Interview: Allyzah Allene

Today we’re joined by Allyzah Allene, who also goes by Ani or Ani Fangor. Allyzah is a phenomenal visual artist who works with in digital and traditional mediums. They haven’t met a material they didn’t like and work with just about everything. Their work is brimming with detail and a masterful use of lines and colors. They’re incredibly dedicated, as you’ll soon read. My thanks to them for taking the time to participate in this interview.

Self2017
Self 2017

WORK

Please, tell us about your art.

I am an artist that likes to dabble in just about everything I can afford. I have worked with traditional mediums like pencils (graphites, colored pencils), charcoals, markers, paints (acrylic, watercolor, oil) and digital mediums (limited photoediting, mostly digital art). My goal is to be able to learn as many mediums as I can because I want to teach art. I also occasionally write, and recently began posting my comic on Tapas.

While many other artists have a “deeper meaning” behind their artworks, or a consistent theme, I find art to be most enjoyable when it is “whatever I feel like.” I don’t like stressing over incorporating hidden meanings and “how it may be interpreted,” but rather getting the idea out of my head. My art blog and my art tag ends up being full of random half done pieces and concepts because it’s not always about finishing, but expressing my ideas. (Perhaps not the best rule to live by, but as a student, it’s enough for me.)

What inspires you?

Most of the time, the deadline. Otherwise it’s usually whatever I find aesthetically appealing enough to draw!

For my writing and my comic, though, that was inspired by the lack of diversity in the media I consumed. I got tired of the same old “boy meets girl” plot/subplot found in most things I read, and especially, the lack of characters who even vaguely looked like me. Growing up, the books I read often degraded characters that shared my race or ethnicity, and I struggled with my identity until I was 16 (a mere four years ago). I hated who I was because I wasn’t white, and I thought that I would only be successful if I were like the white characters in my books—even then, that could be a stretch, as there were very few books with girls as the lead. I didn’t find out that I wasn’t cishet until I was about 15, and by then I barely read outside of the class readings, so I wasn’t as bothered by the lack of LGBT+ positive books just yet. In my junior year, I had my “if no one else is going to do it, I will” moment and decided I would make a comic featuring a diverse cast in both ethnicity, gender identity, and sexual/romantic orientation. It took a while, but I finally decided I had put it off long enough and started publishing pages early July 2017 as my 20th birthday gift to myself.

What got you interested in your field?  Have you always wanted to be an artist?

When I was in the second grade, my school’s art teacher brought a guest artist to speak to everyone. I don’t remember the name of the artist, but I remember being so intrigued—it was one thing to learn about Van Gogh and Picasso in class, and a completely different thing to see someone live at work that wasn’t my teacher. The way he worked was by covering a canvas with black charcoal, and slowly erasing it away to create an image. My art teacher later caught me trying to do the same thing while waiting for my dad to pick me up, and asked me if I wanted to be an artist when I grew up. It wasn’t something I had thought of before, but I remember being so happy that she thought I could, and I said yes. Since then, I have been on a quest to learn as much as I can about art so that I can help as many people as possible when I become a teacher.

As for writing, we have a rocky relationship. During elementary school, I had a pattern: I would love writing one year, and hate it the next. I didn’t really take it seriously for a while, even when I started writing and posting fanfiction. I found out about NaNoWriMo in middle school, and became serious about writing original work, although the passion and motivation is not nearly as consistent as with art.

Death Lingers_Allyzah Cabugao
Death Lingers

Do you have any kind of special or unique signature, symbol, or feature you include in your work that you’d be willing to reveal?

I don’t know if I’ve been consistent enough with anything to have one of those! The closest thing is the stamp I use to sign my artwork (when I have it). I visited China two years ago as part of an exchange program, and the Chinese students gave me an approximate phonetic translation of my name so that I could have a “Chinese name.” I bought a stamp with that name on it to remember them and the trip, and I use it as half of my artist signature.

What advice would you give young aspiring artists?

Besides the ever present “keep practicing,” I’d say “if you can’t figure out what’s wrong with it, put it on pause and work on something different; it’ll come to you sooner than if you keep focusing on it.” If it’s art, that one part will still be waiting for you to come back, and if it’s writing, you can always just type in something like “akdguhos” or “[COME BACK TO THIS]” and continue. (Just make sure that you go back to it before you publish it or turn it in!) You don’t have to finish everything in one go. Take a break, let your creative juices recharge.

Something specifically for visual art: we tend to hyperfixate on the small area that we’re currently working on. Every now and then, remember to step back (or, if digitally, zoom out) and look at the piece as a whole. Something might look okay while zoomed in… and then you look at the whole picture and realize that it’s completely misaligned or maybe the color palette doesn’t match the rest. I’ve worked on several semi-realistic pieces and realized that the “perfect nose” was too far right, or that it looked like the neck didn’t come from the same body as the head, because I didn’t look at the whole picture as much as I should have.

Lumos114
Lumos

ASEXUALITY

Where on the spectrum do you identify?

I am asexual sex-repulsed, and demi-panromantic. (As well as agender/non-binary.)

Have you encountered any kind of ace prejudice or ignorance in your field?  If so, how do you handle it?

I’ve been lucky enough not to encounter any prejudice in my major related classes yet, but that’s partially because I don’t know anyone well enough to actually care what they say, partly because I have headphones in during class almost all the time. I have had people try to get “creative” with their flirting though, automatically assuming that because I’m an artist, I draw nude people, and that I’d want to draw them … How I respond to them depends on how rude they’re being.

What’s the most common misconception about asexuality that you’ve encountered?

Ohh boy, there’s so many that I spent three years researching asexuality in order to academically debunk misconceptions and presented speeches about asexuality to just about any academic platform I could reach. (I’m no longer doing competitive speech as I switch to the coaching side of things, but I’m still ready to spread asexual awareness.)

The one that I hate the most is when people think asexuals are being childish if they state that they have no sexual attraction, especially if they say that they’re a sex-repulsed ace. I’ve had people say that I’ll eventually “grow up and want sex,” and when I literally had an anxiety attack due to a class assigned movie (marked UnRated and with no CW/TW in the film description, nor from the professor) that featured multiple explicit sex scenes and nudity, I was told to grow up and realize that “sex is an art form. You’re an artist, why can’t you appreciate that?” It’s frustrating that sex is seen as a major turning point in your life, the time you’ve “finally reached adulthood,” when there’s plenty of us who can live without it.

Southern Belle_Allyzah Cabugao
Southern Belle

What advice would you give to any asexual individuals out there who might be struggling with their orientation?

Most importantly: you are not broken. Your orientation doesn’t make you any less valid than anyone else! Remember, for every person that takes you down, there’ll be many ready to help lift you back up again.

Also, it doesn’t matter if you fit some of the stereotypes or misconceptions of asexuality or not, you can still identify as ace. Things like “you can’t know if you’re ace if you’re a virgin,” “it’s just a hormonal imbalance,” “it’s because of PTSD/similar,” it doesn’t matter if these are true or not for you. If you feel like asexuality is the best label for your orientation, then you’re ace.

Finally, where can people find out more about your work?

I post my work on Tumblr with the tag “#ani amount of art” on both aniamountofart.tumblr.com and aniamountofsketches.tumblr.com; on Instagram/Twitter tagged #aniamountofart on artisticAllyzah; and my comic can be found at tapas.io/series/OMNI!

Marco the Mallard
Marco the Mallard

Thank you, Allyzah, for participating in this interview and this project. It’s very much appreciated.

Interview: Nycto Falcone

Today we’re joined by Nycto Falcone.  Nycto is a fantastically talented visual artist who specializes in anthro-Pokemon.  She’s quite versatile and enjoys drawing a variety of things.  She works mostly in digital mediums.  The images she sent to go with the interview are absolutely beautiful.  My thanks to her for taking the time to participate in this interview.

I'm No Good for You
I’m No Good for You

WORK

Please, tell us about your art.

Well, digital artwork is my main. I tend to use multiple programs for my digital illustrations and animations, such as Paint Tool Sai and Flash. I started using Clip Studio Paint recently and it is really helpful! I hope to major in animation in college.

I mainly draw anthro Pokemon characters, due to me being in several roleplay groups for them. I’m getting back into drawing other characters again, though.

What inspires you?

Music, mainly. I have to be listening to something to draw decently. That and nice scenery, like forests and cities. Movies don’t really do it for me, since they’re professionals that worked with a team, and even though it’s great and smooth, I feel animations done by single people/amateur animators give me more courage to try doing something new.

What got you interested in your field?  Have you always wanted to be an artist?

I started drawing the moment I could hold a pencil, to be honest. I couldn’t stop; drawing on the walls, furniture, any and all of my papers (including schoolwork!). It was just my life.

Map Part 35
Map Part 35

Do you have any kind of special or unique signature, symbol, or feature you include in our work that you’d be willing to reveal?

My signature is pretty plain. Just my name, Nycto. My signature has changed a lot over time, though. I finally settled on a name for myself after several years.

What advice would you give young aspiring artists?

Don’t compare yourself to others!!! I had an awful habit of that (and I still do, sometimes) and it just unmotivates you. Also, practice. You don’t get better unless you do it, and it may take a lot of time! Some progress at different speeds, so don’t get discouraged just because someone may progress or do something faster than you. It’s not a race.

Mettaton
Mettaton

ASEXUALITY

Where on the spectrum do you identify?

Demi-Panromantic Asexual.

Have you encountered any kind of ace prejudice or ignorance in your field?  If so, how do you handle it?

Oh yeah. Always with the “you just haven’t matured yet, you’re too young to know” or “you’ll find the right person and you’ll feel it”. I’m 18 years old, I’ve been through puberty. I don’t have sexual attractions to people, and that’s the breaks.

What’s the most common misconception about asexuality that you’ve encountered?

The puberty thing. Being “late bloomers”. It’s just not that hard to realize not everyone wants to bang.

Piggy Pie
Piggy Pie

What advice would you give to any asexual individuals out there who might be struggling with their orientation?

It’s not weird. It doesn’t make you broken or anything.

Finally, where can people find out more about your work?

My deviantART account is where I’m most active artistically! http://haiioweens.deviantart.com/

I do post here, but I have yet to make an art blog where I post only artwork.

You're My Joan of Arc
You’re My Joan of Arc

Thank you, Nycto, for participating in this interview and this project.  It’s very much appreciated.

Interview: Celestiial Cosplay

Today we’re joined by Celestiial Cosplay.  Celestiial was one of the amazing aces I met at Cincinnati Comic Expo.  She is an amazingly talented cosplayer and quite a bright personality.  Her cosplays are absolutely gorgeous and I am ridiculously happy to be able to feature her on this blog.  My thanks to her for taking the time to participate in this interview.

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WORK

Please, tell us about your art.

I’ve been cosplaying since June of 2010. Since then, I’ve learned to sew. I’ve learned how to apply makeup for different colors and styles of hair. I’ve learned what passion feels like. And I’ve learned how creative and unique the cosplay community can be. I’ve been a princess and a Pokemon. I’ve been a vampire and Mama Monster. My art is becoming someone new and learning something amazing.

What inspires you?

When I first started this, I didn’t really have inspiration. It was something fun to do a couple of times a year. However, once I really dedicated myself to cosplay, when it changed from hobby to identity, my inspiration came from the friends I made at conventions. It was a way to bond with people that lived hours and states away from me. Then once I started making a public name for myself, what inspired me shifted to being able to inspire others. I’ve been a source of advice for total strangers. Some of them ask me to simply be an ear for their problems. Some of them started cosplaying because of me and thank me for giving them confidence. So today, my inspiration is being able to improve the world a little bit in my own way.

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What got you interested in your field?  Have you always wanted to be an artist?

I’ve always been a performer. From choir, to theater, to marching band, having an audience was my niche. When I was invited to my first convention, I knew I couldn’t attend in my street clothes — it was too big an opportunity to miss. And I’ve never looked back.

Do you have any kind of special or unique signature, symbol, or feature you include in our work that you’d be willing to reveal?

Nothing visible, but any character I cosplay is one that I can relate to in some big way. I have to really be attracted to a character to feel comfortable dressing as them.

What advice would you give young aspiring artists?

Start small and do what you can do right now. Don’t get intimidated by what someone else can make — instead, use that as your own inspiration, as something that you can do someday. Practice and learning is everything.

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ASEXUALITY

Where on the spectrum do you identify?

I’m demi-panromantic asexual.

Have you encountered any kind of ace prejudice or ignorance in your field?  If so, how do you handle it?

None that was directly influenced by my field, but I’ve certainly dealt with individuals, both within the cosplay community and within my personal life, that are either ignorant, intolerant or both. Ideally, someone who doesn’t understand asexuality is willing to learn about it. Too often this doesn’t happen and I’ve had people (including my own parents) try to argue with me, or convince me that this isn’t how I am, or to say that I just haven’t met the right person, or any other cliché you’d like to apply. It’s frustrating, but I’ve learned that my comfort is the most important factor. If someone chooses not to accept me for whatever reason, I distance myself from them. My life’s been a lot simpler once I employed that strategy, and I’m much happier.

What’s the most common misconception about asexuality that you’ve encountered?

The most common one I’ve had thrown out at me specifically is that since I’ve only had sex with one person, I can’t possibly know that I don’t experience sexual attraction. Usually, these people meet the fate described above. I don’t need that crap.

What advice would you give to any asexual individuals out there who might be struggling with their orientation?

Please don’t doubt yourself. I didn’t know asexuality was an option. I didn’t know it existed. You’re either gay or straight, or bi if you’re experimenting in college—this was the stigma I grew up with. It’s wrong. It’s so wrong. When I learned there was a word that described me, that the way I felt was a real thing and acknowledge (however sparingly) it changed everything. I thought back to things from my childhood that now made perfect sense. I was happier. If you learn something you want to embrace, whether it’s your orientation, or religion, or lifestyle, DO IT. You don’t have to commit to it for the rest of your life, so if it works for you right now, please embrace it as hard as you can. Own it. Love yourself. You might change, and that’s okay. You might not, and that’s okay. If you want to choose a label, that’s no one’s business but yours.

Finally, where can people find out more about your work?

My Facebook page is probably the best place: www.facebook.com/celestiialcosplay

Aside from that,

Instagram: celestiially
Tumblr: celestiially
YouTube: celestiial cosplay
Storenvy: celestiial cosplay
Email: celestiialcosplay@yahoo.com

I always answer all messages and emails, so feel free to contact me any way you like!

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Thank you, Celestiial, for participating in this interview and this project.  It’s very much appreciated.