’m glad I did it. I found art to be exciting, meditative, and healing. I also can just doodle and who knows what discoveries that will lead to.

I found that I have really enjoyed playing with mixed media in my sketchbook. I love the different textures and how layering the different media on top of each other makes interesting shapes and colors. I look forward to playing in my sketchbook more often.

Recent Art Musings

If you have read my first post, you will know that art and I have had a journey. Reading that post actually hurts my heart a bit for my past self. It’s only been about four months now that I was diagnosed with ADHD. Things make so much more sense now. Now I can see why I struggled with just being able to do things and talking to myself gently. I encourage everyone to reach out to anyone that you can trust to get your mental health on track. It helps more than you think. It has taken me some time to accept myself but I’ve been able to be more forgiving to myself and that has opened art back up to me.

While watching YouTube videos, I came across Katie Moody. She is a full-time sketchbook artist and is about to come out with a book called Sketchbook Joy. She has been running a 30 day prompt list to celebrate the upcoming release. Surprisingly, I have been able to keep up with it and I think I know why. Art and I are healing. Art doesn’t have to be complicated, it can just be you exploring. That’s what my sketchbook has been for me lately. It’s a way to play with new media and just doodle for fun again. Also it gives me an excuse to buy new art supplies. ;)

I have been playing with Tombow Dual Brush Markers, Carand’ache Neocolor 2 Pastels, Carand’ache Luimnance colored pencils, Winder & Newton Cotman Watercolors, and various pens to create these drawings. It’s been fun and meditative to sit down to paint and/or draw. I believe that these doodles are taping me back into creativity that will help my art business endeavors. My confidence in just exploring has been freeing and I hope you can find that for yourself.

Katie Moody has been very kind in her posting on Instagram and her videos on YouTube are a great watch. They’re not pretentious and she just wants everyone to draw no matter what, there is no bad drawing. And it’s true. Just draw. My brain will overthink things, but have this safe space in my sketchbook has me seeing art a little differently. I’ll make sure to update with another post with the other half of the drawings when the prompt list is over. You can search #30daysofsketchbookjoy to see all the fun art.

Enter Surface Design

I will always love the idea of doing illustrating a children’s book and will hope that some day this dream will come to be.

However, I have found another art love: Surface Design.

My brain has been overflowing with ideas of what I could make for this new focus. This is so encouraging to me. As my previous post has stated, art has been a struggle but I’m finding that mental barriers are breaking down by putting together patterns and illustrations for products. I don’t know what it is, but I love seeing something that I have created become something that someone else could have in the real world. Can anyone else relate?

I am grateful to people who have shown me this new to me art world. Art feels free once again and I’m ready to go with it.

Find your passion and pursue it with enthusiasm.
— Anonymous

My Art History

As stated on my contact page, I have always loved to do art. The problem I’ve had is myself and I never really understood why. Some days the feeling of self-doubt was all consuming and other days it felt like I was born to do this. I’ve come to understand my own mental health, a lot mostly over the past few years. The lingering thought of “if I had known this before, could I be more now” sometimes still haunts me but it’s one I choose to push aside almost every day. It’s no longer about the past, it’s about the now and the future.

I feel like I still have to talk about the past a bit to help others. Maybe through my feelings and experiences they can see something that inspires them to do something. So, here I go.

I initially attended college to get into a prestigious animation department. I say prestigious because they only accepted about 20 people a year and you were only given so many chances to apply. I was encouraged by my professors and they seemed confident in me and my abilities. Perhaps it was me that held myself back by not sketching more, I’ll never know. The point being is that I didn’t make it and I had to move on.

I found myself a year later graduating with a BFA in English. I did find that this was another form of art that I liked. I did think the history of English literature was intriguing, but it was the creative writing that had spoken to me.

After school, however, things were hard. I didn’t know how to use my degree except to write and found myself doing other things. I had thrown away drawing because I had convinced myself what I did was trash so there was no point in practicing. This went on for several years.

I was at a point in my life that I had no career or job. I was pretty depressed, even more so than I let my family know—which is never a good idea, by the way. I was filling a bit of a void by scrolling through social media and found an artist that I will highlight in another post. I found her perspective a lot like mine and she had to change her art goals because of life circumstances as well. It was through her that I found kidlit art.

I say find, but more like rediscovered. I loved kids books when I was younger, but I had forgotten how creative the art could be. It was exciting!

Her videos on how to get into the industry were enlightening and encouraging. I found other artists doing the same thing as her (I’ll write of them, too.) and the rest became history for me. I looked around the kidlit art world and found myself gaining confidence. I could do this.

Interesting enough, I find myself now in a job that could lead to a good career. But art is calling out to me again and I have to try. It was my first love, after all. I’ll just have to work extra hard for the foreseeable future and give myself a chance. I feel that this quote sums up my feelings for me pretty well.

The way to get started is to quit talking and begin doing.
— Walter Elias Disney

So, here I am. I’m on this art journey again and I hope it allows you some hope in your own. If I can believe in myself again, then why not you?