im not even done with the video but i already agree with the intro. studying properly with/without art school is tricky. ive learned myself that no one can really tell you upfront what to do, step by step, so you have to push yourself to do it yourself, in your own way. this video is pretty motivational, ive just realised i havent drawn in a week lol. ill pick up my pen now
Just a few tips as a sel-taught artist who dropped "official" art education: -Constance in practice but patience with the results -This is going to take time... like more than a year I calculate. -Don´t overdue yourself but don´t procrastinate.
Great advice! I’m about to start Draw-A-Box and use other YTuber resources. But ultimately I know it comes down to just doing the work everyday but also ENJOYING learning and growing my skill.
@@bobschmidt6565 ok I think we all know the person meant consistency. Regardless of the typo (it could’ve been an AutoCorrect), the person made really good practical points.
@@galaxylucia1898 I believe the person meant constancy but the word translates as "constance" in french. Thank you for coming to their defense. And your comment made me realize that I've also wrongly just used the french word when its equivalent was a little different. 🙏🏿
Composition, perspective, color theory and learning how to REALLY SEE what you’re looking at, is pretty much all you need to learn for art. Other than this, all you have to learn is your desired medium. You master this and you can save yourself hundreds of thousands on an art degree and that’s coming from someone who actually went to school for art and benefited far more from being self taught after I left doing so because it definitely wasn’t worth what I paid-and am still paying for!
Thank you for sharing your experience . Are there any steps for example for those who are simply beginners have no idea where to start and might be confused . ❤ thank you in advance .
@@Jazba-lifestyle honestly, just start. My best advice is to just draw EVERYTHING around you. All the time. Carry a sketchbook with you wherever you go. Draw your breakfast, your stop at the coffee shop, your car keys, that random flower popping up in the concrete on your way to work/class, the shape of the clouds during your lunch break, everything throughout your day. This is the best way to learn how to really see the world around you as it is, not how you think it is.
As much as I agree with this, beyond learning the basics of color theory, perspective, and composition, Art History is needed to further your practice. It is learning and understanding traditional methods of working and movements that play a role in pushing your practice forward. Beyond learning how to "see", it's also important to learn how to design and create from a place of thoughtfulness.
@@afifabari1310 those things are not necessarily taught in art history classes though. And knowing about art history is not necessarily a requirement to make art today or at all. I’m not saying knowing those things aren’t useful in the art industry, they’re just not a requirement to succeed in the art world or to just be an artist. Saying it is a requirement is like saying you need to learn how the car was made before you can drive it. One is not dependent upon the other to get what you need out of it. So, no, it’s not ‘needed’ even if it can sometimes be useful to know about it, it is not necessary. And who’s to say you cannot learn those things along the way while learning the other things mentioned as well?! That’s the thing about being self taught is that you more than likely do learn far more on your own than in an instructed manner. Your education has more of a tendency to snowball in ALL different kinds of ways and also grabs your interests far more than just being told you need to learn something ‘just because’ it’s how you’re supposed to be taught just because someone somewhere (who’s more than likely not even following the same career/artist life path as you) thought it will someday meet your needs…at some point. When you are more engaged in your subject matter, you have far more of a tendency to actually retain that info as well as know where and when it actually applies in real life concepts.
Thank you - this is what I needed - EXACTLY!! I put my pencils and brushes down over 45 years ago. I didnt study art because my parents were against me going down that road. Guess what it is my passion, I am teary just talking about the feeling I get from creating. I am so thankful for you and the path you are sharing.
Awesome Angela. I stopped photography when I was in college. Restarted just this past year at 54. It's been rewarding beyond measure and very fulfilling. Hope you enjoy your journey of rediscovery. Best wishes #
When you said the things that hold you back the most are the boring bits...I felt that to my coreee. Wanna be an artist, but I hate drawing 3d shapes to practice volume. Want to be an animator but keep skipping over the bouncing ball and sack of flour exercises lol. You've definitely inspired me to try creating my own modules and mixing up those boring exercises with something fun. Thank you!
Agree 100% with this my friend. Fundamentals are some of the most tedious things a person can practice. This video has been very inspirational in terms of finding ways to make it fun
I am already in my 50's. I love art but friends and fam laugh at what I do. In as much as I want to enroll in art school during my younger years, but financial difficulties hindered it from doing so 🥺. I continue to practice whenever time permits. Thanks for this video, it boosted my low morale 🙂
I so agree with you, it is so tricky to learn art regardless with or without school. I studied art in community college I loved the art classes but as for learning and grasping things like I didn’t really get anything out of it. After I graduated with visual fine arts degree I went to textile design school, was so excited to study textiles but I didn’t really learn anything new. I was pretty much bored after a while. Due to language barrier (My Professor spoke Korean). And the way he taught I felt like it was more about me paying than learning unfortunately. I spent so much money for that school. I think I get more out of by teaching my self and learning from other artists that are self taught. Thank you for this video!
I love the blend between structure and fluidity you struck here! As artists I feel it’s assumed we lack discipline or focus, but in reality we all know we have to put in the hours mastering our craft and without any kind of intention we end up spinning our wheels. Random unsolicited advice: For simplifying your structures, I’ve found that studying artists who create characters for video games is incredibly helpful. They talk about shape breakdown and show you how even the most intricate characters in video games are just made up of a bunch of foundational shapes like cubes and spheres. Hope that helps and thank you again for this! 💛
As someone who went through art school (printmaking/ lithography and also a degree in art history) I watched lots of people come in and out of classes and programs frustrated and confused and it was often because they didn’t take their early drawing and drafting classes seriously because they just wanted to get to the “good stuff”. I think printmaking and especially lithography students might be built different in that all we do is practice the fundamentals in lengthy processes over and over and over again. To be a decent printmaker you have to be a competent draftsmen and so the craft itself forces you to become one. A lot of my friends who were painters told me they felt very lost, or as if the professors weren’t helping them in the ways they needed to be helped, and it could be the luck of the draw with teachers and it could be the ego of both student and teacher that get in the way. The problem with art school is that you often just start to make breAkthroughs when it’s time to graduate. I truly wish there was more of a trade/apprenticeship program when it comes to artists. I wish we could apply to be under the practice of a master for years like it was in the old old days. It sounds like your going about it in the right way, the only thing I’d say to try and find is a little community of life drawing class or something. Being around another artists once a week and asking other people who are more advanced some questions and critiques can be so so helpful.
I think it also just varies wildly from program to program what kind of instruction you get. My art classes didn't involve ANY kind of standardized technical instruction. The teacher might give us a 5 minute rundown of like, what a vanishing point is, if it occurred to them, but the entire program was basically just "sit in this room and draw for four hours." Fundamentals were exactly what I wanted out of a formal art education and that's why I felt unsatisfied with my experience.
I didn't take art classes in college, but I did take several years of art in high school and some summer art programs. I totally agree that getting specific feedback is so important! It's not even just the immediate critique/suggestion, but good feedback can change the way you look at and approach a certain skill. Especially having someone there while you're working who can watch how you're holding the pencil, how you're choosing colors, see the common thread between your frequent mistakes/struggles, can really make a huge difference. Not exactly art, but I did ballet as a teenager and came back to it as an adult in casual weekly classes. My instructor (in the adult class) pointed something out to me about how I stand that totally improved my balance and that I would never have noticed on my own. Having the right person makes such a huge difference. Some people will just explain things in a way that resonates with you. I totally recommend finding a local art class to augment the solo learning plan. I know I ask tons of questions in classes so I would hate to feel like I'm bugging someone who didn't sign up to be in instructor lol.
Note: -Mix boring stuff with the fun stuff 1-Drawing fundamentals 2-Advanced fundamentals (Brings in colour theory and light) 3-Painting and composition e.g. simplify objects in landscape 4-Landscape painting Extra: Resource link in description box
This video popped up at just the right time. I was just feeling so frustrated with a bunch of art projects I was trying to work on- I always thought of myself as someone who can't draw and I get easily frustrated with myself for not being able to do the simplest things in art when it comes so easily to people around me.
I feel that. I’ve been trying to pick up abstract painting because I think it’s beautiful, but I can’t seem to grasp color theory. I tried to quickly surpass it but I know I need to go back and do the boring stuff 🙄 Oh and I hope you’re doing well and have improved on ur art!
I am self taught as well through online subscription schools- I got a lot out of New Masters Academy. It’s worth it if you can stay motivated :) your journey is really inspiring- excited to see your thoughts
Hi Kelsey, after 20 years of not doing my art (!!!) I'm finally getting back to it and taking it seriously. Your video really encouraged me to pursue a more strategic path towards leveling up quicker (as I mentioned I have tons of time to make up for lol). Thank you so much for posting!
As someone 30+ with ADHD, this is inspirational. I've always wanted to learn to draw, but I often feel too old to start... Not to mention my attention span simply cannot follow a school program/art school/ even art courses I fail cause I just can't give it that dedication! But maybe I could do it like you, separate what I want to learn into tiny bits and try to make it fun by creating my own curriculum! Also an amazing way to track one's progress I'm sure! Thank you for giving me motivation and inspiration!
I applaud you for your self discipline. As a graduate of two art colleges, I do not regret my experiences. But all artists don't need formal training and student loan debt. You are doing the right thing for yourself.
Not only have you motivated me to make up my own learning path, you've given me excellent ideas for making my own courses to teach & possibly vids. Thank you!!
As someone who went to art school before fast internet and streaming videos was a thing, I can say that had I had these resources back then, I would absolutely be doing exactly what you're doing now. It took me a decade to pay off my school debt, and while some of those classes were great, some didn't pertain to my interests or goals at all, yet I was expected to take those credits to culminate in the final degree. Being able to design a curriculum to meet your needs, goals, and especially your personal learning style... that is a fantastic, powerful thing. I am so happy you're sharing your experiment and process with other young folks out there, and promoting the idea that they can make things happen for themselves in a way that doesn't have to break the bank but provides the same value (if not more, honestly), and providing them a supportive community to do it alongside as well. Because as you said, this is going to be hard work, but when the hard work fits your needs exactly, and you have a group of other artists rooting for you, it is so worth it. Happy arting! I love watching your work.
As someone who also went through art school pre 2000 I am in complete agreeance with GamutGirl! I'm in the stages now that my kiddos are heading into highschool that I am on a new artist journey of rediscovery and this is really inspiring and mimics my own internal thoughts. However, I have had no real thought on how to achieve a step by step reinvention...just been punching in the wind regardless. This is a brilliant experiment and I'm so here for it. I have so much respect and admiration for your self taught journey. I can't wait to witness you to succeed!!! Thank you for the inspiration.
As a fellow self taught artist, this has helped me so much! I've been feeling so lost and overwhelmed recently. I wanted to do everything all at once. Perspective, anatomy, value. Thanks to this video I figured that I'll have to tackle only one at a time. I also need to make my own curriculum too. Thank you for this! I subscribed!
I'm so glad to have your channel. I had a horrible experience getting a degree in art (one particular teacher with an agenda/vendetta was the worst part, the flourescent lights combined with my autism being the other) and I'm just now at 30 deciding - screw it, that experience didn't define me and that I am an artist regardless of what anyone else in a position of academic power says to me.
I also had a horrible experience drawing since I was 12. I just wanted to copy the anime girls and so I loved it so much and during high school I decided to go on and pursue art in college. I had one teacher at an art school be so rude to me and he gave me a D in his class while other students were in the B's and As. That school was also a scam and ended up closing down after I quit it. I was furious and frustrated and not only that, one of my ex friends decided to compare her art with mine and telling me that my drawings were not realistic enough. I have had a couple of amazing art teachers through college, but eventually I didn't feel like I was progressing and so I stopped drawing for many (13) years. I'm 29 and I picked up painting again and drawing what makes me happy. I'm not as good as a lot of fanartists but I'm trying to get back into it again. It's a hard journey but I think it will be well worth it so I am hoping for your success on your journey as well. :)
Can we just take a moment to appreciate THE PLANNING!! Omg ily, color coordinated, separated into categories and you have a whooolleee freakin course. It’s beautiful. Thank you for this video
I love how in-depth you were able to be in creating your curriculum. I think one of the things you DID gain from art school is the ability to know language for, and to be able to identify, the things you want/need improvement on. This process overwhelms me I think because I wouldn't know where to start in my self-education.
Thank you for this! I'm self-taught also and related to this video so much. I really drag my feet with all the art "practice" - especially of fundamentals. I love how you're breaking down your modules. What I've been doing so far is trying to do fundamental practice/aspects and turning that into a project/piece to make it more fun. So each piece goes through a bunch of different phases and fundamentals, so I learn and research new things during each phase which takes a really long time, but I like that I'm able to practice multiple things within a single illustration. Looking forward to the follow-up video(s)!
this video is PERFECT. as i'm primarily self-taught, i try to create plans and "coursework" so to speak for myself, but mine are usually more jumbled and disorganized than what you've created. i guess it's because it's hard for me to know what to areas to focus or couple together. i want to incorporate yours into my own. let's become even better artists! thank you! :)
Okay, YES. Your way of learning perfectly describes mine too. I have been wanting to do something like this with no idea where to start so THANK YOU for this video, the resources, and template
I absolutely LOVE THIS!! Ive been trying to figure out a plan for studying art more thoroughly without art school and I feel like my prayers have been answered. This video was amazing and you explained everything perfectly! Thank you! Thank you! Thank youuuuu!!! I will be using your Notion template to help me on my journey :)
you dont understand how much this video saved my life. I've been feeling so lost for so long on how exactly I should go about studying art and you've pretty much made this so much less intimidating for me. Thank you and I definitely put your template to use!
Hey Kelsey-I really loved how you laid out your own curriculum for what you want to achieve. I’m a comics/graphic novelist-in-training and was feeling overwhelmed by my own self-ed ambitions. But this has given me a way to breakdown my art training goals.
Just from intro alone, you nailed exactly how I feel about my English degree. My writing isn't horrible, but I wanted to learn more grammar and sentence structure in college. But what I got instead was an associate's degree in essays... Nothing wrong with writing essays, but wanting to write better novels and getting essay structure instead for 4 years isn't what I needed. (and yes, I did take 4 years to graduate with an associate's, forgive me for starting off on academic probation and then graduating on dean's honor roll lol).
Thank-you so much for this motivational video, I thought I was the only silly person with no art experience trying to teach myself art techniques in an effort to make myself believe I can draw. Everything you said hits home for me, wow. I'm a self taught nature journal watercolour artist since 2017 but without any formal art experience or training, as I'm a professional astrophysicist! It was a slow sluggish journey, and overcoming the "art is a talent you have, not a skill you learn" mentality that I've been told since elementary school has been a real challenge to my growth. You are totally right in that no one will hold you accountable when you are self-taught. I also found that it was difficult to find the motivation to progress and improve to the level I wanted and know I could achieve, and that made it so easy to give it and harder to push through. I found I pushed myself more and could draw better when I attended workshops, short art classes or made myself complete a project of sorts (either an instagram challenge or a self-thought project), but on general days that wasn't the case. On some days I just can't draw anything sensible, let alone a straight line! However, the more I learned techniques (bless the negative shapes and contour lines!!) the more I was improving and the more I was enjoying myself. Treating your self-taught journey as an enjoyable academically enriching experience to better understanding (in my case, of the natural world, particularly birds) will naturally help you improve as you're not meeting a deadline or competing with anyone. You are so right when you say you have to find what is fun. What also really helped me improve and enjoy myself was drawing for loved one's birthday cards and notebook covers, and the veggies and herbs for the cookbook and botanical encyclopedia I'm compiling with my mum. Thank-you again for sharing your journey, and I hope that you make memorable and fun experiences in the future.
I love how you’re using Notion to organize your life. I have to do this for myself. I’m learning watercolor painting while also learning how to write a spiritual memoir. It all goes together in my mind. But it’s the organization of it all that is challenging. Learning how to learn and tailoring the learning to your own needs is so fascinating to me. You’re doing a great job.
I’ve been drawing seriously for around 2 years now but i’ve only been blindlessly drawing without really studying anything so i figured I should probably get started on that
I genuinely appreciate how you're being open about this and really there to help other people. I was concerned and scared about not being good enough to someone who are graduated from art school and being not knowing how to start. Again, thank you ♡ Such an underrated channel.
0:58 This is why Proko said we should find our "art parents" and guru's. I think I've found mine and it's good to do any art challenges they suggest to help ourselves improve.
I started digital painting in 2020, I went through multiple YT videos and saw their painting methods. Then I settled one guy giving tips on portrait paintings. I could easily read what he did, and he explained certain aspects well in my opinion. Then after a year I went back to those other painting videos and could understand each and every one of them. You need experience to understand what others are doing. The only way to learn how to paint is finding a method and sticking to it to gain a foundation, then once you get decent, move on to something else. For example I decided to move on to landscapes and cityscapes and it was an utter failure. I did not know why. I could paint from reference or life well. However, they just looked so boring. The problem was portrait paintings is I usually didn't have perspective or composition in the forefront. I did learn about values, form, color, brushwork (how you move your hand to get the desired result). However, perspective wasn't needed and composition didn't matter because I put it on a monocolored background. So I learned about perspective and then composition fell into place. Now I can FEEL the depth of the painting. I also learned how to leave some things out to sell the depth. The fundamentals are important. I learned to paint shapes and not things. So at the beginning of the painting I don't see a person, car, building, cup, table, etc. I just see light and how the light interacts with objects. It allows my brain to turn off that preconceived notion of what I think something should look like vs what is actually in front of me. The first 6 months it took me a while to finally remove those pre conceptions and just paint what I saw... If you are looking at your painting or drawing for 4 seconds , you are not drawing what is in front of you, you are drawing from your memory. Look at a cup. Then move into the next room or put the cup out of sight and try to draw it. It should look nothing like the cup. Just a super simplified placeholder of what you saved in your head of what you saw. Every time you stop looking at the subject, that super simplified version starts to show up on your canvas. Ideally you want to dart back and forth with your eyes while painting or drawing. Ahhh ima stop here there is countless videos that are on YT that can help you.
hi there, im writing this a while after your original comment so i hope this gets to you! would you be able to link some of the videos you used? im also trying to start learning digital art but i feel like theres too many options out there to choose from and i get overwhelmed.
@@irene6058 I started with a traditional painter YTber called PaintCoach. I based my beginning painting style to that. I did not use undo, i did not use any special tools. I just used (EDIT: Although I haven't learned anatomy yet, anatomy helps to understand the planes of the face or body. Knowing this can help one be aware of what is wrong with their painting. It can also help push certain things in the painting that one wouldn't see in a picture or in front of them. I know perspective. Knowing perspective helps simplify how shapes lay to sell the overall 3d effect of the landscape or cityscape scene. ) 1. one default brush (only changing the size) 2. one color closest to the subject (only changing the value) 3. No special tools (I paintred over the mistakes or if it was too bad to recover restarted the painting.) 3 Never feel too bad to restart the painting. Failure is a part of life. Accept that the painting you make won't be good. Your job while learning isn't to make a perfect painting. It is to create a reproducible process that you can build upon. A foundation. I started with YT- PAINT COACH and did portrait paintings for about a year. Then I learned about the fundamentals while I build upon my foundation. The foundation is built through success and failure...experience....You have to then sit back, look at your art after you are complete and ask yourself in detail what worked and what didn't work. The reason why it isn't working is because one is weak in the fundamentals. I usually take every fundamental and work with it. First I started with Form and value. I used shapes to make art. Not lines. ( look up Ian Roberts on YT or stick to PaintCoach. Paint coach talks about all the subjects of painting in general.) Monochromatic art. If one can't get a likeness with form and value, they are weak in both. Then I moved to color. I used Corel Painter which one can get cheap (35 dollars) when it's on Humble Bundle. (ITS ACTUALLY THERE RIGHT NOW !! 8 DAYS LEFT!!!) They have an option to mix paint on there. Mixing paint made me realize how to use color. I never pick from the color wheel. I learned how to mix paint from YT Channel Emma Jane Lefebvre. She goes through ALL of the base colors. Obviously one will have to work on their hand eye coordination to be able to paint the correct shapes onto the canvas. This is from experience. I realized the more my eyes was off of the subject, the more it deviated from the likeness. Meaning, I was using a simplified form of what I saw saved in my brain and painting it on to the canvas than what I actually saw. Go look at a cup and draw it while it is in front of you. Now go into another room and try to draw it without any reference. When your eyes are off the subject for more than 4 seconds, you are drawing from that saved image in your mind. Unless one has photographic memory, it will not look anywhere near what they saw. When I paint something, I never think of it as the person, thing or whatever. I think of it as something alien and I am trying to grasp the shapes of the alien thing in front of me. Sooner or later, the shapes start to look like a person. That's when I know it's time to start going into details. Again YTber PAINT COACH will help you a lot. If you feel like you can't see how a traditional painter's technique can help your digital painting technique, I guess you'll have to find another person.... Now once you get portrait painting down You need to learn Composition, Perspective and anatomy... I have yet to learn anatomy.....YET....That is because using shapes to paint allows one to bypass having to know anatomy well ...for a while...I plan to finally learn it next year lol. I got hung up on perspective. I would draw those dumb liines and such...DO NOT DO THIS!!!! LEARN COMPOSITION FIRST!!!! THEN COMPLEMENT YOUR COMPOSITION WITH PERSPECTIVE!!! One doesn't really need that great details of perspective to sell a painting with great composition. I was drawing the grids and realized trying to fit in a composition into the perspective was making my paintings boring. Starting with composition, I can add and remove anything I want and not be bound to the perspective. I can make the composition look great and not have to worry about wasting time having it be in some type of perspective. Then after the composition is done, I can go in there and and plan the perspective for that composition. Since I already know whats going to be in the perspective scene...it becomes easy to make the perspective. So recap YT-PaintCoach Corel Painter on Humble Bundle right now for $35 YT- Emma Jane Lefebvre for learning how to mix paint. YT-Ian Roberts for explaining composition and shape painting. YT-Stephen Travers art for a simple look at perspective (don't go too deep into that rabbit hole and he makes sure we don't) Start with Form and one color Value and get the likeness well. Then move to color... Then move to composition...don''t go too far into perspective Then finally anatomy...because when you want to create beasts or want to ephasize certain things in your art that can't be seen in a picture or in real life...Anatomy is that extra push...
@@irene6058 Start with YT Paint Coach channel. I stayed there for about a year watching his videos getting good at digital portrait painting. His painting process was transferable to digital painting. (YT VIDEO 10 Things New Oil Painters Get Wrong) You'll have to find somebody to teach you how to use the multiple digital tools. The reason why I didn't learn how to use the tools yet was because I want a solid foundation on my art skills. No amount of using those extra tools will make the art look better. I used one brush of varying sizes for about a year. The brush is not what makes or breaks the art, the other tools don't do it either. One brush should be enough to make a masterpiece. When you find that overall PROCESS to paint a portrait, it should be easy to use the same process for trees, buildings, cars, etc. When painting, you are painting SHAPES NOT THINGS (ian roberts). This way you aren't using a preconceived idea of what you are painting but actually painting what is in front of you. So once you get about 75-85% good at painting from reference, and 75% color accuracy, you can move on to whatever you want to do. You can do a pose on camera and use that as a reference to paint your character. You can look at pictures of clothes online and use that as reference to make the designs on your character. All concept artists and traditional artists use references to paint whatever they create. The biggest pitfall I see beginner painters going into is painting from imagination. This is what KILLS their progress. You can think of the initial idea with a drawing with imagination. For example a man who is part dragon. I can draw some simple drawing from imagination that has the overall idea of what I want. However if I want to bring it up into more realism, I have to go find some reptiles or fish scales to look at, some reptile tails and eyes, and of course the human body. All artist make rough drafts of their art before the final piece. They use either thumbnails and do multiple rough sketches of their art. Veteran artists make mistakes all the time, they just get better at hiding it from us lol. You can only get that skill by doing and failing.
@@irene6058 Shape painting this is a quick video about it and a bit about a art fundamental composition. YT-Ian Roberts: How to Stop Overworking Your Paintings. This method works for portraits, full bodies, landscapes, cityscapes. Paint Coach uses something similar. Note all these artists don't just go up to the canvas with no plan and start painting. They build their ideas far before their brush touches the canvas. They create thumbnails aka small paintings before doing the actual one.
I don’t like perspective and shapes because i suck at consistency but i make it fun by drawing transformers because they are made of just squares and cylinders. Finding the right subject can help immensely with motivation 😊
one of my biggest problems with traditional education systems is that it does not teach us how to learn (at least where I live in Brazil). i really like the idea of being self taught and focusing on what matters for me. the thing i love the most in art school (and the reason I chose to enter) is the direct contact you have with other minds that think alike, but through others persperctives. i know internet helps us to get in contact with people wherever they are, but sitting in a room where you have a respectful space to talk and listen, it's the best thing ever. that being said, most of the skills i learned so far were actually just me doing research by my own.
Great video! I see your perspective. I feel artists have the ability to create and teach themselves. I do my stuff daily and sometimes I get anxiety on how my work will come out. Thank you for sharing this! Keep up the amazing work!!!
I’ve been slowly going through the videos on your channel .. you’re by FAR the most helpful art TH-cam I’ve found yet thank you for creating the content you do 💜
How I learned is to study the basics. Shapes, shading, highlights, proportions and colors. Then I studied the intermediate stuff like anatomy, foreshortening, rule of thirds and so on. After that its over to advance by just putting it all together in a composition. After that its just practicing to see what you can do and not do with the drawing tools you are working with. I have done all I can think of doing, but only recently dived into oil painting and I love it! Still learning the limits of the medium, but its a lot of fun.
There are many ways to learn, the most important thing about it to me, is knowing how learning works and figuring out what works for you the most and keep improving what ya had
Ive been scouring the internet looking for someone with this exact experience because I completely relate. I didnt learn the fundamentals in art school and now I'm overwhelmed and bored with honing the skills on my own and frustrated with my lack of skill. Im so glad i found your content. ❤
Yes we are right! Art school is that School where you are practically meant to figure so many things out by yourself and on your own. I Guess it's a universal thing . Once can even say that this phenomenon has become a norm in or for Art schools. From finding your Style to studio practice etc one is just by oneself. I am new here. Glad to ve found your Channel beautiful sister 😘❤️
you are so right about the feeling of not being held accountable for your practice. I wish i had someone who was also learning art with me, or a much more experienced person to guide me along
thank you so much for this video. i dropped out of a college art fundamentals year long certification thing because i couldnt focus or feel like it was helping me at all.. wasted all my money too. that was 3 years ago. i’m 27 now and wanted to find another route and this sounds absolutely wonderful. i feel very hopeful again, thank you
OMG! I'm looking for a website/online course like New Master's Academy for a year. Thank you so much for this video and I really really agree with you on self-studying drawing. I think one "thank you" is not enough. Thank you and thank you! I literally opened the Beginner’s Guide to Drawing video after I watched your video. Good luck with your study!
I`m a self taugh painter too, what i `ve learn was by TH-cam, watching everything that exist about OIl Painting, and others techniques. Those things we can find on web,links to that took in to what we like. Theres so many information we can find, easy, amateur or professional, is important made plans naturally.
This is exactly something Im making for myself right now. Having everything planned out and sticking to it as much as possible should help me solve the feeling of being overwhelmed by all the things I need to learn every time I sit at my desk to draw.
been learning 3D art by myself, specifically in learning to make 3D look 2D while also recognizing anatomy and such things like art style and expression. Having the worst time, and the best time, it's really an enigma.
I love the way you organized the art process into modules and sub goals. I even downloaded your curriculum for myself. Youve stated so eloquently things Ive been feeling intuitively for a long while. Learning art is much more methodical than the stereotypical creative and spontaneous learning process associated with it. I hope you become an art educator because you have a really organized and systematized way to think about it but you have the feel and vibe of an open-hearted artist! good luck! I hope you succeed!
Halfway through I grabbed paper and pencil and wrote up my own syllabus. Will be starting to look for learning material after I finish it. Thank so much for creating this.
I can't tell you how thankful I am that you made this video ,it helped me short things out for me ... I m planning for me too let's see if this works well for me ❤️❤️
6 years of formal art education and i dont remember actually being taught anything (except a one off lesson on using photoshop) this is an excellent idea, ill be designing my own curriculum. once im earning some money ill definitely check out that art academy. absolutely subbing, this is exactly the kind of channel i need right now.
I'm on the same journey as you are and have been using NMA to teach myself as well! This was very helpful and made me feel like I'm not so lonely. I've been doing this for exactly a year now and i promise you i have never progressed so much in my life before in anything so fast, and despite the long, hard hours of sitting through boring stuff, i can say that was what actually helped me the most. Your plan seems much more elaborate than mine was at the time i started all of this though, and i think nma is a great choice for it :)
Hey Kelsey! I liked the video where you taught us how to create our own curriculum, which led us to creating online courses. Similar but different. This just saves us some of the work, I guess. Thanks for all you do.
Heck yeah this is awesome Kelsey!! I’ve been working on firming up my practice + doing more studies and it’s really cool to see how you’ve structured this out for long term growth and commitment!! 😁😁 I’m pumped to see how your work continues to develop with this system!
with or without a school education what matters most is being driven to learn, which you seem like you want to do with all your planning. and not having a set time you need to complete the modules is a good idea, less stress and you can focus on learning. 🙂
i think i got the gist of it, from what i understand is. first module is where the basics are that you want to relearn or restudy and see where you could improve in, second is adding abit more into what you learn and then the third is putting all of it into practice. i think ill be able to figure out how to make my self-taught lesson plan and might even use this as a reference to continue self teaching myself another skill.
while doing the basics i like to add things i would personally like to add to it like lines and dots, just to make it more fun you are absoulutely right. you need to practice the basics while also practicing your style and fluidity, or you will lack motivation and creativity when the time comes to make the actual peice.
One Art fundamentals book that I found that was really good personally was: Art Fundamentals 2nd edition: Light, shape, color, perspective, depth, composition & anatomy :)
I went to a type 3 school for the special needs because I have disabilities. I am good at literature because I would get alot high scores around 8/10 to 10/10 on dictonairy exams. I have poor motor skills which causes me to do every basic thing in life that I need my hands for very slowly as well as sometimes messing up lines when I use a ruler. My very first art teacher that I got for 5 years straight during middle school before high school was someone who saw potential in me but who would be rude when I didn't make something in art class that she liked, if it was something I created on my own, if it was messed up alot or if I accidently destroyed it with my hands. I did learn how to make clay figures from her but they were never something I liked because they would always look weird. Traditional drawing and painting is more for me. In high school I've got better art teachers who always were supportive but the art classes were limited for a school for the special needs. I did get good results but the high school where I went only had art class for 3 years. Art class would go away during the 4th year and 5th year (final year) and 6th year (optional) which I think is a shame. You also wouldn't get a degree because classes like music,art class and needle and sewing class were just classes that you automaticly got. Only needle and sewing class was teached all the years because it used to be part of those business classes. However sewing and needle class I was bad at. The only thing I learned from it is how to do cross stiching,how to make pompoms and how to work with a sewing machine. It took 5 years for me to be able to prepare a sewing machine perfectly and work with a sewing machine correctly. However what I can't do with my hand is stitching up buttons or stitch up holes in clothing. I only can do basic stitching like you would stich up a wound because I got teach first aid class aswell. However I don't own a sewing machine and I wasn't interested in sewing in the first place. I also wasn't my choice to learn it at school because it was also automaticly given to every girl at my school including cooking, washing and ironing clothes and cleaning. I was the second best artist in my class, someone was better than me who could draw realistic houses and portraits. I regret to never learn how to draw bases because that was one of the lessions the art teachers never teached. They only teach me color theory, blending, painting on paper never on canvasses so I actually never painted on a canvas in my life, I only learned to draw frogs and trees and some lines and shapes as well as working with ecoline to draw trees. I also learned how to make stamps out of cardboard and also learned how to do cross stitching in another type of class as well as making pompoms with yarn. I am good at different types of art. I had a low paid volunteers job once where I learned how to paint furniture and did that for 3 years. By the end of the third year because the store would quit painting furniture and I've got fired. I'm now spending my days in another low paid volunteeer job but now also get disability money to survive. The job I now do is just random things involving using my hands, lately I need to fold alot of small boxes which is actually is good for my motor skills and my motor skills have improved a little bit. I've learned about different styles of painting like textures and matching different colors together when I still did that first volunteers job. I recently started to study anatomy on my own as well as painting tutorials because I only got teached basic painting but never got teached how to paint landscapes and flowers and so on. I also never learned how use shadows of high lights in drawings or paintings aswell. I also figured out now what type of pencil is best to draw something because at art school it was never mentioned that you could use those 0.7 mm pencils for drawing. Instead I was teached how to draw with a bic gillbert 2=hb pencil which is also kinda good but I like those 0.7 mm pencils better. Also fineliners were never used in art school to trace pencil lines but instead fineliners would be use to just write. I also would see teachers using stabilo fineliners alot but not to draw but instead to grade tests. Years later I own the same stabilo fine liners as well as fake microns I recently bought which work great. Also a few years before discovering about anatomy I figured out how to do basic picture manipulation edits like experimenting with the colors on a picture and making buttons and banners in gimp by myself. I still suck at digital drawing and painting, I rarely get something I like well except for creating backgrounds on procreate but thats because I use brushes and stamps from other people to create backgrounds. Also devianart is a great thing for me how to learn to draw things traditionally.
Hi there! I'm new to your channel and was looking for some good study tips and guides for continuing on the path of cultivating my art and making it a career. Your video and the links to your DIY Art School, as well as the other links, are so incredibly useful and I'm really grateful for finding your video! Thank you so much for your contribution!!
You’re literally a saint for doing this!!! This is so incredible. Thank you so much for taking the time share this! Also Notion is so handy, so I got really excited when you mentioned it. ♥︎
Please your great right on I am one of those guys that hate the teach boring part your way is my way and a lot more than you think keep going im a student of your method and I'm 70 years young
Thank you kelsey! I'm a very plan as you go person so I always enjoy having an audio/visual guide to follow, bc otherwise I'll just follow my minute-to-minute impulses. I love the editing in this video btw!
I just got back into drawing, when I was younger I’m 30 now I use to draw botonical leaf, butterfly, and trees, after so many years of not sketching, I decided to focus on art, to become better. I decided to draw and have a well rounded principals of art fundamentals which have increased my articulation of proportions, balance, color, shading, and shapes.
Thank you so much for showing us this side of how one can conduct his/her own art school. It came at a point where I am working on developing my art alongside studying for a different field in university. The idea of literally making 'modules'. wow Thank you so much once again.
These big universities just use google and TH-cam to teach anyways. Back in my parents day universities had extremely knowledgeable professors. Now you may know as much as your teacher depending on whether or not you saw the TH-cam videos before they did. And most university teachers nowadays are part time, so they aren’t as invested in teaching thoroughly because teaching for them is a side hustle. You’re on point with your own curriculum. You will be miles ahead of students at the university. All it takes is some discipline.
Hey! I know you do oil, and not watercolor, but if you check around you can find a free scanned version of Mastering Atmosphere and Mood in Watercolor by Joseph Zbukvic, and if you've never seen his work before I think you will really love it! Also, Nathan Fowkes Schoolism course Landscape Sketching in Watercolor and Gouache is really awesome for hitting alot of those fundamentals you were talking about, if you ever feel overwhelmed with NMA (which they can be overwhelming!! At least I felt that way when i was taking classes there. Great classes, but a little scary!). Also, just wanted to say I love your channel. I just started my own tiny TH-cam channel, and your channel has been helping me get oriented and figure out my art career goals. Thank you!! 🤩
I've been studying art with NMA for more than a year! They're really helpful. They have Live Classes too which gives the students a bit of structure ❤️ They also made a curriculum you could follow in case you don't know where to start
as someone who has been self-studying for the last 2 years, I can totally agree, that doing so without a proper plan is incredibly hard! also, your Curriculum sounds amazing. I am excited to see how your journey is going to go :D I wish you all the best!
Very cool! It looks like we are on the same path. I built a nearly identical plan for myself including NMA and many of the same books. After getting started I'm realizing it will take 2-3 years to get through based on available time in my schedule. I look forward to keeping up with your progress.
I love your videos. You're so organized, I'm definitely needing some work in that area. I've been wanting to create videos of the things I make, to share and mostly for accountability, but I never know where to start, or what is holding me back. Thank you for putting this together and sharing it, it's great to have someone/something to help along the way. 💛
I was a member of New Masters Academy a couple years ago. I think I was there for about 9 months. That was before juliette aristides was teaching. Which - I want to re-join at some point just to consume her content. The highlight for me was Steve Huston. His classes are just so informative and unpretentious. It was Steve that kept a fire lit under my ass. Worth the money. Can't think of a con.
I am so glad I Found your video. I went to college for art but unfortunately they were not finished upgrading their new art program so I moved from one condemned building to another and unfortunately my syllabus was the same each year. I’ve been hoping to figure out how to do this at home so this has given me a great start ups to learn from home.
Much of my descovery to realize my self mastery is that art is work. Every time someone has mentioned it, I would only gear towards talent and creativity rather than work ethic and unemotional thinking. Understanding that work is simply work and art is the fun of it balanced out alot of my burnouts to a little more understanding that I am looking for beauty.
When I took Art for GCSE (high school), I hated it because it was all about adhering to an academic curriculum and highly censored resources, rather than finding your artistic identity, let alone learning techniques and mediums that wasn't cheap watercolour or oil pastels. Now, at 28, I'm teaching myself exactly what I want to learn. I have definitely improved in basic skills since starting only a few weeks ago and I already have a rough idea as to the kind of art I want to make. Your videos have definitely helped me with this, so I thank you very much :)
Hi Kelsey.I agree with you about studying art.I felt that I wasn't very encouraged in art college.I hated the boring fundamentals but I guess they helped me because I am qble to draw what I see.I really want to draw and paint what I don't see except in my imagination.I have really taught myself with the exception of a handful of good teachers who I still carry with me in my heart always.I wish you success in your plans You would be a good teacher.❤️
I'm now offering art prints on my online shop!! check it outtt :) www.kelseyrodriguez.com/shop
I personally don't analyse my art before I do it .
im not even done with the video but i already agree with the intro. studying properly with/without art school is tricky. ive learned myself that no one can really tell you upfront what to do, step by step, so you have to push yourself to do it yourself, in your own way. this video is pretty motivational, ive just realised i havent drawn in a week lol. ill pick up my pen now
Agreed, getting those hours in and practicing consistently is really hard when there are no deadlines or class obligations
Totally 💓 I love her content a pure heart! I agree with so many things she describes!
I felt this. 😭😭😭😭😭
@@jaeminniechim1997 me too very related 😖
Same 🤦🏽♀️
Just a few tips as a sel-taught artist who dropped "official" art education:
-Constance in practice but patience with the results
-This is going to take time... like more than a year I calculate.
-Don´t overdue yourself but don´t procrastinate.
Constance? Isn't that a city in Kentucky?
@@bobschmidt6565 nice
Great advice! I’m about to start Draw-A-Box and use other YTuber resources. But ultimately I know it comes down to just doing the work everyday but also ENJOYING learning and growing my skill.
@@bobschmidt6565 ok I think we all know the person meant consistency. Regardless of the typo (it could’ve been an AutoCorrect), the person made really good practical points.
@@galaxylucia1898 I believe the person meant constancy but the word translates as "constance" in french. Thank you for coming to their defense. And your comment made me realize that I've also wrongly just used the french word when its equivalent was a little different. 🙏🏿
Composition, perspective, color theory and learning how to REALLY SEE what you’re looking at, is pretty much all you need to learn for art. Other than this, all you have to learn is your desired medium. You master this and you can save yourself hundreds of thousands on an art degree and that’s coming from someone who actually went to school for art and benefited far more from being self taught after I left doing so because it definitely wasn’t worth what I paid-and am still paying for!
Thank you for sharing your experience . Are there any steps for example for those who are simply beginners have no idea where to start and might be confused . ❤ thank you in advance .
@@Jazba-lifestyle honestly, just start. My best advice is to just draw EVERYTHING around you. All the time. Carry a sketchbook with you wherever you go. Draw your breakfast, your stop at the coffee shop, your car keys, that random flower popping up in the concrete on your way to work/class, the shape of the clouds during your lunch break, everything throughout your day. This is the best way to learn how to really see the world around you as it is, not how you think it is.
I would add constructive/structural drawing (simplifying into basic forms), design, drapery, figure drawing, light & shadow
As much as I agree with this, beyond learning the basics of color theory, perspective, and composition, Art History is needed to further your practice. It is learning and understanding traditional methods of working and movements that play a role in pushing your practice forward. Beyond learning how to "see", it's also important to learn how to design and create from a place of thoughtfulness.
@@afifabari1310 those things are not necessarily taught in art history classes though. And knowing about art history is not necessarily a requirement to make art today or at all. I’m not saying knowing those things aren’t useful in the art industry, they’re just not a requirement to succeed in the art world or to just be an artist. Saying it is a requirement is like saying you need to learn how the car was made before you can drive it. One is not dependent upon the other to get what you need out of it. So, no, it’s not ‘needed’ even if it can sometimes be useful to know about it, it is not necessary.
And who’s to say you cannot learn those things along the way while learning the other things mentioned as well?! That’s the thing about being self taught is that you more than likely do learn far more on your own than in an instructed manner. Your education has more of a tendency to snowball in ALL different kinds of ways and also grabs your interests far more than just being told you need to learn something ‘just because’ it’s how you’re supposed to be taught just because someone somewhere (who’s more than likely not even following the same career/artist life path as you) thought it will someday meet your needs…at some point. When you are more engaged in your subject matter, you have far more of a tendency to actually retain that info as well as know where and when it actually applies in real life concepts.
Thank you - this is what I needed - EXACTLY!! I put my pencils and brushes down over 45 years ago. I didnt study art because my parents were against me going down that road. Guess what it is my passion, I am teary just talking about the feeling I get from creating. I am so thankful for you and the path you are sharing.
Me too. Crushed, but never forgot the thrill of painting and drawing. 50 years later, I'm back at it and loving it.
Awesome Angela. I stopped photography when I was in college. Restarted just this past year at 54. It's been rewarding beyond measure and very fulfilling. Hope you enjoy your journey of rediscovery. Best wishes #
@@susiepattinson3031 Best of luck!
pick your brushes up, angela! 🌻
@@zulusiyathokoza I try to post weekly on instagram
When you said the things that hold you back the most are the boring bits...I felt that to my coreee. Wanna be an artist, but I hate drawing 3d shapes to practice volume. Want to be an animator but keep skipping over the bouncing ball and sack of flour exercises lol. You've definitely inspired me to try creating my own modules and mixing up those boring exercises with something fun. Thank you!
Agree 100% with this my friend. Fundamentals are some of the most tedious things a person can practice. This video has been very inspirational in terms of finding ways to make it fun
Fundamentals are so important. If you can draw basic shapes well, you have won 90% the battle.
I am already in my 50's. I love art but friends and fam laugh at what I do. In as much as I want to enroll in art school during my younger years, but financial difficulties hindered it from doing so 🥺. I continue to practice whenever time permits. Thanks for this video, it boosted my low morale 🙂
Please continue and show the world your art! There will be someone who will appreciated it!
Keep going. Me too, i keeping practice every day 💖💖💖💖 love you 💖🌸🌻🍀🌟
I am so so soooo proud of you, sir.
I recommend dorian itens shading course to get your fam to stop laughing and start wowing them
@@BraveAbandon thank you 💖
I so agree with you, it is so tricky to learn art regardless with or without school. I studied art in community college I loved the art classes but as for learning and grasping things like I didn’t really get anything out of it. After I graduated with visual fine arts degree I went to textile design school, was so excited to study textiles but I didn’t really learn anything new. I was pretty much bored after a while. Due to language barrier (My Professor spoke Korean). And the way he taught I felt like it was more about me paying than learning unfortunately. I spent so much money for that school. I think I get more out of by teaching my self and learning from other artists that are self taught. Thank you for this video!
I love the blend between structure and fluidity you struck here! As artists I feel it’s assumed we lack discipline or focus, but in reality we all know we have to put in the hours mastering our craft and without any kind of intention we end up spinning our wheels.
Random unsolicited advice:
For simplifying your structures, I’ve found that studying artists who create characters for video games is incredibly helpful. They talk about shape breakdown and show you how even the most intricate characters in video games are just made up of a bunch of foundational shapes like cubes and spheres. Hope that helps and thank you again for this! 💛
ooh, that's a great thought! thank you!
As someone who went through art school (printmaking/ lithography and also a degree in art history) I watched lots of people come in and out of classes and programs frustrated and confused and it was often because they didn’t take their early drawing and drafting classes seriously because they just wanted to get to the “good stuff”. I think printmaking and especially lithography students might be built different in that all we do is practice the fundamentals in lengthy processes over and over and over again. To be a decent printmaker you have to be a competent draftsmen and so the craft itself forces you to become one. A lot of my friends who were painters told me they felt very lost, or as if the professors weren’t helping them in the ways they needed to be helped, and it could be the luck of the draw with teachers and it could be the ego of both student and teacher that get in the way. The problem with art school is that you often just start to make breAkthroughs when it’s time to graduate. I truly wish there was more of a trade/apprenticeship program when it comes to artists. I wish we could apply to be under the practice of a master for years like it was in the old old days. It sounds like your going about it in the right way, the only thing I’d say to try and find is a little community of life drawing class or something. Being around another artists once a week and asking other people who are more advanced some questions and critiques can be so so helpful.
You have said it all so perfectly. I could not agree more! I hope everyone pays very close attention to this comment by Danielle Cox.
fully agree with this!
I think it also just varies wildly from program to program what kind of instruction you get. My art classes didn't involve ANY kind of standardized technical instruction. The teacher might give us a 5 minute rundown of like, what a vanishing point is, if it occurred to them, but the entire program was basically just "sit in this room and draw for four hours." Fundamentals were exactly what I wanted out of a formal art education and that's why I felt unsatisfied with my experience.
Watt’s Atelier offers online instruction.
I didn't take art classes in college, but I did take several years of art in high school and some summer art programs. I totally agree that getting specific feedback is so important! It's not even just the immediate critique/suggestion, but good feedback can change the way you look at and approach a certain skill. Especially having someone there while you're working who can watch how you're holding the pencil, how you're choosing colors, see the common thread between your frequent mistakes/struggles, can really make a huge difference.
Not exactly art, but I did ballet as a teenager and came back to it as an adult in casual weekly classes. My instructor (in the adult class) pointed something out to me about how I stand that totally improved my balance and that I would never have noticed on my own. Having the right person makes such a huge difference. Some people will just explain things in a way that resonates with you. I totally recommend finding a local art class to augment the solo learning plan. I know I ask tons of questions in classes so I would hate to feel like I'm bugging someone who didn't sign up to be in instructor lol.
Note:
-Mix boring stuff with the fun stuff
1-Drawing fundamentals
2-Advanced fundamentals (Brings in colour theory and light)
3-Painting and composition e.g. simplify objects in landscape
4-Landscape painting
Extra: Resource link in description box
This video popped up at just the right time. I was just feeling so frustrated with a bunch of art projects I was trying to work on- I always thought of myself as someone who can't draw and I get easily frustrated with myself for not being able to do the simplest things in art when it comes so easily to people around me.
I feel that. I’ve been trying to pick up abstract painting because I think it’s beautiful, but I can’t seem to grasp color theory. I tried to quickly surpass it but I know I need to go back and do the boring stuff 🙄
Oh and I hope you’re doing well and have improved on ur art!
I am self taught as well through online subscription schools- I got a lot out of New Masters Academy. It’s worth it if you can stay motivated :) your journey is really inspiring- excited to see your thoughts
Hi Kelsey, after 20 years of not doing my art (!!!) I'm finally getting back to it and taking it seriously. Your video really encouraged me to pursue a more strategic path towards leveling up quicker (as I mentioned I have tons of time to make up for lol). Thank you so much for posting!
As someone 30+ with ADHD, this is inspirational. I've always wanted to learn to draw, but I often feel too old to start... Not to mention my attention span simply cannot follow a school program/art school/ even art courses I fail cause I just can't give it that dedication! But maybe I could do it like you, separate what I want to learn into tiny bits and try to make it fun by creating my own curriculum! Also an amazing way to track one's progress I'm sure!
Thank you for giving me motivation and inspiration!
I applaud you for your self discipline. As a graduate of two art colleges, I do not regret my experiences. But all artists don't need formal training and student loan debt. You are doing the right thing for yourself.
Not only have you motivated me to make up my own learning path, you've given me excellent ideas for making my own courses to teach & possibly vids. Thank you!!
As someone who went to art school before fast internet and streaming videos was a thing, I can say that had I had these resources back then, I would absolutely be doing exactly what you're doing now. It took me a decade to pay off my school debt, and while some of those classes were great, some didn't pertain to my interests or goals at all, yet I was expected to take those credits to culminate in the final degree. Being able to design a curriculum to meet your needs, goals, and especially your personal learning style... that is a fantastic, powerful thing. I am so happy you're sharing your experiment and process with other young folks out there, and promoting the idea that they can make things happen for themselves in a way that doesn't have to break the bank but provides the same value (if not more, honestly), and providing them a supportive community to do it alongside as well. Because as you said, this is going to be hard work, but when the hard work fits your needs exactly, and you have a group of other artists rooting for you, it is so worth it. Happy arting! I love watching your work.
As someone who also went through art school pre 2000 I am in complete agreeance with GamutGirl! I'm in the stages now that my kiddos are heading into highschool that I am on a new artist journey of rediscovery and this is really inspiring and mimics my own internal thoughts. However, I have had no real thought on how to achieve a step by step reinvention...just been punching in the wind regardless. This is a brilliant experiment and I'm so here for it. I have so much respect and admiration for your self taught journey. I can't wait to witness you to succeed!!! Thank you for the inspiration.
As a fellow self taught artist, this has helped me so much! I've been feeling so lost and overwhelmed recently. I wanted to do everything all at once. Perspective, anatomy, value. Thanks to this video I figured that I'll have to tackle only one at a time. I also need to make my own curriculum too. Thank you for this! I subscribed!
I think a really good point is that people learn differently, so try to find your own efficient way
I'm so glad to have your channel. I had a horrible experience getting a degree in art (one particular teacher with an agenda/vendetta was the worst part, the flourescent lights combined with my autism being the other) and I'm just now at 30 deciding - screw it, that experience didn't define me and that I am an artist regardless of what anyone else in a position of academic power says to me.
I also had a horrible experience drawing since I was 12. I just wanted to copy the anime girls and so I loved it so much and during high school I decided to go on and pursue art in college. I had one teacher at an art school be so rude to me and he gave me a D in his class while other students were in the B's and As. That school was also a scam and ended up closing down after I quit it. I was furious and frustrated and not only that, one of my ex friends decided to compare her art with mine and telling me that my drawings were not realistic enough. I have had a couple of amazing art teachers through college, but eventually I didn't feel like I was progressing and so I stopped drawing for many (13) years. I'm 29 and I picked up painting again and drawing what makes me happy. I'm not as good as a lot of fanartists but I'm trying to get back into it again. It's a hard journey but I think it will be well worth it so I am hoping for your success on your journey as well. :)
Can we just take a moment to appreciate THE PLANNING!! Omg ily, color coordinated, separated into categories and you have a whooolleee freakin course. It’s beautiful. Thank you for this video
only 1:41 minutes in and i already know this is what i've been needing this whole time
I love how in-depth you were able to be in creating your curriculum. I think one of the things you DID gain from art school is the ability to know language for, and to be able to identify, the things you want/need improvement on. This process overwhelms me I think because I wouldn't know where to start in my self-education.
Thank you for this! I'm self-taught also and related to this video so much. I really drag my feet with all the art "practice" - especially of fundamentals. I love how you're breaking down your modules. What I've been doing so far is trying to do fundamental practice/aspects and turning that into a project/piece to make it more fun. So each piece goes through a bunch of different phases and fundamentals, so I learn and research new things during each phase which takes a really long time, but I like that I'm able to practice multiple things within a single illustration. Looking forward to the follow-up video(s)!
thank you thank you thank you! I needed lessons, I haven't studied art, and where I live there are zero art lessons during summertime!
this video is PERFECT. as i'm primarily self-taught, i try to create plans and "coursework" so to speak for myself, but mine are usually more jumbled and disorganized than what you've created. i guess it's because it's hard for me to know what to areas to focus or couple together. i want to incorporate yours into my own. let's become even better artists! thank you! :)
Okay, YES. Your way of learning perfectly describes mine too. I have been wanting to do something like this with no idea where to start so THANK YOU for this video, the resources, and template
Lost & overwhelmed perfectly describes me & the fundamentals of drawing, as well as bored. I love how you’ve broken it down - best of luck!!!
I absolutely LOVE THIS!! Ive been trying to figure out a plan for studying art more thoroughly without art school and I feel like my prayers have been answered. This video was amazing and you explained everything perfectly! Thank you! Thank you! Thank youuuuu!!! I will be using your Notion template to help me on my journey :)
you dont understand how much this video saved my life. I've been feeling so lost for so long on how exactly I should go about studying art and you've pretty much made this so much less intimidating for me. Thank you and I definitely put your template to use!
Hey Kelsey-I really loved how you laid out your own curriculum for what you want to achieve. I’m a comics/graphic novelist-in-training and was feeling overwhelmed by my own self-ed ambitions. But this has given me a way to breakdown my art training goals.
Just from intro alone, you nailed exactly how I feel about my English degree.
My writing isn't horrible, but I wanted to learn more grammar and sentence structure in college. But what I got instead was an associate's degree in essays... Nothing wrong with writing essays, but wanting to write better novels and getting essay structure instead for 4 years isn't what I needed. (and yes, I did take 4 years to graduate with an associate's, forgive me for starting off on academic probation and then graduating on dean's honor roll lol).
Thank-you so much for this motivational video, I thought I was the only silly person with no art experience trying to teach myself art techniques in an effort to make myself believe I can draw. Everything you said hits home for me, wow.
I'm a self taught nature journal watercolour artist since 2017 but without any formal art experience or training, as I'm a professional astrophysicist! It was a slow sluggish journey, and overcoming the "art is a talent you have, not a skill you learn" mentality that I've been told since elementary school has been a real challenge to my growth. You are totally right in that no one will hold you accountable when you are self-taught. I also found that it was difficult to find the motivation to progress and improve to the level I wanted and know I could achieve, and that made it so easy to give it and harder to push through. I found I pushed myself more and could draw better when I attended workshops, short art classes or made myself complete a project of sorts (either an instagram challenge or a self-thought project), but on general days that wasn't the case. On some days I just can't draw anything sensible, let alone a straight line! However, the more I learned techniques (bless the negative shapes and contour lines!!) the more I was improving and the more I was enjoying myself. Treating your self-taught journey as an enjoyable academically enriching experience to better understanding (in my case, of the natural world, particularly birds) will naturally help you improve as you're not meeting a deadline or competing with anyone. You are so right when you say you have to find what is fun. What also really helped me improve and enjoy myself was drawing for loved one's birthday cards and notebook covers, and the veggies and herbs for the cookbook and botanical encyclopedia I'm compiling with my mum.
Thank-you again for sharing your journey, and I hope that you make memorable and fun experiences in the future.
I love how you’re using Notion to organize your life. I have to do this for myself. I’m learning watercolor painting while also learning how to write a spiritual memoir. It all goes together in my mind. But it’s the organization of it all that is challenging. Learning how to learn and tailoring the learning to your own needs is so fascinating to me. You’re doing a great job.
I’ve been drawing seriously for around 2 years now but i’ve only been blindlessly drawing without really studying anything so i figured I should probably get started on that
I genuinely appreciate how you're being open about this and really there to help other people. I was concerned and scared about not being good enough to someone who are graduated from art school and being not knowing how to start. Again, thank you ♡ Such an underrated channel.
0:58 This is why Proko said we should find our "art parents" and guru's. I think I've found mine and it's good to do any art challenges they suggest to help ourselves improve.
so glad to see someone plugging the new masters academy. best source for learning the fundamentals imo.
I started digital painting in 2020, I went through multiple YT videos and saw their painting methods. Then I settled one guy giving tips on portrait paintings. I could easily read what he did, and he explained certain aspects well in my opinion. Then after a year I went back to those other painting videos and could understand each and every one of them.
You need experience to understand what others are doing. The only way to learn how to paint is finding a method and sticking to it to gain a foundation, then once you get decent, move on to something else.
For example I decided to move on to landscapes and cityscapes and it was an utter failure. I did not know why. I could paint from reference or life well. However, they just looked so boring.
The problem was portrait paintings is I usually didn't have perspective or composition in the forefront. I did learn about values, form, color, brushwork (how you move your hand to get the desired result). However, perspective wasn't needed and composition didn't matter because I put it on a monocolored background. So I learned about perspective and then composition fell into place. Now I can FEEL the depth of the painting. I also learned how to leave some things out to sell the depth.
The fundamentals are important. I learned to paint shapes and not things. So at the beginning of the painting I don't see a person, car, building, cup, table, etc. I just see light and how the light interacts with objects. It allows my brain to turn off that preconceived notion of what I think something should look like vs what is actually in front of me. The first 6 months it took me a while to finally remove those pre conceptions and just paint what I saw...
If you are looking at your painting or drawing for 4 seconds , you are not drawing what is in front of you, you are drawing from your memory.
Look at a cup. Then move into the next room or put the cup out of sight and try to draw it. It should look nothing like the cup. Just a super simplified placeholder of what you saved in your head of what you saw. Every time you stop looking at the subject, that super simplified version starts to show up on your canvas.
Ideally you want to dart back and forth with your eyes while painting or drawing. Ahhh ima stop here there is countless videos that are on YT that can help you.
hi there, im writing this a while after your original comment so i hope this gets to you! would you be able to link some of the videos you used? im also trying to start learning digital art but i feel like theres too many options out there to choose from and i get overwhelmed.
@@irene6058 I started with a traditional painter YTber called PaintCoach. I based my beginning painting style to that. I did not use undo, i did not use any special tools. I just used
(EDIT: Although I haven't learned anatomy yet, anatomy helps to understand the planes of the face or body. Knowing this can help one be aware of what is wrong with their painting. It can also help push certain things in the painting that one wouldn't see in a picture or in front of them.
I know perspective. Knowing perspective helps simplify how shapes lay to sell the overall 3d effect of the landscape or cityscape scene. )
1. one default brush (only changing the size)
2. one color closest to the subject (only changing the value)
3. No special tools (I paintred over the mistakes or if it was too bad to recover restarted the painting.)
3
Never feel too bad to restart the painting. Failure is a part of life. Accept that the painting you make won't be good. Your job while learning isn't to make a perfect painting. It is to create a reproducible process that you can build upon. A foundation.
I started with YT- PAINT COACH and did portrait paintings for about a year. Then I learned about the fundamentals while I build upon my foundation.
The foundation is built through success and failure...experience....You have to then sit back, look at your art after you are complete and ask yourself in detail what worked and what didn't work.
The reason why it isn't working is because one is weak in the fundamentals.
I usually take every fundamental and work with it.
First I started with
Form and value. I used shapes to make art. Not lines. ( look up Ian Roberts on YT or stick to PaintCoach. Paint coach talks about all the subjects of painting in general.)
Monochromatic art. If one can't get a likeness with form and value, they are weak in both.
Then I moved to color. I used Corel Painter which one can get cheap (35 dollars) when it's on Humble Bundle. (ITS ACTUALLY THERE RIGHT NOW !! 8 DAYS LEFT!!!) They have an option to mix paint on there. Mixing paint made me realize how to use color. I never pick from the color wheel.
I learned how to mix paint from YT Channel
Emma Jane Lefebvre. She goes through ALL of the base colors.
Obviously one will have to work on their hand eye coordination to be able to paint the correct shapes onto the canvas. This is from experience. I realized the more my eyes was off of the subject, the more it deviated from the likeness. Meaning, I was using a simplified form of what I saw saved in my brain and painting it on to the canvas than what I actually saw.
Go look at a cup and draw it while it is in front of you. Now go into another room and try to draw it without any reference. When your eyes are off the subject for more than 4 seconds, you are drawing from that saved image in your mind. Unless one has photographic memory, it will not look anywhere near what they saw.
When I paint something, I never think of it as the person, thing or whatever. I think of it as something alien and I am trying to grasp the shapes of the alien thing in front of me.
Sooner or later, the shapes start to look like a person. That's when I know it's time to start going into details.
Again YTber PAINT COACH will help you a lot.
If you feel like you can't see how a traditional painter's technique can help your digital painting technique, I guess you'll have to find another person....
Now once you get portrait painting down
You need to learn Composition, Perspective and anatomy...
I have yet to learn anatomy.....YET....That is because using shapes to paint allows one to bypass having to know anatomy well ...for a while...I plan to finally learn it next year lol.
I got hung up on perspective. I would draw those dumb liines and such...DO NOT DO THIS!!!! LEARN COMPOSITION FIRST!!!! THEN COMPLEMENT YOUR COMPOSITION WITH PERSPECTIVE!!!
One doesn't really need that great details of perspective to sell a painting with great composition.
I was drawing the grids and realized trying to fit in a composition into the perspective was making my paintings boring.
Starting with composition, I can add and remove anything I want and not be bound to the perspective. I can make the composition look great and not have to worry about wasting time having it be in some type of perspective.
Then after the composition is done, I can go in there and and plan the perspective for that composition. Since I already know whats going to be in the perspective scene...it becomes easy to make the perspective.
So recap
YT-PaintCoach
Corel Painter on Humble Bundle right now for $35
YT- Emma Jane Lefebvre for learning how to mix paint.
YT-Ian Roberts for explaining composition and shape painting.
YT-Stephen Travers art for a simple look at perspective (don't go too deep into that rabbit hole and he makes sure we don't)
Start with Form and one color Value and get the likeness well.
Then move to color...
Then move to composition...don''t go too far into perspective
Then finally anatomy...because when you want to create beasts or want to ephasize certain things in your art that can't be seen in a picture or in real life...Anatomy is that extra push...
@@irene6058 Start with YT Paint Coach channel. I stayed there for about a year watching his videos getting good at digital portrait painting. His painting process was transferable to digital painting. (YT VIDEO 10 Things New Oil Painters Get Wrong)
You'll have to find somebody to teach you how to use the multiple digital tools. The reason why I didn't learn how to use the tools yet was because I want a solid foundation on my art skills. No amount of using those extra tools will make the art look better. I used one brush of varying sizes for about a year. The brush is not what makes or breaks the art, the other tools don't do it either. One brush should be enough to make a masterpiece.
When you find that overall PROCESS to paint a portrait, it should be easy to use the same process for trees, buildings, cars, etc.
When painting, you are painting SHAPES NOT THINGS (ian roberts). This way you aren't using a preconceived idea of what you are painting but actually painting what is in front of you.
So once you get about 75-85% good at painting from reference, and 75% color accuracy, you can move on to whatever you want to do.
You can do a pose on camera and use that as a reference to paint your character. You can look at pictures of clothes online and use that as reference to make the designs on your character.
All concept artists and traditional artists use references to paint whatever they create. The biggest pitfall I see beginner painters going into is painting from imagination. This is what KILLS their progress.
You can think of the initial idea with a drawing with imagination.
For example a man who is part dragon. I can draw some simple drawing from imagination that has the overall idea of what I want.
However if I want to bring it up into more realism, I have to go find some reptiles or fish scales to look at, some reptile tails and eyes, and of course the human body.
All artist make rough drafts of their art before the final piece. They use either thumbnails and do multiple rough sketches of their art.
Veteran artists make mistakes all the time, they just get better at hiding it from us lol. You can only get that skill by doing and failing.
@@irene6058 Shape painting this is a quick video about it and a bit about a art fundamental composition.
YT-Ian Roberts:
How to Stop Overworking Your Paintings.
This method works for portraits, full bodies, landscapes, cityscapes. Paint Coach uses something similar.
Note all these artists don't just go up to the canvas with no plan and start painting. They build their ideas far before their brush touches the canvas. They create thumbnails aka small paintings before doing the actual one.
I don’t like perspective and shapes because i suck at consistency but i make it fun by drawing transformers because they are made of just squares and cylinders. Finding the right subject can help immensely with motivation 😊
one of my biggest problems with traditional education systems is that it does not teach us how to learn (at least where I live in Brazil). i really like the idea of being self taught and focusing on what matters for me. the thing i love the most in art school (and the reason I chose to enter) is the direct contact you have with other minds that think alike, but through others persperctives. i know internet helps us to get in contact with people wherever they are, but sitting in a room where you have a respectful space to talk and listen, it's the best thing ever. that being said, most of the skills i learned so far were actually just me doing research by my own.
I agree, even my art teachers didnt like the system they had to follow. I deeply appreciate their time and passion.
Great video! I see your perspective. I feel artists have the ability to create and teach themselves. I do my stuff daily and sometimes I get anxiety on how my work will come out. Thank you for sharing this! Keep up the amazing work!!!
I’ve been slowly going through the videos on your channel .. you’re by FAR the most helpful art TH-cam I’ve found yet thank you for creating the content you do 💜
How I learned is to study the basics. Shapes, shading, highlights, proportions and colors. Then I studied the intermediate stuff like anatomy, foreshortening, rule of thirds and so on. After that its over to advance by just putting it all together in a composition. After that its just practicing to see what you can do and not do with the drawing tools you are working with. I have done all I can think of doing, but only recently dived into oil painting and I love it! Still learning the limits of the medium, but its a lot of fun.
I have been searching for this video since I graduated high school (5 years). Thank you! From one self taught artist to another. . . THANK YOU
There are many ways to learn, the most important thing about it to me, is knowing how learning works and figuring out what works for you the most and keep improving what ya had
Girl!!!! You are fire 🔥🔥🔥🔥 you should be an art teacher in a renowned school and be remembered amongst us art lovers. I want you to teach me
Ive been scouring the internet looking for someone with this exact experience because I completely relate. I didnt learn the fundamentals in art school and now I'm overwhelmed and bored with honing the skills on my own and frustrated with my lack of skill. Im so glad i found your content. ❤
Yes we are right! Art school is that School where you are practically meant to figure so many things out by yourself and on your own. I Guess it's a universal thing . Once can even say that this phenomenon has become a norm in or for Art schools. From finding your Style to studio practice etc one is just by oneself. I am new here. Glad to ve found your Channel beautiful sister 😘❤️
you are so right about the feeling of not being held accountable for your practice. I wish i had someone who was also learning art with me, or a much more experienced person to guide me along
Just someone to motivate you and keep you going
thank you so much for this video. i dropped out of a college art fundamentals year long certification thing because i couldnt focus or feel like it was helping me at all.. wasted all my money too. that was 3 years ago. i’m 27 now and wanted to find another route and this sounds absolutely wonderful. i feel very hopeful again, thank you
OMG! I'm looking for a website/online course like New Master's Academy for a year. Thank you so much for this video and I really really agree with you on self-studying drawing. I think one "thank you" is not enough. Thank you and thank you! I literally opened the Beginner’s Guide to Drawing video after I watched your video. Good luck with your study!
I`m a self taugh painter too, what i `ve learn was by TH-cam, watching everything that exist about OIl Painting, and others techniques. Those things we can find on web,links to that took in to what we like. Theres so many information we can find, easy, amateur or professional, is important made plans naturally.
This is exactly something Im making for myself right now. Having everything planned out and sticking to it as much as possible should help me solve the feeling of being overwhelmed by all the things I need to learn every time I sit at my desk to draw.
been learning 3D art by myself, specifically in learning to make 3D look 2D while also recognizing anatomy and such things like art style and expression. Having the worst time, and the best time, it's really an enigma.
I love the way you organized the art process into modules and sub goals. I even downloaded your curriculum for myself. Youve stated so eloquently things Ive been feeling intuitively for a long while. Learning art is much more methodical than the stereotypical creative and spontaneous learning process associated with it. I hope you become an art educator because you have a really organized and systematized way to think about it but you have the feel and vibe of an open-hearted artist! good luck! I hope you succeed!
Halfway through I grabbed paper and pencil and wrote up my own syllabus. Will be starting to look for learning material after I finish it. Thank so much for creating this.
GRL - thanks for the notion template, can't wait to see how this launches you forward!! btw I love how you share your thought process & journey!!
I can't tell you how thankful I am that you made this video ,it helped me short things out for me ... I m planning for me too let's see if this works well for me ❤️❤️
6 years of formal art education and i dont remember actually being taught anything (except a one off lesson on using photoshop) this is an excellent idea, ill be designing my own curriculum. once im earning some money ill definitely check out that art academy. absolutely subbing, this is exactly the kind of channel i need right now.
I'm on the same journey as you are and have been using NMA to teach myself as well! This was very helpful and made me feel like I'm not so lonely. I've been doing this for exactly a year now and i promise you i have never progressed so much in my life before in anything so fast, and despite the long, hard hours of sitting through boring stuff, i can say that was what actually helped me the most. Your plan seems much more elaborate than mine was at the time i started all of this though, and i think nma is a great choice for it :)
Hey Kelsey! I liked the video where you taught us how to create our own curriculum, which led us to creating online courses. Similar but different. This just saves us some of the work, I guess. Thanks for all you do.
This is exactly what I was looking for. ❤ Thank you for sharing.
Heck yeah this is awesome Kelsey!! I’ve been working on firming up my practice + doing more studies and it’s really cool to see how you’ve structured this out for long term growth and commitment!! 😁😁 I’m pumped to see how your work continues to develop with this system!
with or without a school education what matters most is being driven to learn, which you seem like you want to do with all your planning. and not having a set time you need to complete the modules is a good idea, less stress and you can focus on learning. 🙂
i think i got the gist of it, from what i understand is. first module is where the basics are that you want to relearn or restudy and see where you could improve in, second is adding abit more into what you learn and then the third is putting all of it into practice. i think ill be able to figure out how to make my self-taught lesson plan and might even use this as a reference to continue self teaching myself another skill.
Finally FINALLY real instructions not talking around the topic thank u 🫢🫶
while doing the basics i like to add things i would personally like to add to it like lines and dots, just to make it more fun you are absoulutely right. you need to practice the basics while also practicing your style and fluidity, or you will lack motivation and creativity when the time comes to make the actual peice.
NMA is amazing. The courses can be a lot of work but if you stick with it it really pays off! I wish you well on your art learning journey.
One Art fundamentals book that I found that was really good personally was: Art Fundamentals 2nd edition: Light, shape, color, perspective, depth, composition & anatomy :)
I am getting back to art in a general and your videos are really helping me to having a second view into this world. Thanks, Kelsey
I went to a type 3 school for the special needs because I have disabilities. I am good at literature because I would get alot high scores around 8/10 to 10/10 on dictonairy exams.
I have poor motor skills which causes me to do every basic thing in life that I need my hands for very slowly as well as sometimes messing up lines when I use a ruler. My very first art teacher that I got for 5 years straight during middle school before high school was someone who saw potential in me but who would be rude when I didn't make something in art class that she liked, if it was something I created on my own, if it was messed up alot
or if I accidently destroyed it with my hands. I did learn how to make clay figures from her but they were never something I liked because they would always look weird. Traditional drawing and painting is more for me.
In high school I've got better art teachers who always were supportive but the art classes were limited for a school for the special needs. I did get good results but the high school where I went only had art class for 3 years. Art class would go away during the 4th year and 5th year (final year) and 6th year (optional) which I think is a shame. You also wouldn't get a degree because classes like music,art class and needle and sewing class were just classes that you automaticly got. Only needle and sewing class was teached all the years because it used to be part of those business classes. However sewing and needle class I was bad at.
The only thing I learned from it is how to do cross stiching,how to make pompoms and how to work with a sewing machine. It took 5 years for me to be able to prepare a sewing machine perfectly and work with a sewing machine correctly. However what I can't do with my hand is stitching up buttons or stitch up holes in clothing. I only can do basic stitching like you would stich up a wound because I got teach first aid class aswell. However I don't own a sewing machine and I wasn't interested in sewing in the first place. I also wasn't my choice to learn it at school because it was also automaticly given to every girl at my school including cooking, washing and ironing clothes and cleaning.
I was the second best artist in my class, someone was better than me who could draw realistic houses and portraits.
I regret to never learn how to draw bases because that was one of the lessions the art teachers never teached. They only teach me color theory, blending, painting on paper never on canvasses so I actually never painted on a canvas in my life, I only learned to draw frogs and trees and some lines and shapes as well as working with ecoline to draw trees. I also learned how to make stamps out of cardboard and also learned how to do cross stitching in another type of class as well as making pompoms with yarn.
I am good at different types of art. I had a low paid volunteers job once where I learned how to paint furniture and did that for 3 years. By the end of the third year because the store would quit painting furniture and I've got fired. I'm now spending my days in another low paid volunteeer job but now also get disability money to survive. The job I now do is just random things involving using my hands, lately I need to fold alot of small boxes which is
actually is good for my motor skills and my motor skills have improved a little bit.
I've learned about different styles of painting like textures and matching different colors together when I still did that first volunteers job.
I recently started to study anatomy on my own as well as painting tutorials because I only got teached basic painting but never got teached how to paint landscapes and flowers and so on. I also never learned how use shadows of high lights in drawings or paintings aswell.
I also figured out now what type of pencil is best to draw something because at art school it was never mentioned that you could use those 0.7 mm pencils for drawing. Instead I was teached how to draw with a bic gillbert 2=hb pencil which is also kinda good but I like those 0.7 mm pencils better. Also fineliners were never used in art school to trace pencil lines but instead fineliners would be use to just write. I also would see teachers using stabilo fineliners alot but not to draw but instead to grade tests. Years later I own the same stabilo fine liners as well as fake microns I recently bought which work great.
Also a few years before discovering about anatomy I figured out how to do basic picture manipulation edits like experimenting with the colors on a picture and making buttons and banners in gimp by myself. I still suck at digital drawing and painting, I rarely get something I like well except for creating backgrounds on procreate but thats because I use brushes and stamps from other people to create backgrounds.
Also devianart is a great thing for me how to learn to draw things traditionally.
Hi there! I'm new to your channel and was looking for some good study tips and guides for continuing on the path of cultivating my art and making it a career. Your video and the links to your DIY Art School, as well as the other links, are so incredibly useful and I'm really grateful for finding your video! Thank you so much for your contribution!!
I like your method for art study. I'm a digital artist and I will be using your method the craft my own art study plan. Thanks for the video!
You’re literally a saint for doing this!!!
This is so incredible. Thank you so much for taking the time share this! Also Notion is so handy, so I got really excited when you mentioned it. ♥︎
I have always wanted to pursue art unfortunately, I never knew where exactly I should start. Your video helped me out. THANK YOU!
This exactly what I needed to hear! Was debating on going back to school to pursue my passion..art! ❣️ LOVE THE VIBES…SUBSCRIBED❣️✨
Please your great right on I am one of those guys that hate the teach boring part your way is my way and a lot more than you think keep going im a student of your method and I'm 70 years young
Thank you kelsey! I'm a very plan as you go person so I always enjoy having an audio/visual guide to follow, bc otherwise I'll just follow my minute-to-minute impulses. I love the editing in this video btw!
I LOVE Notion too, thank you so much for sharing the results of your research and your template 💖💖
I just got back into drawing, when I was younger I’m 30 now I use to draw botonical leaf, butterfly, and trees, after so many years of not sketching, I decided to focus on art, to become better. I decided to draw and have a well rounded principals of art fundamentals which have increased my articulation of proportions, balance, color, shading, and shapes.
Thank you so much for showing us this side of how one can conduct his/her own art school. It came at a point where I am working on developing my art alongside studying for a different field in university.
The idea of literally making 'modules'. wow
Thank you so much once again.
These big universities just use google and TH-cam to teach anyways. Back in my parents day universities had extremely knowledgeable professors. Now you may know as much as your teacher depending on whether or not you saw the TH-cam videos before they did.
And most university teachers nowadays are part time, so they aren’t as invested in teaching thoroughly because teaching for them is a side hustle.
You’re on point with your own curriculum. You will be miles ahead of students at the university. All it takes is some discipline.
Hey! I know you do oil, and not watercolor, but if you check around you can find a free scanned version of Mastering Atmosphere and Mood in Watercolor by Joseph Zbukvic, and if you've never seen his work before I think you will really love it! Also, Nathan Fowkes Schoolism course Landscape Sketching in Watercolor and Gouache is really awesome for hitting alot of those fundamentals you were talking about, if you ever feel overwhelmed with NMA (which they can be overwhelming!! At least I felt that way when i was taking classes there. Great classes, but a little scary!). Also, just wanted to say I love your channel. I just started my own tiny TH-cam channel, and your channel has been helping me get oriented and figure out my art career goals. Thank you!! 🤩
ooh these sound like amazing recommendations, thank you!
💛 I respect you and want to show my gratitude for you sharing this inforrmation. The value of this is top notch.
I've been studying art with NMA for more than a year! They're really helpful. They have Live Classes too which gives the students a bit of structure ❤️ They also made a curriculum you could follow in case you don't know where to start
as someone who has been self-studying for the last 2 years, I can totally agree, that doing so without a proper plan is incredibly hard!
also, your Curriculum sounds amazing. I am excited to see how your journey is going to go :D
I wish you all the best!
Very cool! It looks like we are on the same path. I built a nearly identical plan for myself including NMA and many of the same books. After getting started I'm realizing it will take 2-3 years to get through based on available time in my schedule. I look forward to keeping up with your progress.
I love your videos. You're so organized, I'm definitely needing some work in that area. I've been wanting to create videos of the things I make, to share and mostly for accountability, but I never know where to start, or what is holding me back. Thank you for putting this together and sharing it, it's great to have someone/something to help along the way. 💛
You have now become my art teacher. Congratulations.
I was a member of New Masters Academy a couple years ago. I think I was there for about 9 months. That was before juliette aristides was teaching. Which - I want to re-join at some point just to consume her content.
The highlight for me was Steve Huston. His classes are just so informative and unpretentious. It was Steve that kept a fire lit under my ass.
Worth the money.
Can't think of a con.
I am so glad I Found your video. I went to college for art but unfortunately they were not finished upgrading their new art program so I moved from one condemned building to another and unfortunately my syllabus was the same each year. I’ve been hoping to figure out how to do this at home so this has given me a great start ups to learn from home.
I like this. I found my college art classes so difficult because you’d have to spend 30 hours on a really boring detailed project
This is an amazing video. you’ve framed this in a way that just makes so much sense to me! Thanks for the direction!
Much of my descovery to realize my self mastery is that art is work. Every time someone has mentioned it, I would only gear towards talent and creativity rather than work ethic and unemotional thinking. Understanding that work is simply work and art is the fun of it balanced out alot of my burnouts to a little more understanding that I am looking for beauty.
When I took Art for GCSE (high school), I hated it because it was all about adhering to an academic curriculum and highly censored resources, rather than finding your artistic identity, let alone learning techniques and mediums that wasn't cheap watercolour or oil pastels. Now, at 28, I'm teaching myself exactly what I want to learn. I have definitely improved in basic skills since starting only a few weeks ago and I already have a rough idea as to the kind of art I want to make. Your videos have definitely helped me with this, so I thank you very much :)
Hi Kelsey.I agree with you about studying art.I felt that I wasn't very encouraged in art college.I hated the boring fundamentals but I guess they helped me because I am qble to draw what I see.I really want to draw and paint what I don't see except in my imagination.I have really taught myself with the exception of a handful of good teachers who I still carry with me in my heart always.I wish you success in your plans You would be a good teacher.❤️
I am literally so thankful for your videos, I feel so guilty watching this high quality content for free