If you start understanding the sides on an object and how they are viewed from different angles art could be easier, that's why you use simpler geometrtical shapes to draw structure-lines, to understand from what angle, what detail and where you'e suposed to draw that detail. That is where the use of 3d-shapes comes in.
Me too... Every time.. i got some imagine picture in my head... And i want to draw that but... When i start to draw that... The imagine is gone... Lol...
Yeah we should all find the fun in drawing hands. It's like "Draw a box" but less boring but still provides all the foundations of art practice. For me I "shed a tear" the day I my expression and head drawings made me react to the expression. Like, realizing I can draw a smile that makes me smile really really motivated me to chase big dreams.
Yes sometimes I get *really* angry when something isn't going my way I try and try until I fix it and by the end of the drawing I can look at it and say "I made this" And that makes me happy and proud Yes sometimes the drawing doesn't go my way at all and it look horrible, but then I can see what looks horrible and watch tutorials, practice what I learned and then re draw it And it makes me proud seeing how I improved
Sometime what you feel can only be expressed through violent warm colors in a contrasting cool background and the form doesn't really matter. That is True Art. An expression of your disdain and disgust of the world you experience. (I may be making this comment from a toxic headspace. That too is an expression of art, in a way)
To be completely honest, most of the actual artistic things and the stuff I do, I do it out of spite. Out of spite of stuff people think about how much I can do or not do. Out of spite of their perception and expectations of me. Of their pre-concieved notion of me. Once they pigeonhole me into only being able to do one thing good, I do the absolute other thing right in front of their face. And I do it the best way it could have been done. The second I spot even the slightest of ceiling being placed above me, I smash it into pieces. Because how dare they try to judge what is and what isn't my limit. I do not expect that spite to fuel me forever, but right now, it shows no signs of running out. Because people never run out of discouraging and shitty things to say. And that has taught me, that spite is a renewable resource.
I sometimes tell people that drawing doesn't actually get easier, you do get better but it always remains difficult to do your best. Good video Mr Pilhede 👍
It's more important to remember that it's difficult as shit no matter if you're doing your worst or your best. You don't have to be pushing your limits to be a good artist, and for a lot of people doing this, no amount of effort will ever be enough. But at least this struggle is relatable.
@@bianca3441 just scan the drawing, flip the first eye and print it out then paste it where you need it to be on the actual drawing smhhhhh so easy smh
@@scrums4748 what if they enjoy that though....nah, people who want free art should be forced to go through the arduous torture of enjoying art but being stuck in art block themselves
I am having a crisis over perspective and building drawing right now... Just dropped in the middle of a drawing because i was so angry that i couldn't get the perspective right...
Alexander Zabolotskii I'm not talking about people who vocally says "Am I an idiot?" so they can get attention, I'm talking about people who internalize this question and strive to get better. There's a difference.
i play music (somewhat) yet most of the ppl i surround myself with are artists. they can draw, they can paint, they can animate, whatever. i’ve always felt that art was so much harder than music because you had to actually cReAtE instead of just perform something that was already created. do i have to compose in order to call myself a musician? or are these two types of art both pretty hard and takes time to master just like every skill in the world somehow i just always feel like they’re more talented..
@@chloelylamusic You do it by doing it. When I started drawing I literally had to practice drawing lines. I filled pages with circles and boxes. I drew grids then drew circles in the boxes trying to touch the sides. It's slow and frustrating and I felt like I'd never be able to draw. But every week, even if I couldn't draw well, I was more skilled than the week before. The same happened when you learnt guitar. You don't think about it anymore, but you had to learn strumming before your practice made it become automatic. Put a sketchbook and pencil next to your couch, and just fill it with... whatever... while you watch TV. Fill a page with lines going from dark to light lines. Thick to thin. Squiggles. Small to large rectangles. Don't even worry about what they look like or think much about what you're going to draw. Just give your brain time to practice the physical movement and link it to how the lines look. Then you'll just want a line in a particular place and it'll happen, like how on the guitar you want to strum a pattern and it just happens.
I hate it how isolating it can feel to make art. Like when I tell my friends or family how difficult it is mentally, to draw hours and hours a day without giving in. They kinda just scoff at you saying "you don't know what real work is, pre-schoolers draw that much every day.. hurry up and get a real job". It really makes you feel like trash to have your struggles overlooked like that.
CatGirl Enthusiast Hi your art is actually really good! You might feel alone but every other artists is there for you ^^ and we’re all going through the same thing lol
Thank you all for the advice, I really appreciate it. It feels nice not being alone.. although it's saddening that other people have to endure the same loneliness.
I feel upset when I see how good the arts of my fav artists are, and I sometimes doubt if I’m doing it right. But my jealousy keeps me chasing and not giving up.
Jaleousy is the feeling that we can't have something that we want and that someone else has. I don't want to continue trying when I feel like I'm never gonna make it. It would probably be a different story if I could prove to myself that I can make it, but I can't. I'll only know when I actually make it, and will that day ever come? Who knows. Learning art is dreading.
Yeah I'm at that "I need to re-learn to do basic stuff again" stage... again... I never learned to do gestures originally. But I'm chugging through, and I can already see some improvements.
Exactly where I'm at. I think the difference between now and then is youtube tutorials and shedding the need to have things be in "my style" that got in the way of the learning process the first time.
Yeah i hate doing that stuff especially in a medium your weak in, you feel kinda helpless and it can get depressing, my problem is i draw as fast as i can without focus and end up a bit depressed and very frustrated, its necessary though so keep at it and try to enjoy it
I want to become a concept artist because I now that I’m good at it and i love it to draw from the bottom of my heart. But I don’t know how to actually become one
We are unessecary members of society. What benefit does the world get from a guy with a bad taste in music (like myself) drawing a pig with no legs about 40 odd times? I rest my case
I personally have been drawing for 12-13 years, and I’m pretty good now. To become good at art, all you have to do is have fun doing it. If you take it super seriously early on, you’ll get stressed and confused. You’ll get stuck and give up. Just try to draw the most interesting thing to you, whether it be copying a really cool photo, or making something you imagined would be really cool on paper. These are two main ways to learn, and I *personally* chose the path of imagining my own drawings. Extra stuff to read if you really want more details (because I really like talking about this lol): If you choose to draw from memory, or imagination, it will look amazing in your head, but when you put it on paper it will almost always look worse than imagined. Don’t feel bad about this, because doing it this way is really fun in the future, even if it’s hard now. However it’s easier to get artist block this way, because you’re constantly having to come up with new ideas, and if you do feel like you’re out of ideas, just draw something you’ve never drawn, and try a new style. Choosing to copy a photo is a lot easier, and usually turns out better because you can constantly refer to the reference image. People who draw like this make better art faster, but the downside is that later on you will have a TINY bit more trouble making your own pictures without copying anatomy. And it’s bad to get into the habit of always copying the same artist, because then you may develop their style instead of your own, which is fine, but not the best. And there is my little typing lecture. I hope you enjoyed my t i p s
Same, when that happens to me, my mood totally changes and go crazy around the house searching while i ask to everyone "HAVE YOU SEEN MY PENCIL????" i become a beast still i found it xD
Idk I always feel different when using a new pencil, like I missed my old pencil and that doesn't feel good, mood change. So yeah, I've a bunch of age old pencils now
Lol I lost mine I was like : who took my pencil then I probably become worried grabbing my phone and tried to call my pencil then I realized it doesn't have a phone....
Here's some tips to all aspiring artists out there: You're going to draw a lot of bad things in the beginning. That's okay. No one is a master when they first start out. Just accept you're going to not be good at the start but that with each day you practice, you get 1% better. Just aim to be 1% better. In 100 days you'll be 100% better than you were when you started. It's really liberating to free yourself of this yolk of being a "good artist". Take yourself back to that time when you were a kid, experimenting with what you perceive, not caring if what you draw is good or bad. Study the fundamentals but don't spend 100% of your time studying. Do a bit of studying and a lot of experimentation. Look at your favorite artists, art that inspires you. Think about, 'How would I draw that?' and try to deconstruct it. Pay attention to small details and really examine the relation of details in relation to each other. How does a child learn anything? By imitating older people, people with more experience. You learn to say your first words by listening to your parents talk. Try to learn like this again. Sketch a lot. I think it is better to just sketch things at first. Don't put hours and hours into a drawing, coloring it, shading it, painstakingly composing it, etc. Because the more time you put into a piece, the more resilient you will be to criticism of that piece. Fail fast, fail often. You want to fail drawing 500 heads, so that by the time you're drawing head 501, you're getting pretty good. Fall in love with the process. The fun part isn't drawing something amazing that everyone looks at and gives you compliments about. If anything that is a lot of pressure and just isn't fun, it's work. The fun part is the magic of drawing lines on a canvas and slowly seeing shapes and patterns and figures emerge. It's really something enchanting.
I wish I knew this earlier on, I ended up missing fundamentals and eventually spending countless hours fixing the issues that I've hardwired into my brain, but in the end I feel much more satisfied and consistent!
That's pretty relatable with music, but oh god, there is much easier to fix things... At least in a program :/ And trying to bring an already built mindset to a kinda similar thing, but qith a different perspective - is hard :(
@@dat4text Music is just as tough, spending a whole day writing a piece for you to start to despise it and end up tossing it as a whole. Ive just learned to experiment, and experiement alot. The more you mess with, the more you learn, the larger you build your mental library of sound, just like you would in art
“Did you draw that?” “Can you draw me?” “Can I watch you draw?” “Can you teach me?” “Can you draw anime?” “Can you draw something realistic?” “Can you draw me for free? We are friends right?” “He looks like that dude from anime!” “Why aren’t the eyes even?” “Oh! I saw another drawing that looks like that” “Did you print that?” “Was that traced?”
You just summed up my life at school, no one fucking even talks to me unless they want something, and since my only defining propeties are being able to do balisong flipping and art, its always, why do you play with knives, thats wierd or can you draw this picture of me or why do you draw that way or why my art is bad because i dont draw realism or popular styles like anime
People are so ignorant when it comes to art now. They completely ignore how it's _never_ easy, how you can only improve. "i cAn oNlY dRAW a stiCkmAn whIlE ThEyRe dRAwinG mOnA liSa!!" -for example. It's kind of harmful to other artists in my opinion. Those people now expect others to draw something *straight* from their head in 5 minutes. It's not just drawing. Imagine you're trying to lift a weight you've been having trouble on, but you just 'can't'.. would you automatically give up? I would without realizing because it's hard to remember you only improve. But.. i am trying to. Just a little rant.
Only that when lifting weights you shouldn't aim at something big, but at something bigger than what you currently can lift. But when drawing, you are always aiming for perfection, because why would you care about improving one little detail, when everything else is still a complete rubbish. Buuut, if you are just trying to draw better, it's still hard to see improvement, there are no scales that tell how good of an artist you are.
I thought I had to get my art career set up and ready to go at 16 years old cuz thats when you can get a job...so now having a website, youtube channel, facebook page, and a webcomic...I thought this because people told me I was a lazy person or a loser if I didn't do something with my life right away. I am so tired and I panic when I cant draw something, like I get nervous
@@fluffibunimadi stories like that are fascinating for me. Because I'm 20, I didn't learn shit, I have zero experience and have no idea what to do. And somehow other people have all figured out and set up by 16, wow.
@@helgenlane Im taking a digital media art class that teaches you how to do those things and I feel so out of place cuz I know too much XD I hope things go well for you, learning about business and entertainment has helped me a lot
@@soph.369 try sleeping on a futon! i’m indian so i’ve slept on a futon (not exactly but the indian counterpart) for a huge part of my life and it really helped me with my bad posture and back aches
Okay, I was NOT expecting this to expose me on that deep of a level. That’s an entire existential crisis but very profound. Good life changes can translate to good art changes. Nice.
Took me 2 days to draw a cube correctly, and a week to draw many in perspective. After a month, I now can draw environments with cubes, don’t give up, just draw but remember to study while drawing, so you can spot your mistakes and then fix them, otherwise you will keep drawing the same mistakes. Trust our boy Bobby, it is worth it
Can we all have a silent moment for all artists that gave up on making art *...* It has been one year since I commented this and now I guess it's time to have a silent moment for myself •_• (because I'm slowly giving up on drawing)
I almost gave up on art one time... I didn't draw for weeks until I got art stuff for Christmas! I remembered why I loved to draw and started drawing again! :)
Imagine all the greatest pieces of art that we haven't seen because the artist thought that the other hand is too small so they didn't post the image and threw the paper in the trash can.
"And then you realize you have been drawing wrong the entire time!" This line hurts me more than it should have. Especially because I'm a self taught artist.
I relate to this so much...and now I feel like I have been drawing wrong for so long, SO LONG, that my mistakes are now part of my "style" and I can't correct it anymore because the damage is done and irreversible T_T
The worst thing you can do when you realize that you need to take steps back and fix something is to just keep going on the wrong path. Moving back is the only way to move forward.
moving back isnt the only way to move forward. its just that sometimes its easier to move backwards, think about it, and then move forwards but differently.
depends how good at coverups you are lol. but total agreement. learning to recognize when somethings off has been a struggle. Ill come across some mundane issue and search books and videos, waste hours and hours only to realize that particular problem is only fixed by experience. not the best example, but i wish i took a step back when i could've gone to school for conceptual design...instead of thinking i knew it all.
me at quarantine : "i wanna learn art!" also me at quarantine : "i wanna learn german, piano, get those platinum trophies, play tf2, get more reddit upvotes, catch up on anime, catch up on comics, learn voice acting, learn basic psychology and counseling!" yeah. i don't know.
Lolz, same here! I end up wanting to do a bunch of things and end up not always getting to all of them in the time that I have, even at the best of my pre-planning ability! ^^; Definitely recommend checking out the basic psychology subject and expanding to other subjects from their, as some psychology/social studies studies can sometimes help explain the "why does this happen" parts in other subjects.
I remember the day I drew the perfect knee... I jumped in my bed and started crying of how proud and happy I was... It wasn't even a drawing it was just a random knee that I drew out of boredom
congratulations! the other day i drew a nose and i was so hapoy with it, even tho noses are more often overlooked than compsred to an eye and mouths and hands.
@@goldenkillzz7425 Do one step at a time, like instead of finishing the one entire eye draw the pupil on one side then the pupil on the other then draw the top lash on one eye and then the other and so on
This actually applies to anything in life where it's impossible be perfect, but it's possible to improve if you practice. Creating art, exercising, many video games, etc.
It’s hard. But it’s the most rewarding difficulty to overcome. There’s nothing like looking at your older drawings and realizing how much you have improved. And thank you, Mattias, for helping me and other artists to overcome our struggles.
There's also nothing like looking back at how much worse I've gotten, and learning from that. It's humbling to say the least. All I can do is laugh, even now 😂
@@TeodorAngelov don't worry I feel the same and I have almost ten years of experience 😂 For some reason I still feel like a beginner who is only starting to learn the fundamentals.
I'd be happy to get a "good enough" straight line in the place I want it. All the learning in the world seems pointless when my hand just won't put the line where i want the damn line.
@@AWanderingSwordsman "I'd be happy to get a "good enough" straight line in the place I want it." Oh you're not alone. Same problems on my end. (I like the idea of a "self-help group for drawing" or something like that by the way. I wonder if such a thing already exists, if not it never will because I can't plan.)
This is exactly the reason why i dont like when someone says im “talented” because i make art. Its not necessarily talent, its a lot of hard work. It makes me feel like they undermine the amount of hard work and mental capacity needed to get to this point..
I have to differ, I've been asking my mother to help me draw stuff since I was 3 she says, she said her greatest desire while pregnant was to give birth to an artist, I think it's a talent for some of us. Noah Bradley has a similar art driven childhood
i’m proud of all of the progress everyone has made in terms of their art and it’s important to understand that not all drawings have to or will be perfect but a step in the direction to art you will be proud of love you all
Honestly. People don't need to be called an “artist” if you do art you are an artist. You don't need the society to label you artist. If you can draw a ball, a stick a dot then you can draw, you're making art. And that's what makes an artist. *An artist makes art in every form*
I say anybody can be an artist On the other hand I feel weird calling myself one because I don't know if I'm good enough for that title My mind is pretty split
Art is hard. I’ve been studying music for about half my life, and yet nearly everyday day I question my perspective. With every new concept we learn, a perspective we had shattered. It may feel like one step forward and two steps back, but it’s honesty the opposite; it’s something hard to see from your internal bias perspective. But as many of us stop, either by false expectations or you reached the point you wanted to end at, most artists don’t completely stop. Because we can’t. And as said many times before by Adam Neely, We peruse music (or any art form in this matter) because we can’t see ourselves doing anything else. We peruse music because we have to.
Took 3 years, a months of depression and breakdowns til I achieved drawing anime girl ;). Its just a matter of time and practice and learning. Follow ur dream
Just do what I'm gonna start doing from now on... draw armless, legless, faceless, bald husks... because hair is hard too. And maybe I'll throw them in a box... but like a basic geometric box with as few details as possible... kinda like a cube or something.
Davinci thought himself as the shit, Davinci would have musicians and comedians at his studio just to entertain the models that would pose for him, the guy was so good that the morgue would allow him to come over and look at dead people and draw them, cut them to sketch the muscles, teeth, organs, bones so they could use his sketches for doctor books. He was the only guy that finished art. The guy would draw on sandpaper with a piece of gold just to make to make it more challenging. He was nuzlocking art just for the lols.
@@Slouworker Hi, I study at an art academy dedicated to preserving the ways of the "old masters" you speak of. We have a large musuem section with lots of well known works. They weren't built different; The old masters were just mentally resilient as fuck and lived in a time where art was EXTREMELY high status. At my academy, some people study there from 8 in the morning to 11 at night. Those guys are bloody CRACKED. I do my art right across those students studios, and whenever I go to wash my hands I see their shit. It's actually insane. They often spend entire years perfecting a single subject. I see people who have entire mini-kitchens in their studios because of how often they are in them.Their walls have multiple life sized model drawings that THEY MADE on them. It's actually terrifying. But academy's like this aren't as easily accessible as they once were. Most of the students at this academy do it full time. No idea where they get their income, but I assume they're uber rich if they are consistently buying the infamously expensive "lead-white oil paint" for their paintings. My teacher was teaching art lessons as a past time from her college work. They attend art talks and live art shows and art EVERYTHING. Their ENTIRE LIVES revolve around art in ways you don't see a lot anymore unless you are looking for it.
@@El-de6nj true! back in the day.. if you get a chance to just draw for a living.. even for a piece of bread and old cheese.. you wouldn't stop doing that shit! just so you avoid physical jobs people back then who really became masters at art.. were exactly like kids this days who spent 20 hours out of 24 on their computers gaming
A certain youtuber told me: "Practice DOES NOT make perfect Perfect practice MAKES perfect" People tend to forget that you can also fail at failing, meaning you are failing while gaining nothing. Perfect practice, you can fail BUT you are learning, you gained something from that practice. To anyone on the verge of giving up, please watch Ethan Becker channel. That guy resurrected my love for drawing and it might motivate you too. Dont give up.
I agree with all of this except the thought that when we fail at failing, we gain nothing. We still gain something when we fail the wrong way or practice the wrong way. We figured out how NOT to do something, which is one step closer to figuring out how TO do something. I feel like it's honestly more "practice makes perfect practice" because everything is always in process and the more we try, the closer we get to finding that golden process.
You will never be able to tell if you're failing at failing or failing "well", as you said there are two different failures. It takes out the meaning of failing. Failure happens and it needs to be ok to fail and you're making even failure "complex". For me, it looks like it's an idea from someone that likes things like Coaching(those guys that say we don't need to sleep 7 hours, for example). It's counterintuitive to overthink about the failure if you're learning something new.
@Lazy Science Nerd the perfect practise doesn't mean you are ment to do a masterpiece,it means that you need to practise efficiently and put enough time into it
My new years resolution was to learn to draw by doing it every day and I'm grateful I'm still bad enough that every new thing I do is different or new enough to not be as bad as the rest.
@@LrdZanny For real, I understand your nice comment perfectly fine. I guess one just can't resist a sick 🔥 or roast, though who can be surprised with RU-vid comments anyways.
Me too, minus the resolution. I just ordered my second drawing tablet. The first is lost in Italy. I’m not sure how exactly to practice. For now, I’ll be drawing people doing stuff and using reference images for help
@@helgenlane The problem with math is that everyone seems to think that you just have to get it. That's not true, you need a lot if practice, and every time someone thinks he just "get it" he forget thé work he put in to reach that level
@@unkykun and still, it has nothing in common with drawing. Science is about solving problems. Art is about expression. Even as a professional artist, you always have room for expression and imagination. Other professions don't work that way. When you draw something, you draw it because someone might enjoy it. When you write a program, you're trying to solve a specific problem.
@@squidly3270 ye, I probably said something dumb because I speak English only in the comments on the internet. But, what I was trying to say, is that you need to grind to become a good artist, which is not necessary in other fields. Lots and lots of practice, countless projects flushed down the toilet, and so on. In other fields theoretical knowledge is more predominant. Except programming, because you can't learn a language without lots of practice, but still, the process is different.
Please don't stress out too much! Just take a break, drink some water, listen to calm music. You ARE gonna get there it takes time. You can't just go to stickmans to full detailed high quality perfect anatomy flexiable poses real life human body. It takes time and patience to reach your dreams. Try to learn different things about art each day like human anatomy, landscapes, angles, color schemes. All that stuff. So please hang in there because I believe in you.
watching it after 6 years again. I found your video at the right time, when I was really unmotivated and ready to give up. I am watching it everytime I feel down and it feels just like a hug. Thank you so much for taking your time to create and post it!
I’m one of those people who see others succeed so easily where I see I’m struggling. Makes me want to quit, the constant thought of “if they can do what does it matter if I can’t? It’s all worthless in the end.” But an unexplainable drive keeps me Drawing and creating. I want to quit once I poor everything I’ve got out, and compared to someone else who just whipped it up makes mine look like chicken scratch. Just keep moving forward; cause even if you don’t see your hard work for what is, someone else does. Someone’s always watching, looking up to you and taking in tips. It gets really rough, but doesn’t everything in life? Persevere, and grow. Wonderful video man.
Thank you! Art is difficult and a lot of people don't really seem to grasp this! It isn't like just "hey, a thought, let's draw it." Drawing art is a skill, not something that can be winged so easily. It is something that is worked up to in the same way somebody would work on any other skill. Art. Takes. Time.
yea a lot of people seem to think its something only certain people can do. in reality its something that just requires a crap ton of practice. it annoys me when people tell you "your just a natural" or "im just not good at art" when in most cases success is acquired through practice.
Yeah, whenever I ask people how long they think it takes to get moderately good at art they say " oh, 2 years?" Or sometimes even lower. It doesn't take a short amount of time, there's a lot of studying and hard work to be put in everyday.
As someone who's into mathematics and software development, which is on the other end of the academic spectrum, this video was exceptional! While I can't relate to most of the comments, the hard work it takes to constantly get better at something, the pressure you experience while doing so, and the self disappointment because you took forever to do something a normal person would be able to do in 2 minutes ... touched my heart. I go through this every single day when coding. Just goes to show how the best experiences are not unique and we all feel the same thing no matter which field of study we're in.
I wish non-artists could understand the pain that artists go through trying to draw sometimes. Maybe then we’d have less people asking to pay in exposure
"am I actually an idiot?" yeah I feel this one so hard especially while learning the fundamentals. it's tough, I almost want to just give up and do something else entirely, but I can't this is the path I have chosen and there isn't any other way except by doing the work it takes to acquire the skills I need. for anyone who ever feels down about themselves and or their art just remember that you do have a voice and it will just take some time to find it and hear it clearly enough to drown out everything else. I'm not quite at that level yet but I know I do feel something when I do draw something I can be happy about. Don't worry about how long the process is, just focus your attention towards how you can improve your drawings the next time you visit them. Never give up hope!
Esse vídeo me lembrou o motivo de eu ter começado a desenhar. Eu acho que comecei a desenhar para tirar todas as minhas frustrações da minha mente: minha família problemática, minha escola problemática, minha cidade problemática, minha mente problemática... Eu comecei a desenhar para me livrar de pensamentos horríveis, de memórias horríveis e etc. Mas com o tempo... Eu comecei a desenhar por *gostar*, e quando eu percebi que eu realmente gostava de desenhar eu fiquei tipo: "WOW. desenhar não só me livra de pensamentos e memórias horríveis, mas também me faz me sentir bem comigo mesma!" Então, mesmo que você ache que não desenha bem, continue tentando. Eu sei que só essa frase não vai te motivar do nada, mas pensa nisso. Se você realmente desenha ou fazer qualquer outra coisa relacionado a arte por gostar, você realmente deveria tentar continuar com isso. Eu vejo todo esse lance de talento como um pequeno jardim. Você quer ter um lindo jardim(talento), mas você nunca acha que tem as ferramentas(conhecimentos) necessárias. Mas mesmo assim você planta as sementes(prática) nesse jardim e dá todo o seu esforço e tempo nesse jardim, mas mesmo que demore anos para você vê as flores que você plantou, pode ter certeza que quando você vê as flores que você mesmo plantou, você vai se sentir orgulhoso de todo o seu trabalho duro, pois ele terá valido a pena! Então... Eu vou falar uma frase que eu escuto e que eu queria que várias pessoas ouvissem ela: Só não desista. Você vai conseguir, mais cedo ou mais tarde, você vai conseguir
As a somewhat beginner in art i could definitely say it is very hard and sometimes scary lmao. there are still levels i haven’t reached yet and i don’t know if i ever will i feel like sometimes i could clueless and stupid in art lol. the feeling of frustration of can’t get it right and that i will probably never get better and evolves at it haunts me
Same. Also the fear of the future creeping up on you and you not getting good enough fast enough. But I suppose if there's anything we can learn from this video, it's that it's all gonna be fine. Just gotta keep going.
Yeah I feel you. There's a moment of time when I think that I'm not good enough to draw the THING and that made me discontinue the piece and decided to give up but there's a part of me that wants to continue because drawing is the only skill I can do but decided to give it up anyways. That's what scares me that what if I work so hard but didn't still get the THING. But now that I watched the video I have a motivation on starting drawing again.
This video made me so glad I got into art when I was way young so I don't have to deal with the disappointment in my art as an adult. When I was a kid I made art that now I would think is not good, but at the time I thought it was the best thing ever made
At first I thought you meant that you literally had a dream that you went to an art college. I thought you were gonna say that you then woke up and realized that you're still not good enough and you dread the future. (lol if you couldn't tell this is my experience; you're super cool)
@@dien3745 Dream is not what you see in sleep. Dream is something which doesn't let you sleep ( totally not my words but sir A.P.J. Abdul Kalam's) This motivational statement always keeps me going ..... I learn art everyday from everything. I don't see how tough is the art .I just see the beauty in it.
Same here 😭😂 except that I studied dentistry. I actually love my work as a dentist, because it feels like I am doing a form of art, especially when I do esthetic restorations, and smile correction.
This video speaks volumes to me. I've been recently struggling with how I feel about myself and art and I kept comparing myself to other people and it was a vicious cycle that wasn't getting any better. But this, this really helped clear my mind of a few issues. Not everything is fixed but it definitely makes me feel better to know I'm not the only one who feels this way. Thank you so much for this.
"you can't be wrong in art, it's YOUR STYLE" the core of art (or life in general, really) is trial and error. You can't get better if you can't tell or don't want to know what you're doing wrong. You can't improve if you are complacent or scared of people "hating" your works. edit: i gotta say, I find your stick figure animatics very mesmerizing and comfortable to look at compared to the blob people that animated storytime RU-vidrs always use.
@@ipotatosenpai7002 objectively, no art is better than other art. of course, theres still a clear direction in which people say that your art is good or bad, but thats because of your brain. if your brain was rewired to like extremely sharp stuff for whatever reason, poorly drawn spikes would be better looking than a sandwich to you.
@@spiritdorkrai5741 Yeah but our brains work the way they do? Also I think you mean *subjectively, because some art is objectively better through its measurable qualities.
Duuuuude, feel that "having to start over" aspect. I've been drawing since I was 13/14, but last year I've had a whole new mindset shift and feel like I went back to 0. Albeit with some rudimentary skills. Are there 20 year olds who have amazing talent? Of course, but I have to just follow my journey.