Elsa Blesa

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Cosimo Galluzzi
One Nice Bug Per Day

blake kathryn

JVL
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

JBB: An Artblog!
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
NASA
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PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Misplaced Lens Cap
h
Keni

if i look back, i am lost
Today's Document
Mike Driver

Kaledo Art
we're not kids anymore.

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@oukla-blog
Elsa Blesa
Janusz Stanny
David Bomberg (British, 1890-1957), Cypriot landscape, 1948. Oil on canvas, 25 x 30 in.
Frank Bauer (German, b. 1964), Kron-Leuchter I [Chandelier I], 1989. Oil on canvas, 150 x 200 cm.
Rug fragment, Iran, 17th century. Collection of Marshall and Marilyn R. Wolf, Toronto
by 和曦
Paloma Elsesser for Lonely SS16
Photographed by Mayan Toledano and Zara Mirkin
http://thyrdculture.tumblr.com
The “If you’re not drawing 24/7 you aren’t working hard enough.” mentality is garbage.
When I was in college there was this ongoing competitive mindset from the teachers /students that: “If you’re not drawing all night / getting 1 - 2 hours of sleep, you’re going to fall behind.” If you’re an artist you’ve probably met this kind of thinking… I’ve heard it from so many pros / tutorials.
One of my professors said that line all the time. I loved this dude. he worked at Disney on many of my favorite movies, and my young self became absorbed in this mindset. About 3 years into my degree that professor had a stroke, and when he went to the doctor they said he actually previously had something like 10+ strokes without even knowing, brought on by stress, and that he needed to slow down.
Since then I’ve heard tons of other accounts of sickness and divorce brought on from addiction to work.
A few years later I was listening to an Animation podcast interviewing Glen Keane. He brought up that there were other animators who would live and breathe their work, never going home, barely sleeping, etc.
What shocked me was that Glen Keane said something like “I ignored this idea, and decided to go home every night to spend time with my family, because I could learn just as much from my life experiences with them.”
Anyway I just wanted to take a second after hearing a statement like this again recently and let any young artists out there know that:
There’s nothing wrong with investing plenty of time studying and drawing, but also be healthy.
This is important! Draw often and draw every day - its how you get better - but don’t stress yourself out! You’ll always do better work when you’re well rested and living your life. I only pulled a few all nighters in college and every single one of them was a mistake. You don’t need to do that. If you’re not healthy in the end it won’t be worth it at all.
Wear your sleep as your badge of honour instead of being a person who trades stories about how they haven’t slept in days. Your body will thank you for it.
Thank you!! This needs to be said all the time!
Good words of wisdom. Graduate school has some how taught me the same thing.
Cairo (2008) by Simon Vahala
Cairo (2008) by Simon Vahala
Benicio del Toro by Henny Garfunkel (1995)
Slowdive in 1991 by Greg Neate