Amazing video - but I kept laughing at the fact that you learned and fell in love with art because you didn’t like the AOT ending 😭😭😭
@TalonFredricks5 ай бұрын
It's even funnier when you remember that everything in AOT started because of a pig.
@Linaosaur5 ай бұрын
@@TalonFredricksa pig??
@pofromteletubbies12435 ай бұрын
Hey sometimes hatred can be the best motivation
@ronweezer5 ай бұрын
That’s what inspired me to start writing! Being a big hater 😭😭💀
@accidentalfrenchfries5 ай бұрын
I died hearing that. I’m also 3 years in bc I wanted to draw Levi a different ending
@buffshel5 ай бұрын
lol nothing like the NEED to correct a canon ending to make you learn a new skill... mad respect
@nyankrauss3 ай бұрын
Now he must learn animation and correct Berserk 2016
@mmmcrispy15 ай бұрын
making art for ONLY YOURSELF is the BEST ADVICE I could have ever heard
@Beanie_peep4 ай бұрын
Yes
@tatey98124 ай бұрын
nah make art because AOT has a very bad ending
@barrylemington4 ай бұрын
@@tatey9812 💯
@user-bf3yh6ue7p4 ай бұрын
Gen curioianwhat else do can you make art for?(from begginners view)
@Beanie_peep4 ай бұрын
@@user-bf3yh6ue7p making art for others is something i struggled with heavily. In the point of view that I needed to prove myself and prove that art was worth making.
@LeeTan1415 ай бұрын
I am so glad this ended on my page. I’ve been drawing for over 10 years. And I feel the same way about my art as you do: it feels like I want to want to create art. I remember when I was a kid I would have so much fun drawing anime characters or creating my own OCs. Then I was trying to make stories for them. These days it feels like I am chasing something, except I don’t know what. I want to be better at art, but why? To get more commissions? To get more followers? It makes me so sad because I rarely enjoy what I do and I tend to hate my art a lot now, even though it is so much better technically than what I did as a kid. But back then art was about fun… I hope we both can find that fun again,
@flux19405 ай бұрын
Yoooooooo i had the exact (or atleast a very similar) problem. I think it is simply that the "desire to create" fundamentally on a human perspective sense is that you want to create value which is currently "lacking". Look at his story. He felt something was "lacking" from the ending of attack on titan and he simply burned with the fire of using his own emotional blueprint, his own values, likes and dislikes to make them a reality. Then with the years of studying for that goal he lost sight of this simple premise. Im not saying that he should make the attack on titan ending. Maybe he even did. It is about not letting your learning process and improvement become your biggest connection to art. I recently realised that for me personally it simply was a lack of confidence and a need to please others. Please others with my skills, with my abillitys, how impressive the things i do where etc etc. I was never allowing myself to digg truely deep because first i wanted to learn more, more, more. "Just mastering one more concept and then i will start creating what i truely want". A need to proof my worth essentially. The external functionality, the comparisons and the learning became a self feeding machine with got facillitated by the use of social media which robbed me day for day of my enjoyment for art. So how did i crawl back out ? For me it was going back to synchronizing myself with the "lack" in my life. What are the fantasy/value worlds i wanted to create ? What are my true inspirations and not just other artists skills which are impressive and therefore i need to compare myself to them ? I got swept up by the learning, studying, comparing etc etc... If you dont get in touch with what really drives you you simply become an analyst. A machine of fundamentals, understanding and production always chasing the next higher skill level to "provide" with your abillitys. But for what ? For which lack ? What do you REALLY like ? Is it really necessary to gather all these skills and all these aspects if they are in the end only shallow skills which do not even help you achieving what you truely want ? For me the solution was to beeing more discriminatory towards my medium intake. Do i really like these things or am i simply studying these because they are technically impressive and i need to feel save in my abillitys to reproduce ? Was i getting blind to my own emotional resonance ? Allow yourself to start creating what you want. Allow yourself taking your time and feeling out which "lack" which "void" you want to fill with your art. From the most heart shattering painting which flips the human condition on his head in a profound way or simply wanting to draw cute cats. It is all valid and in essence the key to happiness and fulfillment in art. Now for something less abstact and more applicable: Write down your ideas, sort them by value (what they mean to you, what you like, what you dont like) without thinking about EXTERNAL validation. Then execute the selected idea and learn for that. Let your desire to express your own internal blueprint become your reason for improvement. Nothing else. This methode keeps you project and value oriented and does not disconnect your learning from your end goal. This is however fucking scarry. Now you are on. Now the game has started. You are creating now what you truely desire. What you truely want. No more studys, comissions, half baked studys for others or all that jazz. When this stuff looks shit it feels like it is all on you. No more:" Ah thats just a study, im just training, short sketch, WIP hell". No ! Finished, polished art which reflects what you want. What you are. The pressure is on. To fail these drawings which truely mean something to you will feel a billion times more stressfull then studying 1000 books about art fundamentals. But this will keep you happy. Your goal will become once again your driver. This was and is the way for me to reconnect with art. I dont know your struggles exactly and maybe im missing the mark here by a thousand mile but i think it does not hurt to share these insights. Have a nice day and happy drawin :D !
@mellodotjpeg5 ай бұрын
@@flux1940 thanks for this. it provided insight i didn't know i needed. im literally about to go make that list of ideas!!!
@flux19405 ай бұрын
@@mellodotjpeg im glad :D !
@cequ4 ай бұрын
@@flux1940Wow, thank you! I’m sure you absolutely nailed it for a lot of us. Especially when sharing art on social media it’s so easy to get into the trap „doing what others might like“. Loose ones own path … again, thank you!
@flux19404 ай бұрын
@@cequ :)
@Rose-luna235 ай бұрын
That last comment about making art "not because you want to want to make art, but just doing it", resonated with me a lot. I was an art student fresh out of college and took a gap year because my family and I were moving countries. I loved art. I loved the drawing, the perfection, the idea process and I loved the art block. But I stopped drawing. Life got to me and I completely stopped doing what I loved. Every 6 months I would end up doing one art peice before going back to emptiness and I never knew why. No practices, nothing. But even though I'd move countries often, I would ALWAYS bring my empty sketchbook, with my best pencils. And when I'd move again, I'd take that exact empty book and move once more. Why? Why carry it when you're not even using it? Is it hope? That childlike happiness when you hear the pencil scrape and slide against the paper? I'm not sure. But I love it. Today, I prepped my paper. I outlined a border :D For me, this is a milestone. I always think, rather than to jsut do. It's been eating and eating at my life in other aspects, but. Even having that happiness in what I could do brings joy in knowing that I absolutely can. I jsut shouldn't ever look back. To keep looking at life in the long run, because worrying about it now is getting me nowhere. Thank you for the video, it really helped :)
@Rose-luna235 ай бұрын
P.s. I'm always afraid of making mistakes. I mentioned I liked the perfection, but that is a lie. Nothing is and I've jsut accepted it. The prefect is in the impurities of an art piece, which is why I get excited because inherently, there's always meaning in the pieces. That bring me solitude
@sirrah24585 ай бұрын
@@Rose-luna23 SamdoesArt said something similar in his recent video about why he hates his art (lately). He was overly focused on accurately depicting every part of the subject that he was drawing, which ended up creating very rigid pieces that lacked character. I think striving for perfection in art can lead to a lot of negative emotions if you walk the path for too long.
@jesustyronechrist23305 ай бұрын
I am a computer engineer. I completely gave up on doing art professionally. I just couldn't see me loving it as a job, with the stress of staying relevant, to be an entrepreneur and market yourself constantly. I also never wanted success or fame. Only dream was to make something that people would discuss a lot. Not me, but my art. And I can totally do that without doing art fulltime. It just takes more time.
@mimi-fk6dpАй бұрын
The bit about bringing along an empty sketchbook resonates with me so hard. I did the exact same thing whenever I would travel, for so many years. Eventually, I just stopped because it would take up precious luggage space. But recently, I've gotten the spark back, even if it's just a fraction of what I felt when I was a teenager. I've drawn more this year than I have in the past 6. I think I'll bring my sketchbook with me on my next trip. :)
@Aeo2675 ай бұрын
As a nonfunctional member of society, I also draw 6 hours a day, desperately trying to get better. I’m going on this same journey and have come across a lot of the same things. I’ve finally started just drawing or painting something if I got the thought in my head to do it, rather than thinking I’m not ready for it, and have to do more studies first. I started learning art because I love it. Then, it became a necessity-the only job I could or would pursue. Now, recently, I just love it again. I fell in love with the challenge of improvement and the simple act of being able to draw whatever I have in my head, regardless of my skill level. This is such a great video. I’ve also been losing my mind for the last two years, and probably longer if I’m being honest. But my obsession with art practically keeps me alive. I can’t wait to see more from you, good luck!
@Chrisbernier_art5 ай бұрын
Man it’s good to see I’m not the only one losing my mind in this process😂. I’m 33 and decided I was going to dedicate my life to art 11 months ago. It is definitely a roller coaster. Like you I’m in love with the feeling of improving. I’m really hard on myself and sometimes focus too much on the technical side of things but now I’m trying to improve with subjects that have meaning to me. Just wanted to say we’re here together🫶🏼
@odytimesthree5 ай бұрын
Bro the ending... When you talk about your art journey long enough, it ends up being a therapy session. Loved this video. I loved the part about finding value in authenticity and passion. It's a rare thing. I hope you get your mind back bro, unlike Edvard Munch.
@MikaHyx5 ай бұрын
Not me clicking this video to learn as much about art as I can, only to discovered why I’ve been demotivated and irritated by making my art and now idk what to do next because I’m so burnt out and stuck 😔 lmao
@asrii56444 ай бұрын
Same
@itshel26773 ай бұрын
making art makes me suicidal. not making art too guess I'll die better that way
@drewdonovan34443 ай бұрын
Take a few weeks or a few months not making any art or and when you comeback youll know if you want to continue or not
@1queijocas2 ай бұрын
Jezz… stop clicking art videos then, you feel bad cause you keep comparing yourself with others. Come back to these videos in 2 years after you’ve got plenty of practice
@casstitudyАй бұрын
DID YOU DRAW YOUR PFP
@4444Paranoia44445 ай бұрын
the autism part killed me ahaha it's so relatable. Thank you for keeping that last part. I started watching this because I stopped drawing for about 2 years, and I thought it would be a good thing to come back to the basics and study a little bit until I get the will to draw something for myself again, but I ended up gaining insight on my art block too. Reality sucks, man. I wanna go back but don't want to give up being a so-called productive member of society
@moumou-t1y4 ай бұрын
damn @22:24 ..."copies are good for learning but when you only do those you forget, you can do more than just a copy. You lose the confidence." been doing so many portrait paintings of reference photos that what i thought ive been chasing the satisfaction was not because i made it, is because i was able to paint it exactly the same as the picture, which is also discouraging at the same time cuz its not something that screams authenticity. Kind of reminds me of how my mother would always say everytime i show her my "art", "why would I need to look at your art if i could just look at a picture?" hurts a lot because it is true. "The discipline of an artist is not to push through when its not fun but rather to find ways to make it fun" I will forever remember that, thank you for making this video. You reminded me of how much I love art in the beginning because it was fun, it made me happy.
@okchvmali4 ай бұрын
“i want to make art that captures the love for beautiful things” love this sentiment. and nothing you did was garbage. don’t be hard on yourself. this video did a lot to inspire me. ty
@RazorTrap5 ай бұрын
10:50 that moustache man right there, is the best joke I've encountered this month 😂.
@muntajiboddinkhatib89004 ай бұрын
Oh.... Was that Austrian painter reference... Oh...oh i did not realise that till I read ur comment😅
@MintBunHunter4 ай бұрын
This sits in top 3 artist jokery
@jeriemiahborela44334 ай бұрын
it caught me so off guard lmaooo
@heckinguy5 ай бұрын
Im so inspired by this video. i think your brushwork and composition and lighting are gorgeous, but im rooting for you to find passion again!!! i can't tell you how long ive felt the same way you have, i wish you the best
@heckinguy5 ай бұрын
ive been drawing since i was a kid and im still not the best at any of the fundamentals. im nowhere near as technically skilled as i want to be, but this video helped me feel better about just enjoying the process. i really love it
@Sentientincense4 ай бұрын
The part about getting the correct feedback is so true! As someone who went to an art college, teachers can make you hate art and the feedback they give you is often destructive- both to your art and to your mental health. Love your outlook on the learning process!
@abirinshl5 ай бұрын
hey man this video felt genuine and i enjoyed to hear what you have to say about losing the mind to art it really sound insightful
@ZIRKKeoe5 ай бұрын
Holy shit I love this video so much, the words “wanting to want to do art” have been my life for the past year. It’s difficult wanting to be better, seeing how far your art needs to grow, and wanting to grow it for the things you want to create. But by the time you’ve gotten there you’ve forgotten how and why you wanted to make those things, how to make something real. Sometimes I get glimpses of passion and a want to work but it’s hard, everything about art is fleeting and impossible to capture twice. Anyway yeah this just resonated with me a lot, thank you for making an honest video about how your art journey has gone, I don’t think I’ve ever heard another artist be so candid about they’re experience
@UkoKoromi5 ай бұрын
Man, 32:49 could easily belong in an illustrated version of Game of Thrones. The jump in quality after you started drawing skulls and learning proportions+perspective+anatomy is actually crazy. The expression some of your pieces have is insane too, kudos for that. Loved the video, it was very real. I've been drawing for about a month now and i'm just focusing on all the face fundamentals (currently reading Loomis's book) and it's painful lmao. I've never been an artistic person so the motivation for me is the challenge itself, but it's a brutal rite of passage everyone has to go through to create meaningful pieces. This video gave me hope to endure it, otherwise i'm not going to make art that feels authentic to me. Thanks again.
@argie56345 ай бұрын
I really like how much time you took pointing out that fun/passion has to be the backbone of art making and sacrificing that for anything is a sure way to lose interest/burn out.
@cheju-hz3jp5 ай бұрын
i'm insanely insanely impressed with your progress. usually i just listen to youtube videos on the background but i sat and watched this the whole way through, eyes glued - the changes were gradual, but also stark enough that if i looked away for a minute i'd audibly go 'holy shit' when i glanced back. on the point of passion, one thing that caught my eye was at 28:40 - the metal/chains are SO well-rendered, but you're talking about how you were doing portraits and not really loving it. it’s so clear where your passion actually was! reminded me of earlier in the video when you mentioned that wanting to learn to render swords/armor was a huge breakthrough point for your improvement, and how chasing that passion led you to understand lighting so much better. it all tied into your point about burnout, which i thought was a great thesis of this vid youtube is an art form, but one you're clearly also very good at!!! amazing vid overall, got a sub from me 🫶
@badjaune5 ай бұрын
This video made me cry man especially at the end...I relate a lot to what you've said and it's quite similar to my own art journey. Just subbed, I like slower paced videos like this because it's a lot easier to digest tbh, anyways I wish you luck on your journey moving forward!!
@biwan10004 ай бұрын
🦖raahhh
@copicmarker10213 күн бұрын
crybaby
@glebbaranov78015 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing your experience. I had mental problems when I was a teenager. So I tried to drawing everything what’s around me, and not focusing what’s inside me. And I realized how is beautiful world around me. To understand yourself you have to look around. Art is language, and good to know it well. And it’s not about technique. Contemporary art is the key. Sorry for my English
@samcloudies58435 ай бұрын
Thank you for adding the ending. It resonates with me. And as you siad poplecznicy really care when soul put into it (unlike ai art), that last 3 minutes felt like deep from your heart
@samcloudies58435 ай бұрын
And it so true about caring social media, analysing other, stilling their strategies, caring about the views and likes. I wonder how the people who draw the stories for years, how they kept being emerged into the characters and plot, that might be insane focus. I wish you to get back to you initially desired path!
@VanderkatPaints18 күн бұрын
Thank you for this beautiful and honest video. I myself have been making art on and off for years (not professionally) and I have struggles similar to yours when it comes to "am I enjoying what I'm doing?" "why am I doing it?" "where's my fascination with art that was there when I just started?" - it's still there but it changed a lot. Your video made me think about what to do next. I haven't been drawing from imagination for years. I've been doing a lot of plein air (I'm into landscapes) and I feel like while I'm learning a lot from plein air its still copying, only from nature and not from a photo. So where am I in this? Sorry for the long comment, I just want to thank you for making me think and I wish you a lot of luck and I hope you find yourself again with your new skills in art. In fact I know you will.
@aidanhanson87495 ай бұрын
Dude just keep drawing and dont worry if its the right thing or not. As artists we go through phases. Phases of passion, analysis and recovery. You went through a MAJOORRRR phase of passion. Sounds like you're either in a phase of analysis or strongly fighting a recovery phase. I got out of art school last may and although i still make stuff ive given myself a lot of time to recoup after 4 years of making art 20-40 hours a week. A phase of analysis is okay, its alright to focus on fundamentals like a student and maybe not constantly work on passion projects, itll help you in the long run. I think youre doing a good job and a lot of people are seeing valur in your recent work.
@vince-13375 ай бұрын
27:48 Because you see all errors that you don't catch the past few years. It's mean that you improve a lot and understand what you need to focus on next. Art is marathon, not a sprint. And you make great improvement in just 3 years. Keep it !
@poofy88565 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this video, it felt like a hug from someone whose been through struggles and wishes the best for others. I hope you will be able to find the passion you once had again and know that time is in your hands
@twotruckslyrics4 ай бұрын
this video felt like a warm hug, ive been struggling a lot and just,,, ❤❤❤ (side note i feel called out hahah, i used to draw so so much every day every week)
@zorock17 күн бұрын
Your landscape paintings convey emotions, even from the beginning. Truly beautiful.
@valeriaaraujo99625 ай бұрын
That's relatable. I used to try to imitate what other bigger artists did, going for the same subjects and style as them and that made me so miserable I felt myself slipping into an art block in my first year learning how to draw seriously. It actually took me a day doodling fun little character from imagination like when I was a kid to start to like to draw again. And time and time again I realize how import it is to draw what you love, what you think is fun or interesting. You have to find a fine balance between doing what you really want and doing studies because if you get stuck only drawing stuff you are not interested or boring studies oh boy, there's no fast way to kill your will to make art.
@aroorooroo3 ай бұрын
I feel this! I have a problem where I compare myself to others and think “What should I draw that other people will like?” And try to do all this planning and everything, and nothing really comes out on the page. Yet when I just sit in front of my sketchbook with no plans except my pencil, eraser and a podcast, I am able to create work I am so genuinely proud of and love. And those are always the works of art I get told look the best too!
@111annabelle19 күн бұрын
thank you so much for leaving in the part at the end. i’ve also been struggling a lot with making ‘real’ art, stuff that is genuinely inspired and meaningful. you touched on something i’ve been exactly feeling and it really eats away at me. i look at a lot of your stuff and really see something in it, so it reminds me i’m not just broken. it sounds dramatic but sometimes when i can make something technically decent which people compliment, but emotionally/conceptually dull, it feels like there is a real block inside me. it’s like i don’t know something which all these other great artists know. that’s not true though, because great artists make stuff about what they care about or feel, and i am definitely capable of caring and feeling. anyway, it’s just good to know other people making art go through this - and that the most important thing is to keep making out of enjoyment, not just to be objectively successful because that is what makes it dull.
@knightofthetime5 ай бұрын
Man you spoke of nothing but facts. I am in the exact same spot as you. I've been drawing faces my whole life and I am pretty good at capturing accuracy. People mostly praise my works because of the faces I draw. I am fucking terrified of drawing without a reference. It's like walking in the darkness and trying to find your way forward. Since I've started using them I improved a lot but also completely forgot a lot of things. My mind goes completely blank. And it shows in my drawings too. I've been drawing since primary school and now I am about to leave college. And I was stuck in practice cycle for years. I never used colour or ink. I told myself I am not good enough to finish anything and was just grinding portraits and some "fundamentals". But you have to actually finish things to be good at well, finishing things. I am finally trying to use colour this year and even though it looks terrible I am having fun. You've improved a lot in these few years and I hope you find joy in drawing again. Thank you for this video
@Sweetestcashew5 ай бұрын
I miss videos like this that are slower paced and arent heavily edited. Thanks for sharing!
@theeantagonist3 ай бұрын
i know right- i really hate those art "tutorials" with a lot of irrelevant cuts and clips of memes??
@katrinah18522 ай бұрын
As someone who has been drawing for like 10+ years now, you're doing fine. You've made a lot of progress in just 3 years, your painting are beautiful. It's okay to hit a plateau in your progress, it happens a lot. In fact you'll encounter them many times in your art journey, not all your progress is going to be straight up sometimes you gotta go sideways if that makes sense. Take these times to think about things you want to do with your art and the things you already like about your art. It's good that you're diversifying your mediums, digital art can do a lot but there's a lot to learn using pen and paper. Good luck with your art journey, you're gonna be ok 👍
@elellellie5 ай бұрын
this is just insanely inspirational, the way i gasped at your improvement! it honestly makes me reflect on my own journey and the fact that i really could’ve been doing more for myself in the year that ive been learning… forcing myself to sit down and do studies made me unmotivated to draw, drawing to post on social media had the same effect, i had cool ideas for projects and illustrations but i was holding myself back because i didn’t feel good enough to do them. but this video brought a bit of light back into my life and i think you should keep up the great work! i also rarely comment on things.. but this video really left a mark for me thankyouu🙌
@nino-lg2pp3 ай бұрын
those flowers at 33:22 are gorgeous 😭 also i love your leyendecker(?)-esque ones. the gorgeous pastoral flower fields and timeless clothing and delicate hair. i hope you find your way again and truly draw from imagination! i majored in graphic design due to overlap with hobbies and graduated; took some illustration courses. in terms of technical skill, i was good especially with references, but i had zero imagination. none whatsoever. and i had zero interest in my hobbies in the last years of school. it's back now that i don't work in that field. imagination is a gift. draw what you love.
@ingrida11212 ай бұрын
I am a traditional painter, and I can tell you, you can learn values separately from colour. It works like layers on photoshop. First paint gray scale painting, wait it to dry completely, and the glaze it with transparent colours layer by layer letting each one to fully dry. It is a old masters technique of oil painting and it is being used for hundreds of years.
@fleakiller200414 күн бұрын
this is the best video i have ever seen in my entire life. thank you so much. i was falling into a death spiral hating my art and losing my goal, this brought me back to where im supposed to be
@Peidro645 ай бұрын
This is one of the realest fucking videos I've ever seen, I greatly admire the vulnerability displayed near the end. Nothing but love and respect and you've given some great insight, rooting for you man
@FC-os1mm3 ай бұрын
A really vulnerable comment on art and the self. Thank you for sharing!
@mixnmatche86295 ай бұрын
I resonate so hard with this. I used to draw so much when I was younger and obsessed with the characters I had in my head, but now I just feel so much frustration when I force myself to find a reference and draw it, I do it because I want my art to look better and more accurate, but it sucks all of the fun out of it. Its hard to get back into the groove of just creating art that you love and not worrying so much about the technicality of it
@CrispyCrepe224 ай бұрын
This video really spoke to me. As a fellow person with autism on her sixth year of art block, I've been beating myself up about how much I could have improved by now if I was drawing consistently. The fact that you improved so much in only 3 years is mind-blowing. The most I ever drew was when I would roleplay with my friends in middle school, creating silly OCs with intertwining stories. Now, I have to force myself to draw and it doesn't come naturally anymore. Your video has inspired me to keep trying to find new ways to make it fun. I was never happier than when I was regularly drawing.
@nithyasriram212375 ай бұрын
I appreciate it that you shared this video, and improving in art requires discipline more than any other factors. As an artist still learning the fundamentals, I relate to you. I have experienced art block, and doubted my creativity. I beleive that to do creative art, you should learn the fundamentals and apply them. I agree that storytelling requires thinking skills, but so is applying the fundamental knowledge. Instead of dwelling in thinking about your lost passion, try recreating the stories by applying your knowledge. Maybe take a break for a while and get back to drawing. Your mental well-being is important too. You did a great job with the fundamentals, and I wish you good luck in your journey. Hope this helps! :)
@Justaperson-on4mx4 ай бұрын
This video is so real i love the end bit. Im self taught and just doing art as a hobby (ive only been drawing people for like 2 years) so i at first was really jealous of how you were actually studying and talking to a mentor and generally had a rigorous approach bc i just draw fictional characters i really like and occasionally watch yt videos if i want to learn something specific. While i draw around five hours a day and ive improved a ton in faces, anatomy, poses, clothes/folds, and just started not hating my digital work (im mostly a traditional artist but its my goal to be equal in both), but i dont have the discipline to really study things like backgrounds, objects, the technicalities of lighting/rendering, and perspective, and you inspired me to branch out! But more than inspiring me in studying and stuff, youve inspired me to make a story that i love because it can push me out of my comfort zone while making me actually WANT to do so. Thanks for being real and youll get through this rough patch and find something-maybe another story of your own-that inspires you as well ❤(edit: i just saw you made a part 2 and you’re already planning out a story thats awesome!!!)
@kjvanwartberg8439Ай бұрын
the painting at 16:30 is so good and kinda hit me like a brick cause you can see all the different concepts you picked up over the time. and in this one they are all at just the right place in just the right amount. for example the blur of closer objects was in some of the early paintings too, but it didnt belong there yet because the rest was still a bit janky. and the chainmail texture was used before as well but never in a framework that didnt make the texture brush stand out way too much. this skeleton infront of the headstone made me stop the video and actually just admire the painting for a minute. good work!
@HariboWormPlsSaveMe5 ай бұрын
This was more entertaining, inspiring and helpfull than i thought when i clicked on it. I just wanted to have something on in the background while eating, now my food is cold. Thank you for making this video and talking so openly about your struggles and how you overcame them. Maybe i need to start painting again *-*
@coralieash12 күн бұрын
Thank you for the vulnerability and honesty. As an artist and maker I feel very strongly as you do. It is so easy to lose track of our heart and passion when we try to make a living. I am trying to get out of this uncomftable place too, and my "plan" is to 1. make things I haven't done and made time for (like paiting folk motives on my wall) because I was too afraid to do it or it was not a priority 2. try to consume less (social media, film etc) and/or prioritize things that give me a sense of wonder, that really inspires me. 3. reconnect with the crazy exciting idea that feel out of reach (make a video game, animate a whole sort film, create a giant tapestry) and work towards them. Trying to remember why I want to do these and keeping the inner fire alive. I love the rawness of your art at the beginning, because it has this inner fire, the need to tell a story, to create something just for oneself. I hope you kind find your way back to your inner fire!
@FERNPretendsToDraw4 ай бұрын
I started in 2021 aswell. Looking back at my art I really see progress and it's very inspiring. I understand wanting to want to make art, as a person who recently got a job in the games industry, making characters, I'm afraid of loosing the spark bc of all the corporate "that's not possible" bullshit. I just want to make good art, fun characters, sometimes I forget that and it feels impossible to even start. You're a real one for leaving the last part of the video in.
@TwizzTBD10 күн бұрын
I don't think I've ever watched a more motivating and helpful art video. you're so real bro.
@alvinadesir580112 күн бұрын
Dear Frej… you have saved a lot of people from taking the route from need to want, pulling the ego away from the pits of hell 😂 to the path of simplicity… that may sound stupid but I think you’ve touched soooo many hearts with your testimony……. Touched my heart … my 3 month all new to ever picking up a pencil and drawing… I love it … I don’t know why I love art all of a sudden but in this moment, I do and I can’t thank you enough for showing me that beautiful hill ahead, that I think I would have started running up it and begun to hate the feeling of that internal strain… instead of taking in the view the joy the inspiration and passion, beauty.. … I want to be good/ really good at drawing/painting… and I know how to burn myself out… thank you for saving me 😂❤❤❤
@igorastakhov84445 күн бұрын
Thank you a lot for sharing your journey, feelings, insights, and advice! I am sort of a burnt out teacher, with about 8 years of work experience, who left the job. And trying to find my true way in life. Working as a CNC machinist at the moment, just to sustain myself. It’s fine but there’s definitely something else in life I want to do. Art is one of them. I’ve had some inclination to it since the very childhood. But unfortunately I didn’t apply it anywhere. It makes me sad, knowing there’s a whole side of me I do not know. Trying to learn how to draw now. Though due to my psychological challenges I am being inconsistent. Not really thinking about making a living as an artist. My main goal is to learn myself, free my artistic side, and express myself. Your video just felt comforting for some reason. And I decided to share something about myself. Thanks again!
@hugoruix_yt99524 күн бұрын
I love how you tackle this video. Focusing a lot on the phycology of the learning process. Which I think is what sets 90% of artists back
@e_nigma_3 ай бұрын
THANK you for posting this vulnerable and so meaningful video. The artist's descent into madness is a real thing but that's when you know you have found the right path. You are thinking and questioning and this had led you to realise that art IS the journey. Not the clicks and algorithms and thumbnails and all that meaningless crap everyone is so obsessed about. Making something that speaks to your soul is the true purpose. You are not lost, you have found the path, sending love to your journey, it will last a lifetime!
@Angel...............5 ай бұрын
Lesson learned, the "nerdy loser" in us have had all the answers all along. But really, I have also struggled with learning to actually enjoy making art again. it reminds me of a saying I heard that cracking an egg from the outside is destructive but Cracking the shell from the inside is creation. I don't remember it in detail but I think that with this making art for external resons to get better, to make a living and follow trends is more destructive whilst internal reasons like doing it cause you feel like it and are passionate, or you want to make a better ending for a show you like, those types of resons are nurturing your art in a good way.
@jeaninet35254 ай бұрын
Understand the struggle. I was doing alot of comms and was burning out, i didnt particularly enjoy doing most of them, but some of them, when i pushed my boundaries and took on a challenge i was afraid of, i look back at fondly. I took a break from commissions, and am back to doing what i love (alot of fanart) while i am struggling in my personal life. So i just drew what i was feeling, or drew what i wished would happen to help me process it. It feels so good, to just draw whatever i want, post it, and not care about the likes. Its a journey, its all up and down, but pat yourself on the back, you put in the work, and thats something to be proud of, something that takes grit and tears. Hoping you get better days!
@axelnebula69754 ай бұрын
An inner working of your mind actually what is missing behind those "How to improve" videos that feels ingenuine and soulless. Im glad you made this video which i may not have learned art but i learned how to love art
@yrnblc3 ай бұрын
You said you want to create something "real" , let me tell you bro, this speech was VERY real. And relatable. Proud of you, don't give up.
@leninouche450824 күн бұрын
From my experience with art, moments of demotivation like the one you are describing at the end usually come before a breakthrough. They are tough, but feeling dissatisfied with your art sort of forces you to identify the cause and come up with solutions. And after some more messing around, you will find the key to unlock the next stage of your progress. If you only keep trying (which is the hardest part)! I was really struck by the almost ethereal elegance a lot of your paintings have (specifically the full-body studies,) and to me it looks like you have a good portion of the initial skill-learning-curve behind you, and now just have to unite what you learned with the passion you are looking for. It takes some figuring out, but I really hope you keep going because personally, I really enjoyed the work you showed in this video (as did many others judging by the comments!) And I would be curious to see what kind of stories you come up with in the future and how your skill will develop from there! Art can be a pain, but ultimately it's all about translating those worlds you build in your mind into reality, and sharing even an imperfect version of that world with other people can be one of the sweetest experiences ever.
@Ohblioh15 күн бұрын
Wow. The improvement in skills and your emotional growth are breathtaking. I liked the end best of all even though it felt negative to you. Because I can see clearly that you’re just going through the doldrums and that you will emerge from this and have a leap in skills and move to a new phase. You’re growing the eyes to see. To be a great artist. And you will get there. Never stop learning my friend.
@lorak.402324 күн бұрын
I really enjoyed the video and your progress is immaculate. One thing I commend you on and appreciate is your honesty. You didn't try to deceive or sugarcoat certain aspects of your progress and that made me enjoy watching your it even more.
@aidanhanson87495 ай бұрын
Take a look at Araki's story, the author of Jojo's, hes very very analaytical and flips between working on passions and working on the fundamentals and foundational aspects, even if it wasnt exactly what he wanted to think about.
@kittymooney15454 ай бұрын
wow this is such a beautiful beautiful video. im also autistic doing exactly what you did your second year focusing on allll the different skills (how i ended up on this video) and this was an incredible warning not to get too wrapped up in the technical stuff and keep balance in my life. i just got a scale tattoo to symbolize my love for balance a couple weeks ago i think its the key to this world and this video really really felt like my future self coming back to warn me to have fun with it and focus on that aspect. the way you speak is so similar to the voice inside my head its comforting im so glad you went off that script because i needed to hear that message. youre following your authenticity and being vulnerable and thats an incredible thing, youre SO right about the inherent value if authenticity and i just wanted to leave you a comment thanking your for all of the value its given me today. dont be so hard on yourself clearly youre finding your way and doing what you need to be and your art is absolutely beautiful!!! youre blessed with the skill (and hard work put in) to create this beauty now is the easy and fun part!!! growing the skill of imagination! and i would love to see more videos of the new stories you come up with having all the knowledge you do now. dont hate on the weird version of yourself that used to exist outside of the real world, that is your core and you need to find BALANCE between that person and the person making this video thats come back into the real world and made friends and everything. let them exist in harmony. omg sorry for the dump on your post you just helped me so much i want to do what i can to help you, if this does. just a little encouragement youre doing amazing!!!❤
@Ma-wv9bn16 күн бұрын
You were coping others and that was important for your growth. You went through a crisis that is inevitable on any path to authenticity. You are doing great
@Sto_be3 ай бұрын
from an aspiring artist of a little over 2 years, thank you for keeping it real and reminding me to stay true to myself, its a breath of much needed fresh air
@Obatalakali23 күн бұрын
Very real ending , loved the video. It’s all a process, I better understand that now. Thank you for sharing and being vulnerable.
@antwoolph2 ай бұрын
Really good video dude. Very cathartic. The struggle of wanting to want to make art, wanting to succeed, wanting to make money with art, becoming obsessed with painting portraits, lots of the things you did were mistakes but they also work just as well for bricks in the walls of your personal accomplishment as the successes that you've also had did. It's totally normal to want your art to be good enough to be easily read and interpreted, to have that eloquence at the tip of your fingers to convey the pictures of your mind, it takes grind, grit, sweat and tears but it's all worth it as long as you listen to yourself to realise where you've gone astray. You've got a great video and great introspection on yourself. You'll be good man.
@eikebraselmann43065 ай бұрын
Fantastic video, dude. You’re showing great insight, honesty, and ability to self-reflect. Most artists (though not all) flirt with madness every now and then, so that’s to be expected. But I do feel that you‘ll be able to handle that and come out stronger. Very much looking forward to your development now that you’re looking into figure drawing and perspective, what you‘ve learned so far looks more than promising! You have a great way of handling the play of light on dresses and skin, if you develop the other fields to a similar extent, you’ll be a beast in no time. Keep it up!
@RA3M1Ай бұрын
hey man, i really enjoyed listening to your journey and seeing your progress. i've been hobby drawing since i was a kid, but with no dedication or real focus, and hearing your struggle and passion and commitment and uncertainty really helped me want to set a more clear path for myself. i really appreciate your authenticity here.
@lilyhestia7714Ай бұрын
Your honesty and authenticity at the end made me subscribe.
@MOTOCS2375 ай бұрын
i loved the vedio your so inspiring i watched it from beginning to the end i loved every second of it and i loved seeing how you improved at art i hope you all the best and i hope you find your purpose in making art
@verystrselemaon75734 ай бұрын
I hope you never delete this video because it has helped me in a way I cannot comprehend right now. Art was mostly all I did for a long time but ever since I started chasing wanting to be better and even went to a college for it, I got extremely self conscious and lost my interest to the point it’s difficult to lift a pencil now. But your words and some discussions in the comments are helping me with new insights. Thank you.
@keisempire77195 ай бұрын
Thank you for showing us this! Theres not many videos showing an artists whole entire learning journey. Its so valuable to have such a well documented learning period.
@Naidoesnerdstuff5 ай бұрын
The rant at the end gave me so much insight. As someone who's been drawing to become an artist for 7 years now, I've recently been getting worse, and people don't understand why I say that because my art is still getting better, but my motivation and love for art is so much less. My most creative art was the worst, because it was before I would stress about my techniques and compare my art. I think I realize now what makes the most inspirational artist different isn't the art itself but their meanings and motivations, like you said, their authenticity. This video is amazing, I'm so glad I found it by chance and I really hope to see you reach your goal of giving your art more meaning with the best of luck. Thank you for this video!!
@sarahshewandagne94484 ай бұрын
The ending of that video I feel is so real- reaching a point in art where you’re consumed by the idea of being an artist that you lose focus of the “drawing because I wanted to draw, not because I wanted to want to draw” at the earlier years. We don’t talk about this a lot. That’s really touching how you’ve shared this.
@muguersoart5 ай бұрын
23:35 bro you touch me so hard in the heart here I needed to hear it. Thank you so much
@charischick2 ай бұрын
What an incredible video. Truly. I felt like you hit on so many points i have personally struggled with in a way that was so raw and authentic it just really fucking resonated with me. Many of the points you made i had to write down because it felt like you just reached a bunch of conclusions for the problems i wasnt fully aware i was even having yet. The ending especially was inspiring and your authenticity and vulnerability was hugely, deeply appreciated. I wish you all the success in the world my friend
@margareeta1369Ай бұрын
What helps me most when I feel like I'm lost on a side quest is that, whatever I do, I improve. It's like my art xp is going up whether I draw a silly doodle or see a movie. And then when I least expect it, the dam of subconsciously gathered inspiration is broken and I make great stuff. You can never really stop being an artist, even if you take a break or feel lost ❤
@ashleyleung3083Ай бұрын
What you've accomplished in 3 years is incredible and inspiring. I've been drawing since I was a kid but I lack of a lot of direction in my improvement. This video is incredibly valuable.
@nevoiya24224 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing your journey with us, the internet. The last part was especially relatable to me, since I'm massively burnt out and making art feels like a work burden. I hope you find your way back to your passion, man. Rooting for ya.
@6lbsofshrimp4 ай бұрын
I really loved this video and loved the bit at the end. You gave so many incredible quotes and perfectly captured my love, my fear, my burn out, and my journey through art. I went to Art school and got burnt out and now I'm trying to fall in love with the feeling of making art again and to get better to find a job. But that will never happen that way. I feel so much shame from the number of projects I've never made because i told myself I couldn't make them until I was "ready" or "good enough". You'll get there someday dude, you're so passionate and it comes through so clear. And I hope that our older selves can look back at this moment of who we are and laugh at the idea that are foolish now.
@namebarrett2704 ай бұрын
im so glad this landed on my recommended. i really needed someone to put my feelings into words, this is such a huge motivation so thank you. I really hope that you figure out how to get past this art block and demotivation since its so sad to see us artists slowly lose love for art.
@amanda79134 ай бұрын
Hi Frej! I loved that rant at the end because it was hella real and I've been going throught the same thing in the past couple of years. I put my dream of becoming an artist on the shelf to study engineering, and I've just recently made up my mind to give the art some serious effort again. ALTHOUGH - thanks to numerous motivational burnouts during uni I was sort of aware about the dangers of emotionless skill grinding. So I've come up with a method to work around it: Treat the skill grinding and the passionate imaginative storytelling as two completely different areas - and put as much time as you're comfortable with on the latter. Have a separate sketchbook around for vague ideas and concepts where you only draw things you really FEEL or are curious about in the moment. Like, no forcing. Take a walk, listen to music, and if and idea pops up, scribble it down. No fancy rendering. Make a stick figure with notes for all I care. If no ideas comes up, then leave it empty. Maybe today wasn't the day for ideas. For me that made it much easier to separate the fun imaginative work from the soulless grind and be fine with doing the grind as well. In the last month I've done like 58 character studies. While tedious at times, it still feels ok because I know I can take a break and play around with unhinged story concepts in the other sketchbook and immerse myself in my imagination again. And it also creates a nice concept database to pick from later when I want to do a rendered piece. Maybe it won't work for you, but might be worth a shot if nothing else. Either way I wish you the best of luck! You'll probably have a stable art career way before me haha! /Amanda
@BegTrying11 күн бұрын
Wow. Wow. Wow. I think there were a lot wise words in this video. Some of them are also new and challenging ideas. I think someone needs to be speaking from experience and intuitive wisdom to say something like artist's discipline can only stem from fun. That is bold and I hear it for the first time. Normally they say doing it for doing it and not stopping even when you feel like garbage. Finding a way to love it again instead makes sense. Thanks for this sincere video.
@pikhachu45383 ай бұрын
this video is so authentic and really a breath of fresh air. as someone whos currently struggling with a lot of the same things you are it was really nice to see it reflected here and know that its a common experience, thank you for that
@tarapogancev24 күн бұрын
"Burnout doesn't come from doing too much, but from doing what you don't enjoy" - This is accurate beyond words. Even after doing art for 10 years, I feel like the path of learning and finding motivation is constant. Sometimes I like what I make, sometimes I hate it, and can definitely say that the pieces ive drawn with the goal of simply doing a portrait study without adding anything personal to it, or (even worse) drawing for the sake of posting on social media are the ones i hate the most. What has kept me going is drawing within a specific fictitious universe, like you in the beginning did with AOT and your own story. The stories we tell and emotions we awake will always outweigh the simplicity of aesthetic appeal. I'd advise everybody, myself included, to build art skills around that goal. Prettiness and technical accuracy will come naturally with practice.
@Rp-wt7uz4 ай бұрын
This is the type of video I needed as an artist. It really does get overwhelming trying to follow the grind, the popular methods of ‘gitting gud’ at art. It’s tiring and I hate that art has become this! It was refreshing to hear you talk about your personal journey and say the most important thing is actually enjoying art. We’re all humans at the end of the day and it’s crazy that harsh critique, self-flagellation and competing with each other is usually the recommended advice to get better. Before clicking on this video, that was the kind of content I was expecting because it’s become so common 😅 so to hear about your mentor, his kindness and encouragement, your passion for creating your story etc was like a breath of fresh air. The part about how focusing on getting better stunted your creativity really resonated with me as I’m stuck at the exact same stage after finishing another year of art school. After taking a break I’m finally trying to draw based on my original interests (silly things like magical girls, anime, mermaids). It would be cool to see more videos of your thoughts as you create a piece and your own return to authenticity. Anyway sorry for the long comment but again, really enjoyed this video :)
@b0624bs4 ай бұрын
the way you described burnout was sooo eye-opening and simple. you've also provided an easy solution. thank you ❤
@aurous57264 ай бұрын
I am just getting back into art after not being able to do art for more than a decade. Trying to keep it for myself but training on the fundamentals. Thank you for being real about it. I think that’s why this video is successful because you’re being genuine. This is more than valuable advice!
@geeksunited38733 ай бұрын
Fantastic video and art, and the authenticity and self doubt at the end earned real respect. I'd say to anyone suffering from that "wanting to want to" do something, be that art or whatever it is - that unfortunately for all of us it's a hurdle in life that nobody seems to talk about. And some people seem immune to it. But you really aren't alone, and its not a fault of your own self discipline or anything like that. Fuck if I know exactly what it is, except a massive burden and source of worry. There really isn't an easy way through it, although I've found a break from whatever it is helps (tough if it's your job, admittedly). Ultimately, finding the joy in a skill you've done a huge amount might come not from practicing that skill to improve and improve - but using the skill like you would any other for something else you like, and reaping the rewards of what you've gained from it. Paint not for the creation of art, but as you say, to tell a story. I struggled with the lack of enthusiasm in my own pursuit of tabletop game design, and found the only way back to enthusiasm was the real desire to play what I'd made - even if I'd half assed bits of it and needed to go back and fix them later. It helped a lot not to want to do everything, but using the skills I'd learned to do what had been difficult and frustrating when I started, quickly and fluidly later on. It gives more appreciation for what you can do, the doing of it, and slowly helps to rebuild (or at least retain) some of the enthusiasm
@Mister_Raccoon2 ай бұрын
Bro, I have to say, the stuff you showed from your second year was really powerful, the emotional faces and the characters told a lot of story together and I was inspired for my own storytelling.
@need_more_kittens3 ай бұрын
Man I'm loving this video. And THANK YOU, from the depths of my heart, for keeping it real ❤
@hannahf49873 ай бұрын
This is the first video I have seen by you but I am excited to see more, I'm in art school right now but I have so much trouble getting myself to concentrate and start even when I want too. Sometimes watching videos about art like this help me get started though, excited to see where your channel goes
@p223155 ай бұрын
I really loved this video! It's just amazing how you managed to get so far and actually show how you feel online, because I know for a fact that a lot of people on here don't say what they truely think just to please others. Thank you for this! I am also on an art journey myself. I used to have these days where I would draw for 6 hours straight because I was so in love with art. I haven't drawn in a while now because I was so obsessed with the idea of what other people would think of it and how they would look at me and my art journey. I had always had people tell others "how good I was at art". It's just sad now to see how their reactions changed when I showed them drawings that weren't as good (because we all make bad art + I was still learning). It made me feel sad and scared of failure. So I got stuck in an endless cycle of making drawings and quitting because I thought they would never be good enough for these people. I think it's time for me to realize that their opinions don't really matter if it harms me and that I just need to draw again because it made me so happy in the past. You really inspired me with this video and I LOWKEY WANT TO DRAW RNNN.
@the_GoogieАй бұрын
One of, if not the best video I have seen on the subject of drawing, improvement, and making art and telling stories.
@vr61045 ай бұрын
Dude that ending hit home I've been struggling with the same shit of wanting to have my art seen but in turn, having it not be genuine to what I want to make. This video is amazing and has inspired me to go back and find the enjoyment in art I had when I started and didn't care about performance. I hope we can find our true path again.
@sapphicat44544 ай бұрын
this is absolutely brilliant video. it really healed me in some way. thank you so much for it
@krissfernandez22442 ай бұрын
Finished the video like a true artist. Original, genuine, and depressed.
@cd4ngel6594 ай бұрын
i appreciate the ending of this video so much. thank you for sharing that, it truly is something relatable to all artists. but our craft, the simple action of reaching out to a computer to start a drawing, of taking time off of the mundane and focusing on what moves you- is art. this action is the consequence of our soul's overflow, it couldn't be purer, be it whatever reason that it is.
@Kraut-p8v5 ай бұрын
This video is mind-bogglingly helpful man. Like prbl the most helpful video on learning how to make art I have found so far!
@juliocesaralvesdesouza1375 ай бұрын
This video really got a hit on me. Your testimony is quite similar to what I'm living and thinking about pursue... Except I am about two years before you! Maybe you won't find this comment, but just now that you probably changed the way I thought about art. Will keep your video saved for when I need to watch it again. Don't give up! I hope you find your true way again, and don't you dare go hollow!
@kumikooo25 ай бұрын
You are not a loser!! No matter if you mean it seriously or jokingly! Great video. Marco Bucci‘s video about edges also changed my art completely
@boxkat5038Ай бұрын
My main rule of thumb is to do one thing out of your comfort zone or challenging in some way with each drawing. It doesn't have to be crazy intense but focusing a little on perspective, material, anatomy, posing etc. one at a time in each drawing, rather than trying to do it all at once. Other then the one thing you're focusing on, everything in that drawing is more practicing things you already know, for the sake of fun! :P At the core of it, it's about making sure that you don't fall into an artistic slump, so that you're always having some progress but still prioritizing enjoyment! Of course if you supplement that idea with studies and what not then you'll see growth faster BUT you'd be surprised how far you can grow with my simple method.... :P Those undead paintings are freaking awesome btw... there's an audience for everything!!!