if you're an artist about to give up on their dreams, watch this first.

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  • Опубликовано: 7 июн 2024
  • #artvlog2022 #arteducation #givingup #artcareer
    --------------
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    or contact me directly at adamduff@videotron.ca
    #artvlog #artcareer #artcoaching #artschool #canadianartist
    ------------
    Artists mentioned in this video:
    You can find Martina Fackova here:
    www.artstation.com/martinafac...
    You can find Juli Hamilton (tattoo) here:
    juli_hamilt...
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    Join me on ArtStation!
    www.artstation.com/adamduff
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    Join me on INSTAGRAM!
    / adam_duff_lucidpixul
    ---------------
    Common topics discussed on my channel:
    - Managing the emotional ups and downs of being a professional artist
    - Finding an artistic style and finding an ideal career path
    - art vlogs with other known art RUclipsrs
    - personal struggles with being an artist
    - artistic motivation
    - social media advice for artists
    - overcoming artistic procrastination
    - unique professional artistic skills
    - artistic skill development
    - professional artistic training
    - private art schools
    - online art mentorships
    - emotional advice for artists
    - common art career mistakes
    - finding artistic confidence
    - maximizing artistic growth
    just to name a few...
    --------------
    Intro: (0:00)
    Chapter 1 - beginner vs professional portfolio: (2:53)
    Chapter 2 - consistency: (6:17)
    Chapter 3 - your ego pt 1: (10:21)
    Chapter 4 - your ego pt 2: (16:05)
    Chapter 5 - impatience (18:41)
    ADAM DUFF
    adamduff@videotron.ca
    www.lucidpixul.com
    www.adamduff.com
  • КиноКино

Комментарии • 1,8 тыс.

  • @drew.deguara
    @drew.deguara Год назад +4688

    If you grew up without any artistic people in the family, Adam really starts to feel like a dad-like guidance but for the arts.

    • @leipzigergnom
      @leipzigergnom Год назад +264

      Yeah, it's tough when you have no artistic family members around and no mentor

    • @Nabotoro
      @Nabotoro Год назад +39

      i agree here, i one only have a friend irl that actually is phenomenal and is my idol since i begun to draw, having someone like adam to speak to me about topics like these is exactly what i need to make my growth fasten up and possibly get a profesional job into art

    • @spacenomad4477
      @spacenomad4477 Год назад +64

      My grandfather was a painter, but he too discouraged me from painting. It was awful and I stopped doing art for years.

    • @fathomlessforge8700
      @fathomlessforge8700 Год назад +5

      Yes

    • @byronius7012
      @byronius7012 Год назад +31

      I have the opposite problem, everyone in my family is artistic and I feel like I suck compared to all of them

  • @faelwolf1177
    @faelwolf1177 6 месяцев назад +402

    This reminded me of a girl in my machinist class, many (more than I care to admit) years ago. She hated, it, but "needed a job". She would draw professional quality cartoons and artwork during our downtime. When we praised her work, she'd say things like "thanks, but they're just doodles. I'm not very good, but I love to draw". It took a while, but we finally convinced her to go talk to the director of the art department, who immediately snatched her up and enrolled her in the art program. Last I heard, she was well on her way to a career she loved. :)

    • @lindam4259
      @lindam4259 3 месяца назад +13

      So common, especially among women.

    • @greencat3800
      @greencat3800 2 месяца назад +3

      Dude! This is amazing news! I am SO happy for her pursuing her career that she loves!!!❤❤❤

    • @MALICEM12
      @MALICEM12 5 дней назад

      ​@@lindam4259
      Very true, feminism has taught generations of girls that they have to be "just like the guys" but they aren't. 99.99% of women don't want shit to do with machining. Yet many will make it a moral issue as though they have to defend their "right" to do something they don't want to do.

    • @scorpiothesaint
      @scorpiothesaint День назад

      ​@@MALICEM12 Great rage bait, I almost fell for it myself

  • @artpromo.
    @artpromo. Год назад +966

    To all the artists out there: Keep creating and never give up on your passion! Your unique perspective and vision is what makes your art special, and there is always a place for authenticity in the art world. Don't be discouraged by setbacks or rejections - they are just opportunities for growth and learning. Keep pushing yourself and your art, and remember that every piece you create is a step forward in your journey. Keep going, and never lose sight of your artistic goals!

    • @lorettaparish1352
      @lorettaparish1352 Год назад

      Ty @artpromo ❤

    • @koromaru6666
      @koromaru6666 Год назад +5

      There is AI now, dilate harder

    • @davidstar2362
      @davidstar2362 Год назад

      Thank you. I will remember that!!

    • @C12-BlueGODs
      @C12-BlueGODs Год назад

      We won't give up on a dream ❤

    • @hilarylockhart1022
      @hilarylockhart1022 11 месяцев назад +8

      There's not one single damn thing that makes my art special. My perspective isn't even a little bit unique and my vision is practically nonexistent.

  • @koolaid-rp2ku
    @koolaid-rp2ku 9 месяцев назад +27

    It’s honestly really sad that 624k+ have considered giving up on there dream because of how the world treats artist makes me want to cry.

  • @Tremblax
    @Tremblax Год назад +2400

    16:20 THIS RIGHT HERE is what made the difference for me. A couple of years ago I've decided to e-mail one of the artists I respect the most to ask them about a quick portfolio review (in hopes of becoming ready for Hearthstone-style illustrations). Of course I didn't expect an answer as he'd be probably too busy for that... Couple of days later I receive an extensive written portfolio review from him talking about how It was apparent that I use reference in some works but completely disregarded using references in some other works. Talked also about things regarding material rendering, desaturating the background a bit so the foreground colorful character pops more etc... Not only that but he said one thing that would stick with me forever which is "I'd hire you" and THAT opened my eyes about how I was almost ready for the job I was looking for but was just lacking in few areas I needed to address. You can't imagine how words of encouragement from artists you admire can shake up your whole art career in a minute! Fast-forward to 2 years later I'm finally given a chance to illustrate some Hearthstone cards. Hasn't it been for him, I would've probably kept wasting years focusing on the wrong things and self pitying about how my art sucks and how I'll never be ready. Thank you Trent K.
    Don't hesitate to contact successful artists about quick portfolio reviews. A lot of them will probably not respond which is completely normal (they're too busy) but some will. It all depends on timing.

    • @chrisrakkestad
      @chrisrakkestad Год назад +98

      Trent is awesome! Your story makes me joyful.

    • @AdamDuffArt
      @AdamDuffArt  Год назад +285

      Absolutely Ramzy. Worst case scenario, they don’t answer - that’s far from a tragedy right! I’m so happy to hear that you just went ahead and did it - you have an excellent story to share as a result of it.

    • @PlaySDolittle
      @PlaySDolittle Год назад +8

      It is also one of my dreams, but I'm so far to reach there, I don't know if you have discord or anywhere to talk, but it would be amazing to see your insights about my work. I'm glad that you achieved this!

    • @waynealright8047
      @waynealright8047 Год назад +8

      I totally heartened, or should I say “hearthened’, to hear your story. Thanks!
      Since I am familiar with Trent and Adam here from RUclips I can totally imagine the interaction.
      It makes that kind of success seem that bit more attainable.
      Adam, sorry for not saying in a dedicated message but, you’re a sound sounding dude. I get a lot of encouragement from watching your videos, even if I still need some more time to put myself out there. Trent sounds like another really cool guy, different vibe though.
      I’d take either any day as an older brother/art mentor.

    • @redandblack641
      @redandblack641 Год назад +11

      Trent actually made a video that happened to be based off of a comment I made under his video basically venting about being on the verge of giving up on the indie game dev grind. I'm far from the only person who had a video Trent made that answers a question or addresses some of the common issues artists have.

  • @CYNEMICAL
    @CYNEMICAL Год назад +2014

    16:20 Haha the exact OPPOSITE happened for me. Following 8+ years of schooling and self-teaching, I made a risky move to Los Angeles to get my first job in animation. After spending a summer applying to countless openings and even taking several studio tests, I met with a professional artist at Nickelodeon who agreed to meet with me and review my portfolio. After barely glancing at my body of work, he looked me in the eye and said "you're NOT ready". These words crushed me. I was about ready to give up, pack my bags, and leave LA as a broke failed artist. But in a huge twist of irony, just a few days after that portfolio review, one of the studio jobs I had previously applied and tested for called me to offer a full-time background design position. Now nearly six years later I've successfully worked multiple jobs in the animation industry.
    Wherever you are in your journey, you never know what's around the corner- keep going!

    • @albertchurchill4845
      @albertchurchill4845 Год назад +242

      Maybe that reviewer felt threatened by your work, you said he barely looked at it. You didn't mention any other comments he had made. The industry is more than a little cutthroat. The fact you received a job offer with almost no period of elapse proves that the assessment of your skill level was a gross mistake. I'll leave it at that.

    • @violet4239
      @violet4239 Год назад +37

      This is so inspiring!!!!!! Thank you for sharing your story!!!!!!

    • @Baryccyon
      @Baryccyon Год назад +175

      tbf Nickelodeon does not allow the breathing room for creativity or artistic integrity with the way they treat their projects so I think you dodged a bullet

    • @pangur_ban5320
      @pangur_ban5320 Год назад +29

      I'm in the same position as you years ago. Just moved in LA from another country, I had a background in animation education, but without professional drawing skills. Last two years I spent on a useless boring position in mobile farming game dev project. Now is a new chapter of my life, coming back to drawing, attending courses at Gnomon school and looking forward to get a job in games or animation industry. Hope it's not late, I'm 27)

    • @meisteria1884
      @meisteria1884 Год назад +76

      Portfolio reviewers are so subjective, and oftentimes have less art training than you do. This is something young artist need to told. It can be a brutal surprise, as what happened to you.
      A reviewer can make a snap judgment about disliking you - for whatever reason - and then you get a bad portfolio review. It happens. It happened to me 20 years ago.
      Artists just have to mature really fast and learn to be confident on their work, realizing that you’ll encounter people who don’t like you or your work.

  • @SuperNova827
    @SuperNova827 9 месяцев назад +311

    Thank you, Adam. After a 12 year artist block and hiatus, I finally snapped out of my depression and ready to take criticism and to enjoy the process and journey as an artist.

    • @XINNOSINN
      @XINNOSINN 7 месяцев назад +18

      It's been one month since your comment, I hope all is well and that the motivation to create is still present, and that life is headed in the direction you want it to.
      If things are going south just remain patient, headstrong, and reslilient, all things happen for a reason, wether that reason is in or against our favors.
      To begin recovering and coping with depression is one hell of a start, as someone who knows individuals that face such a challenge in their lives I'm proud of you and rooting for you.

    • @spinylizardz
      @spinylizardz 7 месяцев назад +7

      And here I thought my art blocks were bad....I wish the upmost best for you and I believe you'll go on to make great things! ❤️

    • @AlexiEffects
      @AlexiEffects 7 месяцев назад +4

      Are you me?? Get out of my head!! It's been roughly the same length of time as you (though I do more animation/cg based art), I thought I was going crazy (and perhaps I had 😁) The truth usually means getting out of your own way. We got this!!! 💖

    • @juliexiong4124
      @juliexiong4124 5 месяцев назад

      Same here 🥹 I’m right there with you @loveleygwendy we got this..!!!

    • @andretheartguy
      @andretheartguy 5 месяцев назад

      3 months ago you said this, why not post on youtube?

  • @thefuturist8864
    @thefuturist8864 Год назад +693

    I'm 42 and have spent my life being discouraged by most people I know from doing art, specifically music. My parents let me learn a couple of instruments when I was a kid, but once I got to my late teens they were adamant I should focus on finding a career and put everything else to the side. Meanwhile, I had a dream of starting a band where I wrote the songs, though not necessarily for me to sing. I saved up some money and bought some equipment, and from the moment I first set it up I was told that it was a waste and that retirement is the time to do art and music. I pressed on, wrote the songs, formed the band and found that my parents still didn't support us (or even ask how it was going). Other adults referred to it as a 'hobby' and the idea that songwriting was something meaningful to me was something they found confusing (at best) and amusing (at worst). Years later, the band broke up, but I continued to write songs. My parents gave away my piano without telling me (they lied and said they were just loaning it to a neighbour). When I was in my mid-30s I realised that my life felt empty without music, and I'd kept writing songs, so I decided to book some time in a recording studio. That Christmas I was staying with my parents, and when I told them what I was planning to do my mother looked down at the table, made a face, and said "you're not still doing *that* are you?" with as much disdain as she could express.
    A few years afterwards, I was diagnosed with ASD. The diagnosis has done nothing for me, and in many ways has made things harder, but it's given me a way to shut the disdain down. It's not a happy thing, because it has involved medicalising 'me' and the things that I find meaningful and important, but it's helped a little bit. However, I still have that voice - that collective voice of a hundred adults - telling me to stop wasting my time with frivolous things and get on with my 'career'. It's baffling to me that I never received any encouragement from the people who were in positions to give it, including music teachers (one of whom once told me "music's not really for you").
    It never ceases to anger me when I hear people saying things like 'just do it' and 'just follow your dreams', and I wonder if they are aware of the psychological barriers that this world can set up. I used to be frightened of spiders and the dark, but now the only thing that scares me is that I will grow old and become that guy who hates everything because he never felt like he was able to do it himself; who desperately wanted to do something different than what was expected of him but never managed to, and has become overwhelmed with anger and bitterness. I can't bear the thought of being bitter, because it would be a feedback loop; my bitterness, produced in large part by the discouragement I received, would then produce discouragement by me towards others who are in exactly the same position I was in.

    • @melodybaoin1425
      @melodybaoin1425 Год назад +72

      You still have air in your lungs and time Sir, keep on doing what you love no matter what people say. We have our own challenges in our artistic journey and the negative voices is one of them; though keep in mind that the goal is to make something for yourself and not to please the expectations of others. You don't have to seek validation because the only person who knows your own happiness is you and no one else's. Once we are gone in this world the only mark we left behind is our creation. You only have one life and perhaps you can still make beautiful music that could inspire not many but a few people; good luck and more power to you ^^.

    • @elsagrace3893
      @elsagrace3893 Год назад

      What is ASD and why you couldn’t be bothered to write out the 3 words in order to be understood? Maybe you just suck at explaining yourself.

    • @myacct8304
      @myacct8304 Год назад +27

      I’m really proud of you for continuing to follow your inner voice, despite all of the discouragement and disdain from people you love and looked up to. I’m really proud of you for standing up for your passion, and not allowing those who are trapped in their own bitterness feedback loop to fully dissuade you from doing what you want. The psychological barriers are absolutely inside, but the fact that you feel that fear of living in quiet desperation means that your passion is still very much alive and waiting to be set alight. I’m just…I’m really proud of you ❤

    • @xzy1004
      @xzy1004 Год назад +9

      Hey man, you tried really hard to make your dream up, but also enjoy doing something else while you try to achieve that music passion, do anything else to figure out your talent or what yo could be really good at I assure you you will have a happier life

    • @Lazfar
      @Lazfar Год назад +13

      Bless your heart... I think you should be proud of yourself. I hope you find more support and people who appreciate you. You don't deserve for people to be disgusted because you have a thorough passion for something that actually has employable merit. That's horrible. I feel for you, and you shouldn't feel bad about yourself at all.
      Us artists... whether it be music or the visual arts, it's like we have to ask for permission to feel validated and it stings. The last paragraph you've written especially resonated with me because I kind of feel like that about my own art and bitter resentment is a horrible loop indeed. It's amazing when people call this a talent, yet, it's not being able to be put to use. Discouragement and failure shouldn't be a weapon for people to hit others with, that's just wrong - and such a low blow to boot.
      Either way, I just want to say this - you're totally not alone... and you're in my thoughts. I really hope you manage to find an opportunity that'll make you feel happy and fulfilled. You have value. You're here and alive at the end of the day, you have a purpose, so never lose sight of that.
      I wish you all the best, my friend. Cheers.

  • @GalidorDragon
    @GalidorDragon Год назад +1228

    Sometimes I feel like having patience is so hard, specially when you see other younger artists do much better than you, progress in the art field, and I feel stuck. I won't give up, but it's so tyring. Thank you for the video, you inspire me to keep going.

    • @omega_shalow
      @omega_shalow Год назад +19

      I feel you.. Same here, same here.. X)

    • @b.p.5129
      @b.p.5129 Год назад +111

      I think it’s hard to have patience because we believe we can’t get enjoyment and fulfillment out of creating unless we get the approval and accolades that we THINK will make it worth it. And that makes the time that we don’t have all those things agonizing and painful when the journey should be fun and rewarding in itself.

    • @GalidorDragon
      @GalidorDragon Год назад

      @@b.p.5129 Agreed

    • @vivvy_0
      @vivvy_0 Год назад +11

      @@b.p.5129 yeah wish i could do that again like as a child..

    • @b.p.5129
      @b.p.5129 Год назад +24

      @@vivvy_0 there’s no reason you can’t, I create art for my own pleasure and for enjoying exploring my own potential when I practice mindfully. You already love art enough that you have the thought to do it, you have the passion and enjoyment within you.

  • @vickilynn9514
    @vickilynn9514 Год назад +923

    I am 53 and discovered a facility for drawing at 47. I was offered commissions early on, but needed to improve my skills first. It is challenging when you’re older to ‘catch up’, but I intend to be taking commissions soon. I’ll be doing this into my 70s and 80s if I can. It just means that I have to work very hard given the more limited time frame at my age. It can be daunting but you have to do what you love, even if it doesn’t fully support you financially

    • @zggystrdst73
      @zggystrdst73 Год назад +66

      Thanks for this. I'm 49 and when I take time to create and draw and paint, I'm getting good. But that gnawing feeling of "I'm getting older, it's too late" comes in and I stop. Think I'm going to go back in the studio this weekend and get the pencils back out.

    • @carolzapinha
      @carolzapinha Год назад +44

      Thank you, you both made my day with these comments. I'm 31 and when I see talented people at their 15's 20's I feel that feeling of being too old to learn how to draw. Thank you.

    • @ArtbyKurtisEdwards
      @ArtbyKurtisEdwards Год назад +27

      40 here. I can't even get a comment on my art, let alone a like, share, or critique. The days of thinking of getting a commission are the stuff of fantasy to me.

    • @NoirArt.
      @NoirArt. Год назад +19

      It's actually easiert for older people to learn new skills, especially art, cause they tend to have more focus and an eye for details

    • @hammill444
      @hammill444 Год назад +8

      @@NoirArt. Hmm. I don’t know about that. I’m 53, and I’m about to pack it in with drawing. It’s just too discouraging to be this terrible sketch after sketch at this age.

  • @rubayaya9947
    @rubayaya9947 11 месяцев назад +71

    I am 34 years old and started painting recently. I am still a beginner and whenever I feel that I'll never get better, I watch videos like this to encourage me. Painting makes me go to another world. I have massive respect for all artists 💛💙

    • @uglydoves
      @uglydoves 12 часов назад

      It’s crazy to me because I know you will get better

  • @shoujo_rei1010
    @shoujo_rei1010 Год назад +236

    I'm 25 and currently ready to give up my dreams on being an illustrator. Now i'm motivated to continue pursuing art career. Thank you for the advice.

    • @playmakersmusic
      @playmakersmusic Год назад +9

      Same 25 y/o too. But I'm pursuing music. 夢は頑張ってくださいね!

    • @mikenoneofyourbusiness7122
      @mikenoneofyourbusiness7122 Год назад +9

      You can still be an illustrator, just not a professional one. Just create for the joy of it! Art is a hobby, after all. It’s no longer a business or profession. So, stop placing pressure on yourself and get a proper job to support your illustration hobby! ❤

    • @playmakersmusic
      @playmakersmusic 11 месяцев назад +42

      @@mikenoneofyourbusiness7122 Why can't someone still be a professional at a later age? There's no age limit to being an illustrator.

    • @nivek3645
      @nivek3645 11 месяцев назад +22

      @@mikenoneofyourbusiness7122 ​@Mike Noneofyourbusiness Excuse me but what makes you say that you cannot be a professional artist at that age? Very famous illustrators started their art career later on such as Vincent Van Gogh, he has done amazing paintings and started at the age of 27, i do also highly believe that there are even artists who has started at that age and are professional artists later on in the animation or in the video game industry, being as a character designer and such, sure people can do as a hobby but there are others that want to make it as their career being as a professional, that being said, never quit your dreams, no matter the age

    • @zeo5009
      @zeo5009 11 месяцев назад +2

      They might’ve been referring to the state of the industry, rather than OP’s age. Personally I lost faith in the industry even continuing to need artists after moving to LA, let alone any age barriers

  • @MandyJRoss
    @MandyJRoss 3 месяца назад +22

    Self doubt is the serial killer of so many dreams.
    If you're reading this I pray you discover your creative gifts and have the courage to share them. You were born to create.❤️🙏🏼

    • @judichang5934
      @judichang5934 2 месяца назад

      omg thank you :( i need that

  • @ChrisOSemrik
    @ChrisOSemrik Год назад +24

    As a teenager, I loved making art. LOVED it. Spent every moment I had doodling and trying new mediums, even made some connections in the art world and my future seemed bright.
    Then, depression joined the table. It completely crippled me in all areas of my life.
    I haven't touched a pencil in ten years. I'm slowly getting back into it, but I have to learn everything from ground zero and don't have the energy I used to before, so it's tiny little steps spread over long periods of time. I get very discouraged sometimes, thinking of all the time wasted, opportunities gone, connections lost within and without. What scares me the most is that because I have so very little energy, some days I can only do one or two things - for instance go to the store and then draw for an hour. I haven't been able to hold a job in years because of my health, but I can't keep relying on my family to support me forever. I want to make art more than anything, but I worry that if I don't get good enough at it soon to get an income from it, I will have to work another job and then I won't have the energy left to draw anymore...that scares me to death. I keep telling myself to just use the time I do have to do the things I'm passionate about, to not worry about the future. But the fear sets in sometimes anyway. I wish so badly I had more energy, more time, a healthier body and brain. But we can only work with what we have. I am grateful that at least I know what my calling in life is, even if I can never quite answer it - a lot of people never find that. I consider myself lucky, and thanks to this video also inspired to keep working - not for the income, but because it's what my soul needs.

    • @darkcharmrecords
      @darkcharmrecords Год назад +1

      Getting an easy part time job is they key. Anything but just limit it to three days a week maximum.

    • @mikenoneofyourbusiness7122
      @mikenoneofyourbusiness7122 Год назад +2

      Stop eating junk and spend time on screens. Get healthy, get active, get your head cleared up! No excuses. You got one short life, don’t waste it. When you feel better physically and mentally, you could get back to your artistic hobby again! Also, make sure to have a proper job to fund your art hobby!

    • @uglydoves
      @uglydoves 12 часов назад

      It’ll come back when you heal.

  • @davidearhart3832
    @davidearhart3832 Год назад +101

    I once had a professor persuade me to change my concept with early sketches and after I made the complete change, the following week they contradicted themselves by saying I should have used my sketch as it told a better story. I tried to defend myself and I got shut down with the whole "don't make excuses" crap. I have never let that down and now I have a huge issue listening to professional advice.

    • @davidstar2362
      @davidstar2362 Год назад +8

      Someone told me NOT to use techno music with my Raps. Haaaa It is the Jam people love it!!

    • @te9591
      @te9591 6 месяцев назад +6

      Most professors are overrated. That guy sounds like a guy with a self deceptive ego.

    • @MBeyeline
      @MBeyeline 6 месяцев назад +5

      This happened to me once with a client. I offer branding and marketing services to independent musicians after having had over a decade of experience in the industry myself. Long story short, after the feedback, the guy wrote an even crappier song to the point I was like "just stick to what you wrote before". That's when I realized that despite your best feedback, you can't force someone to grow too soon unless they're ready for it. He was NOT ready. He didn't even properly assess the feedback. I stopped working with him soon after. This may have been your case or not. Holding on to that incident however, is not healthy for your progress.

    • @debbierichardson8364
      @debbierichardson8364 6 месяцев назад +1

      I commissioned a copper splashback for my kitchen and the first effort wasn't what I wanted at all so I explained it again and showed him photos..every effort got worse so I ended up saying go back to the first one you did. It was frustrating

  • @Alex-zt3rb
    @Alex-zt3rb 11 месяцев назад +36

    I am 21, i spent through my adolescent years thinking i wasn't "good" enough and discouraged by many teachers until last year, i found myself drawing again because of an old friend. I am found at ease while drawing. Recently i had a bad encounter with a art teacher due to my learning disability and honestly no matter how much people try to discourage you KEEP GOING. I am not giving up in art no matter if my art work isnt good enough for people, its good enough for ME.

  • @PetersonJoseph
    @PetersonJoseph Год назад +116

    I used to want to have a job in art. I was always miserable, never good enough. Now I do it for myself. My style is no style. Im happier. And sometimes, a contract comes in, I do it. If not, that's fine. I love art again.

    • @jedje
      @jedje Год назад +13

      Art as a job is just a job in the end, I consider it more craft than art.

    • @TheSilverwolf97
      @TheSilverwolf97 Год назад +4

      I always had that fear. That's why I've always kept it a hobby. But for a while now I reached the point where if I don't put a billion hours into an illustration I am not satisfied so I barely draw anymore due to fear of commitment. Maybe I need the commitment of being my job now, I am not sure.

    • @SureTina
      @SureTina 4 месяца назад +2

      I feel you, before graduating from uni I found a job as a graphic designer and been working there since then. Sometimes I wonder how it would be to make illustration my job, but I think it's better for me for it to stay as a hobby: that way I have no deadline pressures, can draw the subjects of my choosing and it doesn't matter if I'm not "good enough".

  • @godofironart
    @godofironart Год назад +326

    I Burned out so badly over the course of the pandemic, leading to the beginning of this year that I started hating art, and I've started my pivot towards an entirely new career. If I'm going to eventually hate what I do anyways, why not do something that makes much better money?
    I'd love to live my dream, but people in this world are so focused on squeezing every bit of life and value out of creatives while leaving us with scraps... it's unsustainable. It's too hard breaking into any kind of creative industry without connections, for how much you get paid for it. Now, my new dream is to be able to retire, and I no longer see that as being possible while chasing an art career.
    That was such a tragic realization for me to make.
    Maybe I'll love art again when I do it just for fun and not as a profession. and maybe at that point much later in my life, I can make it a side profession, because by then I might be good enough.

    • @AdamDuffArt
      @AdamDuffArt  Год назад +170

      Not every artist is an artist by profession. You can paint and create daily without making a career out of it
      Maybe you prefer sustaining yourself through a different career but you use art as a way to ground yourself
      I have many students who have zero desire to be professional artists, they’re programmers, engineers, consultants etc..
      Totally common.

    • @soupedelimaces
      @soupedelimaces Год назад +10

      give yourself time. you'll go back to it when you feel like it, it's not always constant :)

    • @roycexroyce6446
      @roycexroyce6446 Год назад +17

      This is how I feel about editing tv and film. Film used to be my life, now I'm burned out and have grown to actively hate it. But drawing and art is my relaxation. I never want it to be a source of income or a job because I know I'd grow to hate it as well.

    • @Bachconcertos
      @Bachconcertos Год назад +20

      Artist are exploited their time talent money & resources. When it turns ugly time to just make it a hobby. Luv yourself value yourself over art - never be a slave to any passion.

    • @salmaorabi5478
      @salmaorabi5478 Год назад +20

      @@AdamDuffArt
      I'm 20 and i love making art
      it's the only thing I'm really really good at but trying making it a career made me stressed me so much and emotionally unstable
      I thought maybe I'm not meant to work as an artist and have it as just a hobby
      But the thought of working something else aches my heart
      I want to survive in terms of making money to live
      But I can't really think of any other career
      I don't want to be a failure on somethings I'm not good at
      What should i do?

  • @jtslade4709
    @jtslade4709 Год назад +62

    I know this is mainly targeted at artist as in people that draw, but i feel this video applies to every artist. (musicians, actors, ect.) every artist has some form of portfolio equivalent and all your advice taken away from the art context just applies to every field. personally wish we had a person like this in Voice over but i loved hearing the advice.

    • @mikenoneofyourbusiness7122
      @mikenoneofyourbusiness7122 Год назад

      Art is obviously a hobby, not a profession. Nobody buys original fine art pieces! Once a person stops hoping to earn, it’s way easier to create! No need to give up creating! Just get a proper job to fund your hobby. Easy!

    • @devinkipp4344
      @devinkipp4344 4 месяца назад

      @@mikenoneofyourbusiness7122 It can be both.

  • @droppedcombofiend2707
    @droppedcombofiend2707 Год назад +29

    I actually had one of those "gasp" moments a few months ago. I'm in my early 30s, and spent the past 15+ years trying to improve as an artist, and got basically nowhere. Then I finally had the opportunity to go to art school. By the beginning of my senior year, I had grown and learned a lot, but still was missing something. Most notably, I was awful at value. I had a really hard time shading.
    I primarily work as a digital artist, so this was a problem. I took 3 different digital art classes trying to figure out what was missing, and while I learned a lot, I never got that key piece I was looking for. I knew I was missing something and kept asking what I was doing wrong, but no one could give me a real answer. I kept just getting stuff like, "You're doing fine," and "You're improving, and that's what matters," and the one that drove me the craziest, "Be patient." After working for more than a decade and getting nowhere, then spending tens of thousands of dollars on an art degree and still not getting what I was looking for was driving me insane.
    Then I just took it on myself to try and figure out what I was doing wrong, since my teachers and other students weren't helping. I watched videos, read multiple books, and watched streams. I did this for 6 months and got nothing. Everything I saw seemed to assume you either knew nothing about digital art and would do things like go over the basic tool bar, or would assume you already know the basics and start talking about composition and color choice. Until I saw a video by Sinix design about what brush to use as a beginner. It was so obvious what I was doing wrong. I wasn't using opacity brushes. That's what I was missing. That's why I had such a difficult time. When I found this out, I absolutely did an audible gasp. I was also kind of mad that I was in my final year of art school and no one told me something so simple.
    I saw this video about 5 months ago, and my art has improved more in those 5 months than in over a decade of working alone. I still need to work on my portfolio quite a bit, but I'm finally making full pieces that warrant creating a portfolio. I'm still not a particularly good artist, and have a lot to work on, but I'm finally getting there. Sometimes there really is just that missing piece.

    • @spiritlevelstudios
      @spiritlevelstudios 3 месяца назад

      Opacity? Really? You weren't adjusting opacity?
      That's unbelievable.

    • @droppedcombofiend2707
      @droppedcombofiend2707 3 месяца назад +2

      @@spiritlevelstudios Yup. It really opened up a whole new world. I guess it's something so basic that most people just assume people know already. I was aware of it, I had heard and seen the word, but had no idea what it did. Most books and videos that mentioned it just mentioned it as a setting. Never really specifying what it was or how it was used. Even when I took classes they didn't talk about it, because when I got to a digital art class it was considered an advanced class. So there was no instruction or lectures. We were just given prompts and meant to work on our own.
      On the bright side, since I spent so long struggling, experimenting, and doing things the hard way, once I found out what I was missing my skill jumped significantly in a short time. Now people always tell me how clean and professional my work looks.

  • @gred8864
    @gred8864 Год назад +293

    At this point Adam I think you have some mind-reading capabilities and I'm extremely thankful for it

    • @cyb3r_d0g76
      @cyb3r_d0g76 Год назад +2

      tots agree

    • @glorytoukraine5524
      @glorytoukraine5524 Год назад +1

      Fully agree

    • @DRYeisleysCreations
      @DRYeisleysCreations Год назад +2

      Maybe he's tuned in with the creative side of the universe.

    • @AdamDuffArt
      @AdamDuffArt  Год назад +75

      I’d love to claim to be psychic, but it’s a lot simpler than that - I’m just a fellow artist, we all pretty much struggle with the same stuff

  • @katlyntheartist
    @katlyntheartist Год назад +217

    I am an artist with Tourette Syndrome. I have been struggling with my art since I first started. I keep beating myself up seeing these artists my age who are lightyears ahead of me. I have wanted to quit so many times. Your videos help out me so much. They offer great advice as well as great encouragement. Thank you for taking the time to make these and for helping me keep going.

    • @kaylynchua9574
      @kaylynchua9574 Год назад +9

      Hey! I checked out ur speed paint and it's pretty good! Although there is one point u can improve to make ur art look cleaner :') instead of sketching multiple times for the line, try to aim for one clean line. But if clean isn't ur style then ignore what I said didndn. I rlly like ur style tho!

    • @FrozenPrimordial
      @FrozenPrimordial Год назад +3

      how does having tourettes effect ur artwork?

    • @katlyntheartist
      @katlyntheartist Год назад +21

      @@FrozenPrimordial I swing my arms out to the side. It’s hard for me to hold my tics back when I try to draw.

    • @the_flushjackson
      @the_flushjackson Год назад +6

      Comparison is the thief of joy. Find inspiration in others and remember it's a journey not a destination.

    • @RawrTen
      @RawrTen Год назад +3

      Fellow artist with Tourette Syndrome, too. I feel you in every aspect. But we have to keep pushing. Sometimes it’s best to detox from the internet/social media for a week a month and focus on our own artwork and not compare ourselves to others. Everyone’s journey is different. ❤

  • @kzbee
    @kzbee Год назад +55

    After 12 years of not knowing what I actually want and staying in a career that helps me make more money but doesn’t spark a light in me, I am finally deciding to switch careers and pursue my artistic career! I don’t know how this will turn out but videos like these inspire me to keep going and not give up on my dreams. I finally know what I want. Thank you for this! I hope we all make it!

    • @mikenoneofyourbusiness7122
      @mikenoneofyourbusiness7122 Год назад

      Nobody buys original fine art pieces. You may be stuck being a pathetic art teacher, which is unskilled job that pays peanuts. Art is just a hobby, after all. Not a profession.

    • @Nadeirevyk
      @Nadeirevyk 9 месяцев назад +7

      I feel you. I once wanted to pursue art as a career but decided against it due to financial reasons (and thinking I would become a "starving artist"). After many years of working unrelated jobs, it starts to get to you and it can be soul-draining. Starting an artistic career for me will be a slow process, but I think it's worth it. Best of luck to you!

    • @littlestbroccoli
      @littlestbroccoli 4 месяца назад +1

      You'll be fine.

  • @Talalmakesthings
    @Talalmakesthings Год назад +6

    Making art is the manifestation of a sensory experience that the artist experienced and wants to share.
    Meaning, an artist subjugates his craft (the medium) to express the subtleties of his experiences.
    An artist’s art is a mirror of his own experience.
    The reason behind making the art is for him to understand the profundity and subtlety of his experience (to evolve), and share it with the world as an act of service (for the world to understand and connect with their own experiences. It creates a sense of connection).
    AI does not experience things sensorily (as in emotionally or spiritually-through senses).
    Art to AI is not a mirror to its own development towards realization/revelation (it just contributes to more accuracy-more optimization).
    AI art is just an amalgamation of all previous artistic feats achieved by humans.
    Without human art there wouldn’t be AI art.
    Each person has his own subjective experience. A completely novel way of perceiving the world.
    Therefore, each artist is original even if they tried to express the same idea or even the same exact script. It will be completely different.
    This subjectivity is not present with AI because its perception is the collective perception of all previous artists (as data points not as an experiencing being).
    AI is not experiencing anything (sensorily).
    An artist is an experiencing being.
    ---
    Apologies for the long message. This following statement sums it all up:
    Chocolate tastes sweet for a human being (as a revelation, an experience-in the moment). And chocolate tastes sweet for AI only because its tasted sweet for the human being.
    Make your art for your own sake. We all need your revelations.

  • @bribri1219
    @bribri1219 Год назад +155

    I used to want to be a digital artist, constantly painting and drawing on my iPad. I had put so much time and effort into learning everything, but unfortunately something happened with my eyes to the point where it hurts to draw on a device now. I had to stop and completely switch my path of what I wanted to do due to the condition. I’m now in the pursuit of becoming a tattoo artist. And I am so grateful to have had your advice and videos through all this. Chances are I’ll be watching you far into my tattoo career:)

    • @eiwhaz-tina6528
      @eiwhaz-tina6528 Год назад +4

      Holy shit damaged your eyes because of the screens?

    • @eeeeeek
      @eeeeeek Год назад +5

      subpar genetics lol

    • @bribri1219
      @bribri1219 Год назад +10

      @@eiwhaz-tina6528 not sure yet:/ I’ve been going to different doctors too try and figure it out, we think it’s something more tho…. not just my eyes, but still I wish while I was doing digital art I took more care of my eyes…

    • @eiwhaz-tina6528
      @eiwhaz-tina6528 Год назад +14

      @@bribri1219 I see. I'm sorry to hear that.
      I also do digital, but I've been using the best blue light filter glasses, i hydrate my eyes regularly and I even use blue filter on the screen. Also my phone.
      I hope it's good enough honestly

    • @bribri1219
      @bribri1219 Год назад +9

      @@eiwhaz-tina6528 wow I wish I had done that, and I’m sure it will be:) take care of yourself. I’m pretty sure my eyes aren’t really due to the screen, but even so I should have been better with keeping them healthy

  • @merullaart
    @merullaart Год назад +78

    I never gave up. To be honest, after 30 years I would like to be making money from my art.
    I have been sick for a long time and I feel that time is slipping through my fingers.
    I don't know how long I'll be here and if my dreams will come true, but I'll keep going because creating is my purpose.
    You are a huge inspiration to us - our mentor, our father. Thank you Adam for what you do for us!
    Wish you all best you deserve in life with all my heart. :)

    • @13tapioca
      @13tapioca Год назад +1

      I'm in my late 20s and I fear my health will always be in the way plus with mental health as well this feels like an impenetrable wall.

  • @stephanclemens2348
    @stephanclemens2348 6 месяцев назад +5

    All your observations are correct.
    What I can say out of my experience as an Art Student is that very often the problem that occurs is that teachers seemingly always try to break the student to submit to their way. That's understandable as they know what industries are looking for and they are tasked to teach you that but it often results in them completely losing sight of what the person trying to master or to achieve. Sometimes the straight line to the finish is not the best approach and it needs a detour to get to the same destination.

  • @adammerchant6755
    @adammerchant6755 Год назад +4

    I’m discovering my songwriting ability and building confidence and creativity every day... I don’t think of any business aspects. I don’t think of using my art and passion to pay bills... I think about people that I can share my art with. People that will hear me and resonate with my creations. 🙏🏼

  • @Kimmieziven
    @Kimmieziven Год назад +321

    The reason why i feel its too late because theres "too many" artists on the internet that are freelancing and selling at cheap prices like under $60 because of competition or country's currency value. And it brought up the question, is there enough demands in art for artists to survive as a full timer? (Like technicians or electrician demands)

    • @AdamDuffArt
      @AdamDuffArt  Год назад +256

      Honestly Chan - there have ALWAYS been too many artists. What’s changed over the centuries (kind of) are the responsibilities that artists have had. Photography and 3D changed that dynamic dramatically, but the need and birth of new artists is constant. Never feel like there are too many - in my opinion there aren’t nearly enough :)

    • @Kimmieziven
      @Kimmieziven Год назад +13

      @@AdamDuffArt thankyou for everything you've shared

    • @starandeath4735
      @starandeath4735 Год назад +12

      In Asia where I'm from, 60$ ain't cheap. I only recently up my prices cause of that.

    • @TheWhiteTemplar2077
      @TheWhiteTemplar2077 Год назад +20

      @@AdamDuffArt Stop giving people hope- there is too much competition especially with AI advancing more and more. The truth is the art career is evolving and getting smaller to the point where if you aren't one of the tippy top dogs you have no chance, even 3D is being more and more automated. Where do we go after 3d? what is the point anymore? art may be about expression ,but it won't feed you or pay your bills. Corporations and all the competition out there don't care about you and what you have to say. I wanted t obe a comic boo kartist- that is my dream and I realized that at 33,but then I discovered AI and where art is going with the fact i'm the noobie in an endless ocean of better artist- this is what real depression is like and giving false hope to people will only make it hurt worse in the future.

    • @Basedeath
      @Basedeath Год назад +21

      @@TheWhiteTemplar2077 I feel a similar way sometimes. If all you want to do is paint pretty pictures then yeah competition is tough.
      Come up with a unique style, characters or a really interesting presentation or a memorable world for your art to live in.
      But AI is a tool and it will benefit any artists who use it properly.

  • @seniorordenanza2387
    @seniorordenanza2387 Год назад +107

    I’m not an artist I’m more of a writer actually but this hit home for me and helped a lot. I’ve lost my passion just to make a short story for so long. And tbh writing is just making an art piece but with words essentially, so I think this definitely helps anyone.

    • @AdamDuffArt
      @AdamDuffArt  Год назад +59

      Of course this talk hits home for you!
      IMO - artists are artists are artists - this talk applies equally to writers, musicians, vocalists, comedians, painters, dancers, actors etc..
      We’re all forged from the same core - we just have our own means of expression.

    • @kazuo398
      @kazuo398 Год назад +13

      I'm also a writer. I tried to be actually. In my opinion, it's even harder to get in the community. People are reading less and it's harder to make a story appealing. You can immediately see the skill and understand the idea behind a drawing or a painting. Reading became a big investment of time for people. Why should people read your story instead of going for a well-established author? It's even worse to compete with instant pieces of entertainment like tiktoks, reels and stuff like that. Not saying it's easy for artists or writers should just give up. I'm actually learning digital painting to make my stories more appealing. Building a community and influence seems to be the better way to get in the market. It's not all bad either self-publishing made it easier

    • @tshobe7833
      @tshobe7833 Год назад +11

      Writers are 'Artists'. Artists exercise creativity from within. So if you write, do music, arrange flowers or anything else that uses your spirit to produce something where there wasn't something before, then that qualifies you to be called an artist. If someone thinks that to be considered an artist is only for those that paint or draw, then to me, they are are incorrect.

    • @alonespirit_1Q84
      @alonespirit_1Q84 Год назад

      @@tshobe7833 Straight facts!
      I got the same feeling from reading the original comment.

    • @ditron1963
      @ditron1963 Год назад +1

      Bro fellow artists with ego issues here. I am on my 7 day of writing every day after burnout and harsh but true critique about my writing.

  • @lalathelemonllama
    @lalathelemonllama Год назад +18

    Oh my gosh. Im not even searching for an art career, I’m an economics major for goodness sake, but this hit me so hard. Everything you just talked about can be applied to so many areas professionally and i think more people need to hear everything you just said. The part about having patience and not looking at the clock on your growth is so important. As someone who is striving for huge goals it’s hard to take the little baby steps in order to grow and actually go through the process. But I know that it’ll be worth it in the end. Saving this video for future me lol.

  • @diabolicaldebacle
    @diabolicaldebacle Год назад

    This popped up exactly when it needed to for me. Thank you, for taking the time to make this, edit it, and upload it for people who are struggling. Your kindness is appreciated.

  • @zinzolin14
    @zinzolin14 Год назад +53

    Recently I've gotten the "you're ready" from a teacher. I get the hesitation, as we artists often question our own work and abilities, especially newer inexperienced artists. But there's a point where we'll have to move forward, as scary as it may be.

  • @kwasib-r2434
    @kwasib-r2434 Год назад +102

    I remember at college at age 19 I was learning writing and illustrating comics. I learned this and learned that but never actually tried making a comic until the very last assignment the teacher told me "make a comic." My heart dropped. I thought it would be years before I actually start making comics. I was terrified. I haven't mastered the fundamentals yet or learned to draw everything yet. But I did it. And it wasn't as awful as I thought it would be. Not professional industry level but not hideous either. I was quite proud that I made a comic at all and it felt like a step in the right direction. I've also heard from a many comic artists that the best way to learn drawing comics is to draw comics. Even to assign specific subjects to practice in each comic like "in this comic I'll practice drawing perspective, faces, shading etc". So currently at 20 I'm recovering from a bad burnout and slowly easing myself back into making short comics and slowly making each one longer. Thanks for the video it just reminded me of that time in college.

    • @johnvonmartin7501
      @johnvonmartin7501 Год назад +4

      Not too late at 26 I just actually learned the fundamentals of anatomy after so many failed attempts back in college.

    • @brandtruffle
      @brandtruffle Год назад +4

      I’m a lot lot younger but I also have the dreams of illustrating my own comics. I have a bad habit of comparing myself to other artist which is why I haven’t even started a book but, because of this comment and video, I’m a lot more hopeful for my future

    • @noklarok
      @noklarok Год назад

      yeh comics seems like an easy route to burnout-

    • @kwasib-r2434
      @kwasib-r2434 Год назад +1

      Update
      I've decided to put comics down for a bit and take both art and life at a slower pace. Drawing less but appreciating it more. If I learn slower? Oh well. It's better for me to not overdo it. I could work for an hour before but after my major burnout I can work for 10 mins most (I can do 10 minutes, break, and another 10 minutes but only when I feel like it). I recently went to a museum and drew what i saw in the museum (for longer than 10 mins and no breaks) and for the first time in years art felt like a therapeutic experience. Like how Bob Ross loves painting I felt like in that one calm, tranquil moment of focus. Where everything else in the world faded away and it was just me and the subject I was drawing. Where I enjoyed studying which I never thought was possible. Most studying I do (drawing a face 100 times and writing a few notes around them) felt so boring and monotonous but this felt different. It felt fun and my drawings looked fairly good. That one drawing of a crab in the museum looked and felt better to draw than the 100 heads I did. I should probably practice this way more often.

    • @brandtruffle
      @brandtruffle Год назад +2

      @@kwasib-r2434 I totally agree, the process of making art is sometimes better than the piece itself. Just have fun with your art. It’s your art after all.

  • @TheArtofCourage
    @TheArtofCourage Год назад

    I appreciate how straightforward you are in this talk. It's refreshing to hear someone tell it like it is and not sugarcoat things

  • @wordstalktome
    @wordstalktome Год назад +1

    Gosh, Adam's videos just HITS YOU! and I love him for his words and presence on this platform!

  • @asyrel6900
    @asyrel6900 Год назад +39

    Im 27, I started drawing when I was 19 because I kindoff thought video game concept art was cool and I didnt have anything else going for me, I ended up going to university for graphic design, I was too afraid to major illustration because I was really afraid and not confident in my art, i would draw on and off and not take it seriously... fast forward till I was 25 I was so inconsistent but I kept improving slightly, I graduated with a degree in graphic design and had a few internships but I hated the marketing industry so I felt like I made a huge mistake and I should of majored illustration.
    Graduating in the pandemic I didnt get any jobs, so I decided im going to go all into my art, and Ive improved more from 26-27 than any other peroid in my life, but I still feel very lost in this journey, I am very lonely and I dont really have any art friends I wish I had atleast 1 art friend to get some sort of feedback ...

    • @ramjeevacartoons
      @ramjeevacartoons Год назад +2

      hi bro its really bad . we love and live with art spend entire life for art . but in my experience we all failed in marketing and business . because we all are just focus on art only . that's why we failed . and mediator's earn more then 100% im also still struggling to improve my skill and getting correct client and lot of issues going on... but i don't have any other idea or skill so im stick with art only . (sorry for my bad English)

    • @MirKat792
      @MirKat792 Год назад +3

      Oh man, I feel that about not having any art friends. :( If you'd like, I'd love to chat with you as a fellow artist and friendly human :)

    • @sparklingunicornss
      @sparklingunicornss Год назад +3

      I'm 26 and have been quitting art on and off for like 7 years ): I too feel lost and I also feel like it's too late for me. I would also like an art friend. do you have a discord ?

    • @Kimmieziven
      @Kimmieziven Год назад +2

      Theres an art discord server for hobbyist and people who wanna improve art (sometimes we debate about our different art opinion though). I can share the name of the server if you wanted. Actually.. im in few others too , depending wat u looking for.

    • @asyrel6900
      @asyrel6900 Год назад +1

      @@Kimmieziven hell yeah! im actually looking for art communities to join and learn from

  • @kenonerboy
    @kenonerboy Год назад +179

    Im 27. Ive been drawing since 14. I legitimately gave up everything else in my life to draw, and i just dont improve. Yes i draw cubes and simple forms. At this point i feel regret for wasting my life chasing a dream i simply dont have the talent to actually manifest it. Ive been training so long i feel like i have forgotten what i even wanted to draw. No friends no job no gf. Just a broken pencil left

    • @snowpanther7076
      @snowpanther7076 Год назад +25

      I even dropped out of university to pursue my dream. I can't even move out of my parents' house if I wanted to right now

    • @just_thammi
      @just_thammi Год назад +1

      @@snowpanther7076 Same here at least on the university part; what kind of dreams do you have?

    • @snowpanther7076
      @snowpanther7076 Год назад +18

      @@just_thammi I want to be a famous writer who can live off the money made from my books. I've written a lot and published a lot but haven't really sold anything

    • @noob_artistrrrr
      @noob_artistrrrr Год назад +32

      we're the same bro, i literally quit my engineering course cause i just didn't like it and wanting to pursue arts and make a living out of it, i even plan on not going to university and rather spend those years improving my art, i just started drawing a year ago and all I've been drawing is 3 boxes and forms too that's why i can relate to you, and I'm a loser autistic guy so i probably couldn't get a girlfriend or even friends, right now i enrolled to finearts course cause my father forced me to graduate college so i can have a degree and don't struggle finding a job cause college degree is a requirements for a job, so i chose finearts so i can get a college degree and keep drawing at the same time since my course is all about drawing, and i have no talent at it at all I'm just an idiot trying to an artist 😂 well hopefully i find success and hopefully you could too

    • @yonavlad3723
      @yonavlad3723 Год назад +8

      @@noob_artistrrrr I hope it works out for you bro

  • @cwazy7108
    @cwazy7108 Год назад

    You're the realest person in the art community thank you for that ❤

  • @AMARINS
    @AMARINS Год назад +17

    This is SO true! As a 31 year old professional violinist I can definitely say from experience that life is not just a clear line upwards, it's often at the most unexpected moments when some amazing bend in the road appears. I've definitely been through some low points (especially during the pandemic when I couldn't do what I loved most, performing!) Now, luckily, I'm performing a lot with my string quartet all over the world, we are lucky (and have worked hard!) Wishing you all luck and don't give up!

  • @scaredsanty857
    @scaredsanty857 Год назад +27

    I think it's a human nature to resist to change
    I've been stuck for the last three years, always in and out of artblock and hating my art but actually what i needed weren't studies or motivation - it was my readiness to change
    You were right for pointing out that our artworks are tightly tied to our ego
    And while some things are easy to bend, others aren't and it's exactly when those unbendable in our mind spots are touched we become defensive

  • @LeonIsLate
    @LeonIsLate Год назад +10

    I haven't been drawing anything for a year because last time I focused on learning so much, I burnt myself out. Trying to slowly pick up the pace and be my best artist self

  • @NikiLynn02
    @NikiLynn02 Год назад

    Holy moly, this resonated on so many levels for me and about brought me to tears. You threw out some amazing, critical, and concrete advice. Being a painter and your own boss makes it difficult at times to get true unbiased feedback and help with growth. This helped me analyze what I am currently doing, what's working and not, and where to go from here.

  • @CosmicReverberations
    @CosmicReverberations Год назад

    Had me in tears multiple times. THANK YOU w so much love for sharing your perspectives. Life feels so defeating at times and this video greatly helped ♥️

  • @liquiddnblife8654
    @liquiddnblife8654 Год назад +4

    Hey Adam, just wanted to say how much I love your videos, I can't even describe how much value I get from these. Big ups!

  • @user-wq7uf4sq2v
    @user-wq7uf4sq2v Год назад +4

    Adam, I must say, I've been very much in love with this kind of videos that you make. It's like having someone to vent and calm you from all those issues that drawing can put you through, it's very inspiring, truly. I've watched some repeatedly because I very often pressure myself and everytime it is a blessing to hear.

  • @Matthimeo
    @Matthimeo Год назад +17

    Having worked in the animation industry for 6 years now, I can say that your not gonna be ready for the industry until you’ve already been in it for several years. Its always gonna be hard to get in and catch up with the skill level of professional artists, but nobody reaches a professional level without professional experience. Apply to lots of places and stay persistent in your practice and pursuit and you will succeed, it’s a marathon, not a sprint.

    • @Zeoytaccount
      @Zeoytaccount 3 месяца назад

      I was told how much experience matters by more senior artists too, until they were cut/automated out. Beware; it’s certainly not a meritocracy.

  • @schlummerkatze795
    @schlummerkatze795 Год назад +1

    I had a good long cry at the end of the video. I think this is exactly what I needed to hear. Thank you. Really. I feel like a bolder has been lifted from my soul.

  • @anthonylaselva4727
    @anthonylaselva4727 Год назад +48

    Although I've been working in this industry for a while, these things are always good to listen to.
    Thank you so much, Adam. Rarely in my life have I found such human people.

    • @AdamDuffArt
      @AdamDuffArt  Год назад +7

      Aww well right back at your Anthony. You just made my day too :)

  • @zachshield5187
    @zachshield5187 Год назад +10

    This help put a lot of things into perspective. Especially the consistency and style. It never occured to me that maybe my style isnt what resonates with others. Thank you Adam

  • @fegoonowori
    @fegoonowori Год назад +2

    Thank you so much Adam! Half way into the video I had no choice but to subscribe.
    Thanks again!

  • @grizzly228
    @grizzly228 8 месяцев назад +4

    I’m a writer not a painter but wow, how this advice still applies is pretty amazing. Thank you.

  • @doctorlatte2515
    @doctorlatte2515 Год назад +54

    Even for artists at the moment who don't feel like giving up, this is extremely important information for them to hear! thank you Adam for being an important insight to all of us. I have been fluctuating in art style at the moment after a 3 months period of being in a horrible jaded art state due to thinking that if i changed style i would have wasted all that time i invested into the other one, and that everyone would look down on me for it and stop trusting me to have this difficult career in my own hands, (( currently dealing with the fear of failure even when knowing failure is important for growth) but due to that period i lost a lot of love for art because i was trying to keep myself forcefully into that cocoon of that style of who i use to be, even thinking of drawing would cause me heart palpitations but I kept going on. Now knowing why all this was happening , but then trying to learn from different types of artists, gave me the answer to that and refueled my soul. Your reminder that it's part of the process to go from different types of artists style of work is normal, and is part of an artists growth really reassured me, thank you!

  • @nathanvertil7355
    @nathanvertil7355 Год назад +4

    I haven't been thinking of quitting because doing art brings me much joy, and watching this video; watching and listening to you speak on the factors of it as a career re-ignited what I need to remember as I continue to create. Much love to you, Adam!

  • @vtor9340
    @vtor9340 Год назад +5

    Don’t give up!! The more I’m going through my art classes the more relived I feel because a lot of my professors are focusing less on talent and skill and just on progress and it’s so uplifting!

  • @soulfulandnice
    @soulfulandnice Год назад

    Right from the beginning with your calm voice, I was focused on what you had to say. You spoke like a true teacher: with patience, guidance, constructive feedback and empathy because you've lived the life too. Thank you😊

  • @gijis02
    @gijis02 Год назад +3

    I love how you talk about progress. So often I get frustrated that it’s not a constant thing, but it’s a mixture of plateaus and sharp inclines

  • @Nabotoro
    @Nabotoro Год назад +4

    thank you adam, yet again with another video that gave me more advice to help me advance towards my uncertain future, i have many fears of the unknown about this but i belive that sooner or later ill be ready, my art has been steadily growing with eatch completed piece and practice work ive done, your words have helped me to realize what i must do from here to continue my journey into a profesional art career that i have been looking for since i was a kid, art now has became a part of me and i just cannot imagine myself loosing this spark its just unimaginable to me and i dont want to lose it so i will be working hard whenever i can to improove myself.
    thank you adam, love you for your wise words, these are exactly what i will need.

  • @verakhamenok
    @verakhamenok 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you SO MUCH! Found your video in the critical time for myself and... as if I asked you directly --- you gave responces to MY questions. Good luck to you and everybody going through the existential and/or artistic crisis!

  • @halagaafar9448
    @halagaafar9448 6 дней назад

    Everything you addressed was so spot-on
    Thank you. I needed to hear it

  • @drawcohol1387
    @drawcohol1387 Год назад +5

    Everytime Adam does a video, is a masterpiece. Thank you so much!

  • @ZahhibbDev
    @ZahhibbDev Год назад +5

    Even though I am not an artist a lot of these insights will work for me as well -- as a game designer, so thank you Adam for being honest and straight with us on how things are in the end.

  • @cmillerart
    @cmillerart Год назад +3

    I just wanted to take a moment to express my appreciation for what you said about not giving up your dreams. Your words really resonated with me as an artist who has struggled with impatience and self-doubt in my own journey. I often feel like I'm stagnating and that my growth is "too late" especially as I get older and can't seem to break into new territory with my art. I compare myself to other artists who are about my age, and have found a lot of success in their work, and have a lot more variety.
    But hearing your words and your reminder that growth in the arts can be slow but rewarding, it helped me to see things in a different perspective. I understand that everyone's journey is different, and that my time to shine will come. Your message about not waiting for the perfect moment and the reminder that growth in the arts can be slow but rewarding really hit home for me. It was both comforting and motivating to hear your perspective. Thank you for sharing your wisdom and insights.

  • @estudiomanga
    @estudiomanga Год назад

    A lot of tears in my eyes. THANK YOU VERY MUCH from Brazil!!!

  • @anaverageanimistictable4700
    @anaverageanimistictable4700 Год назад +4

    Talk about timing. I'm having some serious doubts relating to art, and I really needed this

  • @vdyson9655
    @vdyson9655 Год назад +3

    Love your advice, Adam! A dream is like a destination, but life is a journey and giving up isn't an option 🙂

  • @pocketlighthouse
    @pocketlighthouse Год назад

    Honestly I'm blown away by how amazing this video is. Thank you so much for making it! It's incredibly helpful :)

  • @abbyrudh1399
    @abbyrudh1399 Год назад +3

    man u reminded me the lecture who was the reason for me to quit college i deeply appreciate and grateful that u exist like there is someone who’s never rude and encouraging people who at at their lowest much love and pls advice and lead us more i would love to listen to you♥️

  • @RatusMax
    @RatusMax Год назад +9

    This advice parallels getting a software so much. It's why I consider making software an art. It's why unlike some people I respect artists. Creating a piece of artwork is like creating a piece of software. The tools used are just different. I am the person who thought to little of my work. I thought I was never ready. Years passed after college wondering what I was doing wrong in the interviews. Hell, even securing an interview.
    All of what is in this video is what I did to get on the road to getting interviews. My biggest mistake was not creating a portfolio. Well, I should say, I kept seeing flaws in my work and kept wiping my GitHub. I realized that I was trying to a perfectionist. The thing that got me out of that was when I started doing art during the pandemic. I started to learn all about the concepts and the tools. I bought myself a drawing pad. I took 15 hours finishing my first "painting" I felt happy. I went to sleep and woke back up and it looked horrible like a cartoon. I went on to RUclips and found channels like this, and some traditional artists. I leaned on oil painters techniques to learn how to digital paint. They usually gave tips on the fundamentals of art. The mental "tools" to create art. That's when I started seeing parallels in software.
    I started to make a process where I could see myself fail horribly trying a concept. Then pick up the pieces and see what I did wrong and what I did right then start a new painting with that information. Within a year I became very good at digitally painting from life and references. I would continue to watch these videos seeing more parallels in software and art.
    It's when it hit me. The tools I learned from college and used in the portfolio were outdated. Unlike math, and natural sciences which rarely changes over time software evolves quickly. I needed to learn the new tools of the trade. Then create a portfolio with those tools. I found the tools were easy for me to understand. I avoided it for some time because I thought it would be daunting also that I knew what I needed to know after leaving college (lol). When I actually sat down and opened up these new tools, I realized it still flowed the same way as the old tools, just with some new concepts added here and there.
    The reason why I was OPENED now than later was because I spent 2 years learning how to digital paint. I also listened to the same struggles artists had getting a job that I had. For me, doing art helped me remove my perfectionist was and see that I was a flawed being and could never be perfect. One can grow even through failure if there is a process to understand the failure that occurred. In college, one can't explore until failure to its maximum because you'll have to retake an expensive class. There is also a set time limit on learning the materials. One has to stay on the rails of the course to get an A. Although many had a hard time during the pandemic, having the pandemic happen was a blessing for me. It altered my trajectory. It gave me a better way to learning.
    I will continue my art journey. I always wanted to be an artist since I was a child. I should rather say, I always wanted to express myself in many ways. It's probably why I see everything as an art. At 50 I want to make a book, movie or game. I have a pretty good story to tell. It's sci-fi. At 65 I want to have an efficient way on teaching anything to someone. (Could be A.I. lol)
    Like I said eariler, the thought process in making software and art is very similar.

  • @Creed329
    @Creed329 Год назад +5

    I relate about that progress being slow because I plateau a lot but ever since I started redoing one artwork from my earlier stuff that progress does show, it really helps me keep going

  • @nancydcurrystudio
    @nancydcurrystudio Год назад

    I’m coming from a different stream of art, i.e. abstract, and found your comments insightful and applicable to my philosophic understanding of how the artist needs to be placed with respect to their art. Thank you Adam. Cheers from Hawaii!

  • @carolblack-lemon8973
    @carolblack-lemon8973 2 месяца назад +1

    Excellent advice. I can relate to everything you said. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and keeping it real.

  • @christinekoper2407
    @christinekoper2407 Год назад +4

    Oy. Impatience was the bit I needed to/always need to hear most! I pushed myself pretty hard in the past year (pretty much daily art making while working in health care) because I so desperately wanted a career change. Got to the point where I was teetering on the edge of a massive burn out cliff, and hated to look at nearly all my work. There was almost no joy in it anymore and that made me really sad! It took getting sick (and taking much needed time off) for me to realize I was putting tons of pressure on myself to work as an artist NOW. I’m trying to take it easy on myself and am happy to say I’m making things for fun again!
    Thanks for this, it is vastly, vastly appreciated ❤

    • @mikenoneofyourbusiness7122
      @mikenoneofyourbusiness7122 Год назад

      Art is a hobby. It’s unrealistic to earn from it. Nobody buys original fine art pieces, just look at people’s homes. Art isn’t a profession, but a very wide spread hobby.

  • @alaisytireivra3545
    @alaisytireivra3545 Год назад +13

    I wasn't thinking of quitting, but this video was still immensely useful, thank you. Sometimes reassurance is what you need, it puts the thoughts in the right place and gives you confidence

    • @mikenoneofyourbusiness7122
      @mikenoneofyourbusiness7122 Год назад

      Art is a hobby. It’s unrealistic to earn from it. Nobody buys original fine art pieces, just look at people’s homes. Art isn’t a profession, but a very wide spread hobby.

  • @meganbentleyart
    @meganbentleyart Год назад +2

    Thank you for this video, Adam. After 7 years of self-training I finally gathered the courage a couple of weeks ago to start applying at game companies. I haven't received any responses, but every day I find positions that I might be good enough for and I apply anyways. It's so freeing to no longer be thinking "Oh, one day I'll apply. I'm just not ready yet". Now that I've taken that step I feel calmer.
    However, I really wish I could have a conversation with a professional to gauge my skill level. It's so true what you said about Martina's work. It's truly amazing. When you're so isolated art-wise from others who create, with no mentor, you never know if you're good enough.

  • @amendgame
    @amendgame Год назад +1

    This is the first time I've ever commented on RUclips. Thank you so much for this video! I've been 'doing art' since I was 5 years old. (Now 67years old...) That "gasp" moment got me.... Just experienced the same recently, and am finally getting back to where I left off in 1992-getting to enjoy practicing a different way of expressing art from what I've been doing over the years. Yet incorporating older art experience into new art experience. What you have said about being 'willing to listen, and apply, has helped me over the years with commissions. I often said that my clients are my best teachers, especially the "fussy" ones-they often "fine-tuned" their art piece, till they were happy with it. Then I got the final payment-for "seeing" their vision in my creativity. But it did take getting over a lot of personal fear and frustration. It also became a "university" for me to keep learning a trade I just couldn't give up. The tools you taught today, are priceless! My older son is a digital artist, I'm a fine artist. We have learnt from each other. We respect each other's craft, we have learnt from each other. He has inspired me to get over the fear and frustration of going in a new direction, past "old - fashioned." We collaborate on projects. Over 100 years of artwork between the two of us. You are an enlightening teacher.... Love the tough love. Resistance to change is fear of succeeding. Because success is not based on apathy. It's based on determination to get through the artist's struggle. Listen and apply and practice. Thank you again for giving us a valuable lesson. Much appreciated! 😊

  • @momimessina2615
    @momimessina2615 Год назад +6

    The right video at right time. I've been 7 years of self-taught art, and still today i'm struggling in perspective and other big stuffs that always scares me and brings me to give up. But i repeat to myself that art should be one of the most pleasant things to do and don't overthink or loosing myself over it

    • @mikenoneofyourbusiness7122
      @mikenoneofyourbusiness7122 Год назад

      Art is an awesome hobby! Keep doing it, keep growing! Just don’t put any pressure on yourself, it’s just a hobby! Let go of unrealistic expectations.

  • @bers232
    @bers232 Год назад +24

    I am 23, I studied another major and realised I can't continue working in a field I don't like. Currently I am preparing a portfolio to apply art schools around the world (my country does not provide good art education lol). Thank you for such an inspiring video, every tip was helpful!

    • @mikenoneofyourbusiness7122
      @mikenoneofyourbusiness7122 Год назад

      So, you’re about to study a hobby that will leave you unemployed and broke? Weird…

    • @ldr580
      @ldr580 11 месяцев назад +14

      @@mikenoneofyourbusiness7122 what’s your point coming specifically to a video for artist and commenting something negative like this

    • @yochior
      @yochior 11 месяцев назад +4

      I Turned 23 recently and felt that i was wasting my time but i can't stop even of i'm going to fail or never make it almost nobody ever supported me for my art my parents told me i would be homeless but after working lots of different job i realised that i would be better of in the street drawing that in a office licking my bosses boots

    • @ldr580
      @ldr580 11 месяцев назад

      @@yochior what did you major in?

  • @artisteharo108
    @artisteharo108 4 месяца назад

    Thank you, Adam. I’m not the best with words when it comes to saying in depth of how I feel…but you have “unlocked” some things for me. I’ve never really commented before, I have been going through things that has distracted and has halted me from continuing my passion for Art. Didn’t think I’d find relation, comfort, inspiration, motivation and joy all in one video. Thank you again, I really needed this to hear😊.

  • @nahheli
    @nahheli 2 месяца назад +1

    What a beautiful grounded and warm energy. Thank you for these wise comforting words ✨

  • @anabanana3857
    @anabanana3857 Год назад +8

    I’m a burgeoning music producer/DJ and this helped me so much. Art is art. We always need that unbiased feedback. Otherwise you’re in a funhouse going,”I think this is great! Wait, maybe it isn’t. Help!” I like what you said about hard work. The arts are misleading - it’s easy to think it’s all about natural ability. Some professional musicians I know have said it often boils down to how many hours you practice and patience to not quit.

  • @inlovewithhumans
    @inlovewithhumans Год назад +3

    This Message is not Just for painters or visual artists ..
    It's for everybody who is trying to be anybody ..
    You nailed it Speaker..
    👍

  • @DekuAndWatch
    @DekuAndWatch 10 месяцев назад

    This is absolutely something I needed to hear. I feel like I've gone through all of these emotions by now. I'm 26 now, was in school for almost 8 years (part time, but still) because of lack of confidence in anything I was doing, but that lack of decisiveness lead to a lack of desire to improve. It's been over a year now that I've failed to get a job, still just stuck at a dead end job, basically just hoping something would come my way my sheer chance over the last 6 months. I'm not ready to give up yet, thanks for the work you put into this.

  • @lucasronchese9999
    @lucasronchese9999 Год назад

    Adam , cant thank you enough for your work! came back after months of seeing this and it felt different than the first time. as the grind continues its always necessary to get feedback and get your feet on the ground thank you art-dad !

  • @LucasYchisawa94
    @LucasYchisawa94 Год назад +4

    Thank you so much for this video! I really appreciate all this art talks

  • @Roguechan
    @Roguechan Год назад +7

    At the "ego" part of your talk, I bowed my head in guilt, and I'm glad you were so kind about it - that it really boils down to wanting to protect what you cherish. I'm a 100% guilty of defending myself up to everyone's exasparation around me.
    And then came the next part, the insecurity part, and I'm sitting on the couch bawling my eyes out right now. I really want to be an artist, to create work and put myself out there, and it's only at 35 that I'm gaining confidence that it might be feasible somewhere down the line. I'm so scared of getting hurt over my art and not being good enough. I also want to give Martina a big hug, because her work has blown me away multiple times, yet her struggle that she confided in you feels all too familiar. It's such a brave thing to put yourself out there and go for it.
    Thank you for this video. It's a lot to process, and I will need to watch it again, but every sentence hit nails on their heads.

    • @rhythmandblues_alibi
      @rhythmandblues_alibi 8 месяцев назад +1

      I feel you. I'm simultaneously very egoistic about what I make, but also massively lacking in confidence to ever put it out there because it's not "perfect." What a strange internal contradiction we struggle with 😅

  • @Fortunate_Moss
    @Fortunate_Moss Год назад

    I’m really glad I took the time to watch this. Exactly what I needed for a little boost in morale 😊

  • @KARYONGLOGGEN
    @KARYONGLOGGEN 5 месяцев назад

    Wow. I just get like: "this is what I needed to hear" thank you for the advice!

  • @TinyMaths
    @TinyMaths Год назад +4

    I listen to your videos because they are so much more than advice for artists. I really think they apply to any undertaking where you are trying to develop a skill set that may take years to master. I'm currently on a path to something completely different but I think your advice can be generalized to the skills I'm learning. Thank you!

  • @kelyrin-douceuretdessin9476
    @kelyrin-douceuretdessin9476 Год назад +5

    I’ve never had a teacher (or anyone, for that matter) accept, yet alone ENCOURAGE me to record the talk so I can get back to it later. I have working memory issues and I struggle so much with learning because either I need to type it all on the spot so I can come back to it later, or I listen more actively but I can’t remember it. You’re a great and pedagogic teacher, and thanks for putting this information out there. I hope it will plant a seed in many minds. ❤️

    • @AdamDuffArt
      @AdamDuffArt  Год назад +3

      Yeah, I don’t get that either.
      I mean think about it - if you’re frantically trying to keep up with writing notes then you need to disconnect from what the teacher’s saying to write it.
      You can always just listen to and enjoy the lesson now and take notes on it at your own pace afterwards
      A teacher can take for granted that the information they’re sharing took many years to “absorb” fully - assuming someone can just be force fed that information in a few hours is kind of foolish honestly.

  • @TheArrieman
    @TheArrieman Год назад

    This just blows my mind, and it's not even topic related. I felt 'lost' for the last 3 months. Last 3 weeks I felt useless. Finally got around watching one of your videos again. And almost instantly, I remembered what matters to me the most and what I want to do. Thank you

  • @kasperbaele7959
    @kasperbaele7959 Год назад

    such valuable advice and what an encouragement for the artist community. Thanks beyond measure Adam🙏

  • @Red_Rebel
    @Red_Rebel Год назад +4

    When RUclips recommendations becomes good at doing its job.

  • @st3doom_art112
    @st3doom_art112 Год назад +14

    Well I thought about quitting art so many times, from my personal experience growing and getting recognition in this day and age of social media is next to impossible, you put so much time into your art and learning new skills but in the end I can't justify the effort.

    • @AdamDuffArt
      @AdamDuffArt  Год назад +13

      That’s a very important thing to consider. If it “just doesn’t feel worth the time and effort”, that might suggest that it might not be the exact career path you’re looking for - your heart might not be in it.
      I’d recommend to keep exploring different career paths at that point. If you can’t be passionate about what you do then you’ll burn yourself out and get discouraged before you get the chance to achieve anything you’re happy with.

    • @st3doom_art112
      @st3doom_art112 Год назад +1

      @@AdamDuffArt Thank you for the reply adam, The thing is that I'm very passionate about art and I love to create stuff, I'm a civil engineer and I started my art journey as a side project, but now I want to get serious with it.

    • @sabinetsamtsukakis4031
      @sabinetsamtsukakis4031 Год назад

      There are more colours to one situation, there is not only black or white.

  • @phoegon12
    @phoegon12 Год назад

    This was a much-needed watch today. Thank you for making this video. You never cease to help when it is needed the most. I look forward to your next video.

  • @jasonsadliberty1503
    @jasonsadliberty1503 Год назад +1

    The Complete calm voice of a seasoned captain allaying the screaming nerves, doubts, and fears of his cadets as they weather the individual storms of their lives.
    Immeasurable thanks to you. Mr. Duff.

  • @sugarcoatedsoul2010
    @sugarcoatedsoul2010 Год назад +11

    Hi Adam, I still want to think of myself as an artist even though I haven’t done much in the last five years. I was at an exclusive Art Academy in my city before I had a stroke. They found a brain tumor that is non operable, but it is stable now. My art took a back seat as I was learning how to walk, talk and feed myself. I was trying to get back into my art again, but the skill I had was not there anymore. I became frustrated, so I sat art aside. I found your video, and it has given me courage to try again. Thank you for having the courage to speak your truth. Sincerely Christine

    • @mikenoneofyourbusiness7122
      @mikenoneofyourbusiness7122 Год назад

      If you don’t do art weekly, you’re NOT an artist.

    • @sugarcoatedsoul2010
      @sugarcoatedsoul2010 Год назад +2

      @Mike none of your business, your trolling right? Good thing I am confident in myself enough to know that your statement is complete malarkey, if you had taken the time to read the personal autobiographies of Dali, Rembrandt, Rodin, Picasso, just to name a few, you would know that due to personal health problems and family issues, they all had to take time off from art. At the time and still even today, they are considered artist, and they are dead. 🤔

  • @julienmariette4988
    @julienmariette4988 Год назад +9

    And again, like every videos, Thank you !
    I actually started a new mentorship at Sergio Paez Storyboarding Schools and had this one on one chat with one of the teacher, Steve Lee
    and he told me: "You already on the road, you just need to practice."
    Your words just confort me in what he was saying. So now, I'm gone grabe my pencils and go practice.
    Cheers mate !

    • @AdamDuffArt
      @AdamDuffArt  Год назад +2

      Well it sounds to me like you’re in truly amazing hands Julien (talking about Sergio Paez), I can only imagine what you’ll take away from that amazing experience.

  • @cartierbreson
    @cartierbreson 11 месяцев назад

    thanks!!!! for your words!!! I am very moving with that as an artist

  • @guyhy
    @guyhy 7 месяцев назад

    Thank you for this video Adam! Such encouraging words that feel real and connected. I've been flip flopping through different mediums, not establishing my brand. I am going to recenter myself. I hope to continue to grow, learn, accept critiques, and apply everything I have learned. Onto being patient in my growth.