08-29-2015, 09:59 AM
I'm kind of stuck in a rut right now, looking for some other points of view from people who've figured this out already.
When I started out, I was doing finished pieces - they were pretty terrible, but I was spending a lot of time and effort on them, mostly portraits, they could take me days to complete. However, I couldn't see the mistakes in them - I knew they weren't right, but I had no idea why or how to fix them.
When I started to get serious about art I got into the "draw daily" "study figure drawing" "study study study" mindset, and I created many more unfinished/ rough sketches.
Now I feel like I can't take the time to finish anything - things that I would have spent a week on I do in a couple of hours. I feel like I'm consumed by the thought there isn't enough time, and not actually /working/ much, more time is spent in procrastination than drawing. I have started to feel like painting and rendering are time wasting, because they come easily, and drawing doesn't.
I love painting, it's my happy place, and if I could skip the drawing part - because I'm never happy with my accuracy, proportions, or any of it, - and just paint, I'd be really stoked. But of course the drawing part is the most important. So I feel like I should ignore finishing pieces in favour of getting drawing nailed, and as a result I feel like my ability to finish anything has slipped.
How important is it to be doing studies and pumping out drawings? I'm pushing myself to do so much, but generally not maintaining the momentum, and not finishing anything to a point I'm actually happy with means there is no self reward happening even.
For example - figure drawing, I do 30 mins daily, but they are sketchy, should I be then focusing on one figure and rendering it out fully? My people drawing skills are frankly terrible, I can't get faces, I don't know how to get expressions, and when I draw from imagination they look stiff flat and lifeless, even when I start with an action line.
I'm just feeling really frustrated with myself and kind of burnt out and stretched in too many directions at once. I have works in my gallery that I look at now and I don't know if I could reproduce, it's like I've gotten worse rather than improved.
I get this is probably a common thing with self learners - the 'am I learning right, what should I be doing?' but I guess I'm looking for some validation that it'll make sense at some stage, and things will.. if not get easier, at least get less confusing and frustrating.
I'm so grateful to have found Crimson Daggers, the supportive atmosphere is really freeing, and I am starting to remember art should be fun, not self flagellation, I love art, it's my passion, but recently it's become more of a task master and a source of guilt and frustration.
When I started out, I was doing finished pieces - they were pretty terrible, but I was spending a lot of time and effort on them, mostly portraits, they could take me days to complete. However, I couldn't see the mistakes in them - I knew they weren't right, but I had no idea why or how to fix them.
When I started to get serious about art I got into the "draw daily" "study figure drawing" "study study study" mindset, and I created many more unfinished/ rough sketches.
Now I feel like I can't take the time to finish anything - things that I would have spent a week on I do in a couple of hours. I feel like I'm consumed by the thought there isn't enough time, and not actually /working/ much, more time is spent in procrastination than drawing. I have started to feel like painting and rendering are time wasting, because they come easily, and drawing doesn't.
I love painting, it's my happy place, and if I could skip the drawing part - because I'm never happy with my accuracy, proportions, or any of it, - and just paint, I'd be really stoked. But of course the drawing part is the most important. So I feel like I should ignore finishing pieces in favour of getting drawing nailed, and as a result I feel like my ability to finish anything has slipped.
How important is it to be doing studies and pumping out drawings? I'm pushing myself to do so much, but generally not maintaining the momentum, and not finishing anything to a point I'm actually happy with means there is no self reward happening even.
For example - figure drawing, I do 30 mins daily, but they are sketchy, should I be then focusing on one figure and rendering it out fully? My people drawing skills are frankly terrible, I can't get faces, I don't know how to get expressions, and when I draw from imagination they look stiff flat and lifeless, even when I start with an action line.
I'm just feeling really frustrated with myself and kind of burnt out and stretched in too many directions at once. I have works in my gallery that I look at now and I don't know if I could reproduce, it's like I've gotten worse rather than improved.
I get this is probably a common thing with self learners - the 'am I learning right, what should I be doing?' but I guess I'm looking for some validation that it'll make sense at some stage, and things will.. if not get easier, at least get less confusing and frustrating.
I'm so grateful to have found Crimson Daggers, the supportive atmosphere is really freeing, and I am starting to remember art should be fun, not self flagellation, I love art, it's my passion, but recently it's become more of a task master and a source of guilt and frustration.