Episode 2 - Am I Too Old To Get Started?
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Firstly, I love the podcast and I think it's a perfect transition from 3rd Thursdays! I really liked this topic because I'm a very young and green illustrator. I'm only 20 years old and about to start my final year of art school! I felt like starting in high school was too late, can you believe that?
Hearing you guys talk about this really puts my journey into perspective. There are no excuses for me! I loved hearing you talk about the life experiences of people who start much later adding tremendously to their work. I've noticed that some artists my age (and younger!) may create beautiful work, but it's conceptually or emotionally mediocre because we lack the experience to back it up. I constantly struggle with this and try to remember that the story/message is the heart of it. It's easy to get caught up in the need to get better and better technically, but then what are we trying to say? If we have no life, then our work has no life. I also didn't know that Yuko Shimizu started so late! She's amazing!
This topic also lets a lot of self-inflicted pressure off. It's not a sprint. I'm in this for the long haul. I've got my whole life to do this! I get to do this my whole life as long as I can pick up a pencil.
Thank you so much!
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Just want to say, I too am 38 getting back on this horse. I have not legitimately picked up a pencil to draw in almost 20yrs. I have fiddled with programs halfheartedly making logo's, custom UI for a few games... custom textures here and there. Things for little mods. Deep down I've always wondered.. what if I gave it it a real effort. I'm at a point in my life where I have 4-5hrs a day, I can devote to something, and the money to get the tools and lessons for the first time. So here we go. Fundamentals it is. Line, lines, circles and squares.
Jake your Youtube Videos are what got me to sign up and try this out. I don't know if I will ever do anything professionally, right now, I'm just grabbing the horse and holding on for the adventure to come.
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@lady-chamomile I don’t have much experience, but from what I’ve seen and been told, if you don’t really fit into more ‘traditional’ art paths, it might do well to start your own thing.
My best friend wants to make graphic novels, so she got her feet wet with a webcomic and it started generating money. Not enough to live on yet, but she’s getting there. My other best friend has gotten some niche freelance sculpting jobs that most people probably wouldn’t have because she’s interested in certain fandoms and creative properties.
Artists like Loish, Chihiro Howe, Iraville, Cat Coquillete, Jacquelin de Leon, Chris Hong, Claire Wendling, Teagan White, Morgan Davidson, our very own Jake Parker, and others have had successful careers so far or are building their careers by branding themselves and monetizing their interests. They freelance and do client work, sell prints, do licensing, or start personal projects based on the personal work and brand they established/are establishing. They all seem to have their thing that attracts people to them, and that's what makes them money. Something like that might work for you.
I'm young and barely in the industry, but it appears that if you can channel your interests into projects and products people are willing to buy, it can be a fairly sustainable career in the long run
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@holleywilliamson I totally agree about getting enough sleep! I'm in art school right now and my peers pull all nighters all the time, and we're often told to do whatever it takes to improve even if it's not sustainable and causes intense physical stress. But I've learned that having a healthy relationship with time and managing it responsibly will virtually eliminate the need for that. Good sleep is important like good nutrition and good exercise in order to do good work. I know that if I don't get enough sleep I can't function at full capacity the next day and my productivity while trying to stay up plummets exponentially which negates the point of an all-nighter, late nighter, or cutting my sleep time. People ask how I get all my work done, and sleeping when I need to is a surprisingly large part of it. That being said, it's important to understand how much sleep we actually need to function at our prime. I found I only need 6.5-7 hours in order to feel rested. Knowing ourselves and how to use our time wisely increases quality of life and productivity
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@jake-parker I just listened to this episode. Actually I caught up on all of them while folding laundry and vacuuming and making dinner. Thanks for the encouragement, because I ask myself if I’m too old all the time. I’ve been writing and drawing since I was a kid. It’s my release, my way of processing life and it’s been the one constant pursuit of my life. I got serious about it a couple years ago and felt directionless till I found Will Terrys YouTube and then SVS. I’m a bookkeeper for my husband’s businesses /stay at home mom of 5 and I quite often feel like I missed the boat. You guys give me hope though. Gonna give myself some time and try to work my way through the “Jake Parker 3phase plan for success.” What Lee said was what I needed to hear... I’m gonna turn 40 at some point anyway. Why not work at doing something cool along the way? I’m paraphrasing. I deal with a lot of interruptions, but the struggle makes it more precious in a lot of ways.
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Hello @jake-parker and company. I just heard this podcast because, although I've been drawing all my life, eight years ago I started working in a company as a graphic designer, and I kept stuck here, in what was supposed to be a "temporary job" while I was trying to be an illustrator. My personal situation has not been ideal, it's important for me to say that I have been in a therapy for more than a year to solve some serious problems and, coincidentally, a few months ago I started to draw again after a long time that I just couldn't do it. I felt bad, insecure, blocked, pressed... And then, for the first time in my life I was clear that, I want to draw! I have only done things by inertia, without passion, without illusion, I am really tired of my work... So I here I go. Casually I've been in a workshop with Yuko Shimizu recently, who you mention in the podcast. This was so encouraging! I have a lot of doubts but I feel able. I think your advices will be very useful to me. Thanks!
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By the way, I am 33. Almost 34.
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I'm also 40 years old now and still trying to "BREAK IN"....for me I think the path forward is working only on my own projects and then trying to sell them or crowd fund. I've pretty much stopped trying to do any freelance work at this point. Putting all my effort into my own stuff.
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In relation to this podcast, I thought some of you might be interested in this recent New York Times article on late "hot streaks" in one's career. Keep in mind that the NY Times only offers a very limited number of free articles a month, so unless you have a subscription, this will count against that number. Happy reading!
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@missmushy I totally get you. It's awfully scary to step off the train in a place where you don't know anything or anyone (if you catch my drift.) I'm 38 and have always taken art classes in school but then when the moment came to choose an occupation my mother told me that there's no future for artists. They don't earn anything. I could better look at something where I could be sure I'd get a wage off later on.
As I am a mom myself, I can understand her feelings and her way of thinking but if I could turn back time, I would have gone to art school and just follow my heart.
Right now I am following the SVS learn classes whenever I have a spare moment. I love them and totally loose track of time once I'm going. I'm also reading up on stuff I have a hard time with (at this moment it's perspective, next I'm doing character design).
And just like you, I have a lot of moments when I am thinking to myself, what the heck are you doing? Why are you spending all this money on supplies, books and lessons? And then having my husband sneer at me for getting that book that I need for my study or yet another pad of paper. It makes me feel guilty.
But then again, we are doing something that makes us happy. Something where we don't have to sit pushing buttons all day long so in the end it will be all worth it. " Eyes on the prize Violet. Eyes on the prize."
Big hugs!
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I love this podcast... I feel like a complete newbie coming into this field many of the replies above already have so much of art that is so good. I run my own web development and graphic design business and am getting kind of tired the technical aspects of that so I am only just getting into drawing again. I did a lot up until I was 20 years old and then nothing for the last 17 years. I am only now getting back into it again. Starting at age 37....
I grew up with no tv from a kid until like 20 years old, so I read many, many, many books. My head is full of ideas and creativity and I am hoping I will find direction and a place to finally release the many stores in my head. There are so many good illustrators on this forum I feel quite intimidated...but inspired as well.
Such good advice in this episode, plus I am glad I joined svs learn. I am going to devour everything in the online courses and learn from the masters. I already have a thick skin for critiquing in my current profession. So I am ready to be humbled and learn from the bottom.
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@smceccarelli would also join for a meeting in Europe. Hope you would also invite an absolute beginner
Studied geography and geoinformation and after some years in the scientific world I am in software engineering at the moment. -
I'm way WAY late to the party, as I just discovered SVS within the last couple weeks. I just binge-listened to all the podcasts, and Episode 2 was my favorite.
I'd been looking for someone to outline a sort of plan more fleshed out than "Work on your fundamentals & draw every day", and this was it. Can I tell you how much this has already impacted my life? Just within the last week?!? I'm 50, and this episode Rocked. My. World.
Finding my top 5 illustrators I'd like to emulate (as suggested in Phase 1) led me to trolling through around 25 different illustrator representation agencies. Portfolio after portfolio... On and on... And I finally narrowed it down.
And because I did that, I have a much stronger understanding of my own likes and dislikes, what type of work I want to create, specific visual techniques I want to try to figure out how to do, and a greater awareness of the current work in the illustration field as a whole.
It's vast. I didn't realize how vast. I learned so much about what my own preferences are, my own biases, my own strengths and what I really need and want to work on. I so needed that.
I can't tell you how useful that simple exercise was. I know, as a theatrical costume design teacher of 20 years at the university level, that many students don't know very much about the fields they think they want to have a career in. I'm beginning to realize myself how much I don't know. I see now that I've personally just barely scratched the surface.
I'm going to use this exercise in my own teaching. I urge everyone to try it. Just googling "illustration agencies" will render several websites with lists of different links to go visit. It's very enlightening. I had a couple favorite illustrators growing up that I thought were my long-held favorites, but I didn't realize how many other artists there were to fall in love with and explore and I soon started to question my choices. I don't wanna knock Richard Scarry for whom I have a soft spot in my heart, but I think it was my nostalgia keeping him there. I can confidently say that Rogério Coelho now has my personal top spot... I bought several children's books as a result of the exercise and I am not disappointed!!
I also learned that this year there is a new book coming out called History of Illustration by Doyle, Grove & Sherman. I think there have been a LOT of art history texts, but not necessarily one about illustration specifically. The $90 (!!!) paperback version comes out on February 7th.
Does anyone else know of any really good "Intro to the Illustration Field" texts that have helped them? I'd love to know about them!
Anyway, I thought I'd share. Thanks for this episode! It was great! Changed my life!
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I can't explain how much this episode meant to me, especially hearing Lee say that he'd started at around my age. I'm 34 right now, and I've been drawing all of my life, but I've never pursued it as a career, either supplemental or main. I honestly thought I'd be stuck sitting an IT job and not ever having my art amount to much until I started listening to the show, and the thought that maybe I could freelance in my spare time and do okay started to float. But then that voice... "You're 34, dude. You're too old for this."
Thanks so much for the advice, for the encouragement, and for the reminder that age is just a number. 2019 is where my art career is going to start, you wait and see
-Aaron
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Great thread!
I read through the show notes but i didn't listen to it yet.. Need to take some time to do that and to read through this discussion too. Very relevant to me, being 32.All the best!
Have a great day,
Samuel -
@SCBenedict This is one of my favorite episodes of this podcast. The "what to do the year before you go to art school" is my map for how I am approaching learning the big field of drawing. I used it to create a month by month plan and am really enjoying it, and reaping the benefits of the advice.
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I know this was aired back last year, but I wanted to say how helpful I found this podcast. I used to do lab work, been a stay at home parent for a few years (I'm 40 now) and now I'm looking for a job, my kids are in school and everything's a bit more predictable with less sleep-interruptions... So I thought this was a good time to really make a go of studying illustration. I've wanted to for years, I sometimes pick up a pencil and sketch but it can be months inbetween sessions.
Since January I've really tried to focus more and I have to say the podcasts have been really helpful, and this one especially was spot on for me. Out of this podcast, I've drawn myself up a basic learning outline and I'm going to be going through all the sites I have bookmarked, and all the books accessible at home and in the library to put together a syllabus I can follow. I need structure to push myself forward.
Anyway, my point is, thank you guys for putting out that podcast, I'm working my way through them and sketching whilst I listen now, stopping to take notes along the way. I look forward to listening to the rest and when I'm confident I have that regular study time put aside and can get the most out of it, I plan to subscribe and join a class.
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Just wanted to chime in as well and say that this episode is VITAL, even if you don't think you're too old.
I'm 37 and have always wanted to learn how to make the pictures in my head into something others can experience. This episode has helped me figure out a multi-year path to get there. I'm taking my first steps down that road now.
Thanks guys!
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GREAT EPISODE AND GREAT PODCAST!
I've been binge listening from the first episode and I can't get enough. I'm starting to get a backlog of all my other podcasts because of you guys.
Just from skimming this this thread, I'm glad to see so many folks coming to art/illustration at a late age. After a many years in the advertising/graphic design industry, spending my days clicking on a keyboard and mouse, I've decided to restart my love for analog art. Right now, I've learning and re-learning how to use my hands. My goal isn't to become a professional illustrator, but rather enjoy the process of making art again. In turn, it's making me a better designer, art director, creative director at my job. BTW, I'm 53 (how's that for a late start?).
Keep up the great podcast. I love learning new stuff, and enjoy how relevant it is to many other creative industries.
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I re-listened to this one yesterday. I love the three stage curriculum aspect, and recognize the outlines of your SVS re-vamp in it. Really pushing to get a process that I can trust to push out portfolio pieces. And @dickdavid, I'm even older than you!