nice to meet you! an art/sketch blog about nothing much
19 posts
Snoopy my beloved
Strawberry đ
So earlier in art class today, someone drew a characters hands in their pockets and mentioned that hands are really like the ultimate end boss of art, and most of us wholeheartedly agreed. So then, our teacher went ahead and free handed like a handful of hands on the board, earning a woah from a couple of students. So the one from earlier mentioned how it barely took the teacher ten seconds to do what I canât do in three hours. And you know what he responded?
âIt didnât take me ten seconds, it took me forty years.â
And you know, that stuck with me somehow. Because yeah. Drawing a hand didnât take him fourth years. But learning and practicing to draw a hand in ten seconds did. And I think thereâs something to learn there but itâs so warm and my brain is fried so I canât formulate the actual morale of the lesson.
actually this reminded me of art blindness (not sure if it already has a term, but this is how Iâve thought of it as). Itâs the idea that youâll never quite know what your art looks like, how others see it, because youâve seen so much of it and were there for the entire process so your brain has become familiar with it. Many artists wonât ever fully grasp how amazing their work looks to everyone else. Itâs not always about perfectionism, it just comes from being unable to see it from an outside perspective like everyone else can. Not a bad thing, just a reminder not to be hard on yourself. Youâre just used to it so you canât see how amazing it is!!
Itâs the same thing that happens when you grow up in a town with extremely beautiful flowers. Tourists would come from all over to see them! And youâd be confused about what the big deal is, since youâd known them so long that theyâve become familiar. Youâd still appreciate them and youâd also have moments where that familiarity drops a little and youâll see the awe-inspiring beauty everyone else sees, but it wonât be the same as it would be from an outside view. Thatâs also why artists are more easily able to judge their older art (for looking either better or worse than they recall) because itâs been put aside for enough time that the familiarity has faded enough for them to see it objectively.
A banner I made bc Iâm working on opening commissions (through vgen!!) and itâs strange to see my art next to each other like this for some reason
A banner I made bc Iâm working on opening commissions (through vgen!!) and itâs strange to see my art next to each other like this for some reason
artists, this is ur reminder to start drawing references or redesign your original characters before artfight in july this year
Appreciation post for all the beginner artists who work hard despite the AI ââlooming over us. You are fabulous. You are precious. Keep up the hard work, you are needed.
Saw a video of all these people doing super impressive sports things today, and it was meant to be inspiring (which it still kinda was, the stuff was very cool) but it got me thinking about what would happen if the way we consumed sports and art were inversed, like:
"Ah, the artist chooses another brush! Things are about to get crazy, folks." "The crimson? Oh, no, she swerved at the last moment and chose the vermillion instead! An interesting choice, we'll have to see what this does to the painting in the long-term." "He drank the paint water! This will be bad for the season, folks, we may have another hospital visit on our hands. ...And looks like he's down for this painting session."
vs.
"That backflip turned out so well! Can't believe it took you five hours." "Oh you like, play sports, right? You should kick a ball for me right now!" "Yeah I was thinking about hiring a professional, but just anyone can shoot a few hoops, you know? Plus they have that new AI thing these days... sports are just so much more accessible now."
Anyway there's a lot of interesting comparisons you can make with art and a lot of things, just kinda funny to compare it to sports especially given recent controversies I think
shit ton of people are repeating the thing about hayao miyazaki saying AI art is an "insult to life itself" and just as a reminder he was talking about the zombies that team made that were intended to be scary in how much they shook, but instead reminded him of his disabled friend. the insult to life itself was referring to the team trying to make scary real symptoms that people live with.
it was a quote about ableism. if he has said other things about AI type stuff, that is a different thing. but that specific quote was about ableism.
tw: eye strain and angst
@shadowmagegemini asked for angst and I responded âI gotchuâ đ in all seriousness this was super fun and experimental so commission me again please your characters are so fun to draw
Lots of thoughts recently. Everything feels plastic.
I could go on and on about why all that AI "art" is bad. I could mention theft, lack of creativity, it's impact on the work field and environment, but countless people have already said all that. I wanted to touch on something that to me is the most utterly wrong about all of it.
Art is more than just something pretty to look at or listen to. It's therapeutic. It's a form of communication. A tool for human connection. It's a pure, human need.
Support real artists âď¸
that new generative ai thing is breaking my heart
Oh I am in such a Dungeon Meshi mood⌠you can pry this au out of my cold dead hands.
When making the au, I knew Love had to be a half-foot because it just suits her so well. âŚit also occurred to me that half-foots are specifically mentioned to have a low mana capacity as compared to other races like elves, and also that Love would likely be a healer and thus need a decent mana capacity⌠but sometimes you have to shove the rules aside and go for what FEELS right instead.
being an artist and revisiting media you liked when you were 11 is like. oh ok. this shaped my sense of humor and the way I write characters and the way I pace narratives and the tropes I'm drawn to. and I vastly underestimated how much of an impact it had on me because I literally have not thought about it for 15 years. but it was there inside me the whole time. ok. ok cool! c ool
We were all beginners at one point or another, and we ought to respect everyone's beginning regardless of what it looks like. Critiquing another artist's skills or mocking them for being inexperienced is in extremely poor taste.
"But it could look better, I'm just giving them advice so they can improve-" no. If they want advice, they'll ask for feedback. Also, feedback should be given in a constructive and kind manner, not just an infodump of their flaws. it's called constructive criticism for a reason, because it's meant to build others up not tear them down
There are so many art babies just starting and it always gives me hope for the future of art, knowing that people are still finding joy in creating and starting on the long journey of being an artist. We have got to take care of these beginners, not crush their spirits by criticizing them for not being as experienced as the artists further down the trail. It is a process. Let them learn like we did, like we still are learning.
Birthday gifts for friends, I pushed myself with these ones because I will absolutely try anything new for my beloved friends, for myselfâŚ. maybe haha đ I absolutely adore how both of them turned out â¨
I wish *I* had a cup of soup as big as my head and no worries about anything ever
Snoopy watching me draw after a meal at a restaurant (I love drawing food)