Monday, March 7, 2016

Growing in the imperfection

I have been having a hard time giving value and recognizing my quick and experimental sketches as something important and worth showing. Just because they don't fit the mental image I have of how I wanted it, doesn't mean they are not good. Nor the fact that I was just experimenting and playing around and things didn't work out as I thought they would.

Warm ups for figure drawing
 


 

Every little sketch, word, musical note, sculpture that is created, regardless of our opinion on it been successful or not, is worth something. It mark a step closer to our goal, to the final product, to something maybe even better than the first image we have of it in our heads.

Hand studies

That is the reason why I decided to start counting the faces I am making or struggling to make as part of the 29 faces challenge, regardless of how much they represent or not my best skills and art. This is not easy, I feel raw, exposed and vulnerable. Why? Because I want to show you my best, I want my art to touch you in the best way possible. And it is with that thought in mind that I am showing you the not so perfect, because I want to inspire you to practice and keep moving forward regardless what your art is; I want to grow in this artistic endeavor with you.

Faces #16 & #17 (Distress and Tombow watercolor markers)


Face #18 (Inktense blocks on Stillman & Bin Beta Series Sketchbook)

Face #19 (art journal page in progress)


Face #20 (Study for future painting)


Not everything is perfect, we are not perfect, but there is beauty in the imperfect and the possibility to grow. Looking at how we progresses in our respective arts is very rewarding and fill us we pride and even more motivation to continue honing our skills and craft.

3 comments:

Ester said...

Oh, I like this last one, girl looking up, she's so alive! It's really hard to draw a face tilted back like this, at least for me :).

Lora said...

Thanks for visiting my blog and forbyour comment. It is a challenge for me too to draw tilted back faces. I am happy with this one because it means that practice is starting to pay off. I still have some misshaps though. Hehehe

Lora said...

Thanks for visiting my blog and forbyour comment. It is a challenge for me too to draw tilted back faces. I am happy with this one because it means that practice is starting to pay off. I still have some misshaps though. Hehehe