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Here’s part 1 of the Q&A session on artistic style! In this one I talk mostly about my own journey and approach. I talk about how my style changed over time, turning points in the development of my style, and my artistic inspirations.

List of the inspirations I talk through:

Alfonse Mucha / Art Nouveau: http://www.muchafoundation.org/en

JC Leyendecker: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._C._Leyendecker

Odile van der Stap- she was an incredibly talented and kind friend of mine who sadly passed away in 2018. You can still find her art on a few websites that showcased her work: https://illustratorslounge.com/editorial/odile-van-der-stap/

Aurore Blackcat: http://www.auroreblackcat.net/

Jana Schirmer: https://www.artstation.com/janaschirmer

Barachan / Rose Besch: https://barachan.smvi.co/

Bao Pham: https://www.baopham.art/

Andrew Hem: https://www.andrewhem.com/

Yun Ling: https://www.lingy000.com/

Amei Zhao: http://ameizhao.com/

Zeen Chin: https://www.artstation.com/zeen

Nurzhan Bekkaliyev: https://www.artstation.com/nbekkaliev

I also talk a bit about the following topics: feeling of hating your own style and wanting to absorb someone else’s style, having a defined style vs. having multiple styles, understanding style in terms of the ‘deeper levels’ that define it rather than just the superficial aspects, the importance of consistency, and balancing reference with drawing from the imagination.

In the second video, I’ll talk more about general approaches to style that applies to anyone! Still waiting for the captions to come in on that one but I’ll post it as soon as they’re finished! For now, I hope you enjoy this one :)

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Comments

Anonymous

Hi Loish! i was wondering if you have made a tutorial on drawing trees ? I am mesmerized by this piece https://www.deviantart.com/loish/art/nymph-826145426

Anonymous

Thanks Loish! A great explanation of the balance between finding your style and experimenting was explained in this video.

Loish

i have not! but that would definitely be a fun topic for a future tutorial or step-by-step!

Anonymous

I managed to finally watch this today, and it gave me so much insight about my style and what I want! I've had this feeling that I was trying too much to emulate an artist's style that inspires me (I love Zeen Chin's artwork), but lately I've felt that it's not quite me there. That artwork I've made doesn't reflect me at all. Watching this Q&A made me realize that it's completely okay to not achieve the same result as your inspiration in your style, because that's not what actually matters. I'm really grateful for this video, I'm already waiting for part 2 :D

Klara Art

Thank you for this video. It was really so helpful. For me it was important the part about - it is not just about what you like, what it is intersting or what looks good. it is about what i want drawing and what bring me joy. And now i know I like animation and chracter design and some decorative style ,but i do not enjoy them. I just like do and make messy sketches, colors and textu. I like portait and animals. And it is fine. I do not need drawing evething. Thank you do much and sorry for my english. i hope you understand my text :D and it was really inspiration see your progress and how you develop your skills

Niquey

You don't know the release you gave me when you, with the amazing work you have, said you don't think you are creative. I am the exact same way though! Give me a framework and I'm set. Also, I have the same problem with reference, but I didn't know that this was the issue until you mentioned it and I was like, "Oh yeah, that does happen, doesn't it?" lol I look forward to the next part of this!!! I'm taking to heart everything you're saying. Thank you so much Loish!

Anonymous

I'm the same way when it comes to the imagination! It's one of the main reasons I decided on Graphic Design for college instead of Fine Arts. I need a framework, I need a context to start working and to know what I want to do. Without that I'm going to burn out very quickly haha is the same reason I love doing DTIYS and challenges like inktober. It gives me some guidelines and limits to follow, and that helps me be more creative. This video has been so inspiring! Especially to help me not be so hard on myself, since I'm right in the middle of figuring out what my artistic voice is. Looking forward to the next one :)

Loish

glad you liked it! and i think there's no shame in being an artist who likes structure and a framework to create. it goes against the myth of the perpetually inspired artist, but it is how a lot of people work!

Loish

haha glad it resonated with you and that i'm not the only one! i've had people suggest that I come up with my own story and visual world out of nothing, and I had to tell them that I would hate to do that hahaha. i need some structure and starting points first!

Loish

your english is great! I'm glad you like this video and it is true, you don't have to become an expert at everything. you can just focus on what you love!

Loish

i'm so glad you liked it! and i think if you look at your art and feel like it's not really you, that could be your intuition telling you that it's not resonating with you on those deeper levels. it's all part of our search for our own style and voice :)

Anonymous

Love Alfonse so much the poses are so elegant and graceful, I see that kind of flow in your art 👍💕, also very sorry to hear about your friend the work is very beautiful ❤️

Anonymous

Omg oekakis. Loish, you brought me back to a place I almost didn't remember haha :))) What resonated more with me was your advice on not being able to do everything. There will always be people that can do amazing animal portraits, or people portraits. Or concept art. Machines. Environments. But it is so broad!! It was great to hear from you that is OK. We don't need to know it all. There seems to be an idea perpetuated by nonartists that if you know how to draw this thing you know how to draw anything, and... wow being a generalist must take forever.... like in any other job ;)

Loish

thanks for your comment! i think some folks love the challenge of being able to draw a bunch of different things and they're very good at it, but most artists i know end up becoming an expert/specialist in one area of art and that works out fine for them!

Ashley

This is my first time joining your Patreon and wow, you pretty much covered every insecurity I had about my art in this video. I normally do portraits but I thought I had to stick to that because I worried people wouldn't like my storytelling art with backgrounds included with OCs. This gives me so much creative freedom, thank you so much!!

Loish

i'm so glad you liked it ashley! and thanks for the support here on patreon!

Anonymous

This was - again - so helpful! Especially the part about leaning more into ones natural tendencies, like experimenting with different styles a lot. Embracing this as part of my creative identity instead of struggling to stick to one trademark style - how liberating! Also the bit about articulating what makes an inspiration so appealing to oneself seems really important. Thanks a lot!

Loish

glad you liked it! i feel like the more you force yourself into something that doesn't feel natural to you, the more you'll lose touch with your creative strengths.

Anonymous

Catching up on these videos and I just had to say the second you mentioned Aurore Blackcat I had an immediate recovered memory of being influenced as well by her when I was younger! whats crazy is I JUST found the same image you clicked first of hers (I think I always called it Aries?) saved to my computer and remembered that photo specifically influenced my style drastically, but for the life of me I couldn't remember the artist's name. Not even sure why I'm sharing this I just got so excited and it feels so coincidental I randomly am watching this now. Thanks so much for this reminder and trip down memory lane!

Loish

haha i totally get this feeling! i have so many artists that hugely influenced me and i forgot their names and can't find their art anymore. glad you re-discovered aurore :)

Anonymous

This was sooo interesting! Thank you :)