Maybe Someday...

I hear this statement a lot: “I’m too busy to become a good artist.” Or, “I had to stop doing artwork when my children came along.” Life is very busy. As a result, many people either give up, or postpone their artistic development until retirement. Once retirement is reached, they may believe that its too late to become as good as they had hoped. I’ve seen this over and over again in workshops I've taught. But it doesn’t have to be that way.

One-hour watercolor sketch. 2003

When I decided to get back into art, I was working almost full time while going to school for graphic design. Let me just say that graphic design is not the same as fine art. When it comes to fine art, I’m essentially self-taught. My graphic design training didn’t contribute much to my drawing and painting skills. However, during these very busy times I was still able to develop as a fine artist, and I did it through daily sketching; sketching from life that is. And it only took about 10-20 minutes a day. I would sketch anything from trees out my window to a fork on the table. And it worked! The truth is, it doesn’t matter WHAT you draw, just that you train your eye to see shapes and proportions and your hand to accurately replicate what your eye is seeing.

Sketch done on my lunch break over two days-pencil, circa 2001.

Staying in the Game

You can develop your artistic skills and maintain them even with a busy schedule. While it may not be as ideal as being a full-time student at an atelier, it will keep your eye and mind fresh so that when you have more time to dedicate to your art, you will be miles ahead of the person who totally leaves art behind. Trust me, as a father of five who has had to do many things over the years to make ends meet, this works. Here are some ideas from my own experience:

If working a full-time job, sketch on your lunch breaks:

Drawing exercise from the Bargue Drawing Course-pencil, circa 2008.

For busy parents and grandparents:

Quick sketch of my daughter sleeping-pencil, 2007.

Other ideas:

Old fishing reel-pencil, circa 2005.

Get Started

So get a sketchbook or sketchpad and some pencils and make a commitment to sketch for at least 10-20 minutes a day. The longer the better, but don’t get discouraged if you cannot do it more than 10 minutes, or if you have to skip a day or two. And don’t get discouraged by the results. The goal is NOT to produce masterpieces, but to stay in the game and exercise your powers of observation. The results will come. I did several years of atrocious sketches in pencil and watercolor before I started to see anything even half-way good. The victory is not in producing a great sketch, but in keeping up the discipline. If you do this, I promise that when you are able to give your art a more serious go, you will be miles ahead.

Don't forget to check out my YouTube channel and watch my painting and drawing demos. Be sure to subscribe! It's free and you won't miss any new demos.

jason@jasontako.com
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