Interview: Sara

Today we’re joined by Sara. Sara is a phenomenal visual artist who specializes in acrylic painting and digital photography. She enjoys experimenting with different mediums and styles. Her work shows an incredibly creative mind with beautiful colors and amazing detail, as you’ll soon see. My thanks to her for taking the time to participate in this interview.

5-Pezzella-Pattern-and-Texture-Portrait
Pezzella Pattern and Texture Portrait

WORK

Please, tell us about your art.

I’m a contemporary minded fine artist whose training was in traditional representational art. I have a history of bouncing between mediums but for the time I’ve settled on acrylic painting and digital photography. Although I alternate between styles and mediums, in my work I consistently use bold compositions and colors as a means of expressing my innermost thoughts and emotions.

4

What inspires you?

I’ve always found sources of inspiration to be a tricky thing to nail down. I think there’s probably a lot of things in my life that inspire me in ways I’m not even aware of. A big thing for me is that fact that I’m a workaholic and very passionate about art. The drive to create new works is always there and working on projects usually helps me generate more ideas so I never really run out.

10_8_15_1

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

I’ve been a creative person my whole life. As a little girl, I wanted to be an artist but at some point that shifted to wanting a career as a chef. Midway through high school, I did a lot of soul searching and realized I was spending significantly more time on photography than cooking. I began to more consciously dedicate time to art and decided to study art in college.

2917_5-14in-

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?

Most of my work is very bold in nature especially in terms of the colors I choose to work with. This is super reflective of my personality. I’m not a very subtle person.

What advice would you give young aspiring artists?

Work like you’re running out of time and use the work of others as inspiration, not fuel to tear yourself down. If you don’t want a career in the arts, it doesn’t matter how good you are as long as you get joy out of your work. If you do want a career in the arts, don’t sweat it because it takes work to get where you want to be. Look at your work with a critical eye so you can improve, but never tear yourself down.

11117

ASEXUALITY

Where on the spectrum do you identify?

I’m an aromantic demisexual

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

I’m not out to most people so I haven’t particularly encountered prejudice personally but that being said, the assumption that everyone is allosexual is always alive and well. There’s a lot in both fine art and marketing that is very sexualized either intentionally or unintentionally. As an art student, I was always super confused by the awkwardness most people have around doing figurative work especially for the first time. I was always just like, “Well they’re naked and this is a part of my training and also bodies are really fascinating to study this isn’t a sexual thing.”

102215_3

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

That it’s just another type of being straight. I’ve had friends be like “oh I’m glad you found a word that describes you!” while also downplaying the fact that it’s an orientation just like being bisexual or gay and I’m like wait no you don’t understand I thought I was broken.

brooke
Brooke

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

Follow positivity blogs. Being demi immediately made sense to me once I found out it was a thing but figuring out, and accepting, my aromanticism was much more of a journey. Seeing aro positivity and posts about how there’s many different ways to be aro did a lot for me.

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

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pezzella.sara/
Tumblr: http://spezzella.tumblr.com/
Website: https://www.sarapezzella.com/
RedBubble: https://www.redbubble.com/people/spezzella

dust
Dust

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

Interview: Hannah King

Today we’re joined by Hannah King. Hannah is a phenomenal visual artist who works in a wide variety of media. They’re currently attending university again to become an art teacher. Hannah hasn’t met a medium they don’t like and has this amazing enthusiasm for visual art. They do illustration, mixed-media fine art, abstract photography, and a variety of other things (as you’ll soon read). There’s an amazing eye for detail demonstrated in the images Hannah sent and it’s very apparent they’re amazingly talented. My thanks to them for taking the time to participate in this interview.

403026_10151107760170543_499854815_n

WORK

Please, tell us about your art.

I have three different styles I work in. I’m a Fine Artist and an Illustrator, with training in both, as well as a lot of self-directed study in other styles and media.

My first and most often seen style is my illustrative western-comic’s influenced style. With this I tend to do character art, concept art, book illustrations and comics. I use both traditional media – pen and ink – and digital media – anything from Photoshop to PaintTool Sai and MediBang to Corel Painter – to create these images.

abstract01

My second is mixed-media fine art, in which I use every media I can get my hands on, including everything from stamping-ink to acrylic, fine-line pens to sewing, dried flowers/leaves to hand-made papers, and even found objects. I work mostly on canvas for this art, but sometimes I use hand-made paper. My fine art is either figurative, architectural or non-representational abstract.

My third is a recent foray into abstract photography, using the medium of Instagram. I have a deep and abiding love for texture, so I collect photographs of those textures I discover in my daily life – often these are crumbling walls, peeling paint, shattered concrete and so on – and I have started using these photographs to create abstract images.

abstract02

My passion is the human figure in all its shapes, colours and configurations. So a lot of my work tends to focus on people, whether characters from novels/tv shows/films/etc or models I have had sit for me or drawn/painted from photographs. I have been making myself work on my non-figurative work, though, so I’ve started having fun with architectural art.

I am also a huge fan of fantasy. A lot of my work, including my fine art, incorporates fantastical elements or is fantasy illustration outright.

abstract03

What inspires you?

It’s a little cliché to say ‘everything’ but that really is the most correct answer. To get a little more in depth, I guess the human figure inspires me. And well written fantasy. Folk tales. Myths and legends. Painted concrete walls where the weather and age has conspired to peel the paint in interesting ways. Abstract art. Songs with meaningful lyrics. A pretty face. A complicated hairstyle. My own emotions. Ancient, neglected and rusty farm equipment. Weird and wonderful fashion. Tattoos and scars and body modification. I could go on.

abstract04

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

I come from a fairly arty-crafty family. My mother dabbles in abstract art, sewing, knitting and scrap-booking. My father makes dioramas and scale models of armed forces vehicles. My maternal grandfather was an architect and painter, maternal grandmother was into hand crafting, knitting, crocheting, drawing. My paternal grandfather was an architect, paternal grandmother is into sewing and knitting.

So when I first started showing signs of wanting to be creative it was encouraged. Even when I drew and painted murals on my walls, ceiling and the back of my bedroom door, I wasn’t reprimanded, just told to keep it to my bedroom. My maternal grandmother taught me all sorts of crafty things – like collage and stained-glass painting – and my maternal grandfather got me started on the basics of perspective.

abstract05

I first got into comics when I was 11 or 12, and that obsessions lead to my wanting to be a comic artist and an illustrator, which in turn lead to me taking fine art at college and illustration at university. I do now work with a couple of writer friends on some webcomics – not yet published, but looking to get them up soon.

In more recent years I discovered a love for teaching, so now I’m about to go back to university for a post-grad degree in teaching art to 11 – 17 year olds.

image00006

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?

Because I’m heavily influenced by the likes of Klimt, Mucha, Shiele, Yoshitako Amano and comic artists like Dave McKean, David Mack and J.M. Linsner, my work tends to have a lot of idiosyncratic marks in it.

Normally this shows up in my Fine Art or personal illustrative art. Most often, the marks are tiny squares picking out a checkerboard pattern, sometimes it’s circles picked out in tiny triangles, or negative space filled with interlocking circles or even dotwork.

I try not to do this in commissioned character art, but even then, Mucha’s influence shows out strongly in the way I draw hair and folded clothing. Dotwork sometimes also makes an appearance in my commissioned character art, but I try to restrain it.

image00007

What advice would you give young aspiring artists?

Life Drawing.

Seriously.

Do as much Life Drawing as you possibly can – not only does it fill out your portfolio and make University professors very happy indeed, it also very quickly builds up your ability to not only draw the human figure but also your ability to SEE.

image00010

Once you know how to draw a person, once you’ve learned the anatomy underlying how the body works, you can start breaking rules and developing a style of your very own. And once you’ve trained yourself to actually SEE what’s there, rather than draw what you EXPECT is there, you can draw just about anything.

Basically, draw from life as often as you can, even if that means taking a sketchbook out to a public place and drawing what’s around you (you don’t HAVE to go to an actual class to do this!)

Draw everything. Draw all the time. Learn how to see what’s there.

You’ll thank yourself for doing it. Trust me.

image00028

ASEXUALITY

Where on the spectrum do you identify?

Celibate Asexual, Pan-Demi-Romantic – I’m sex indifferent and mostly find it boring, but I am willing to have it with a partner if they want it. I have been celibate for 5 years and single – with the occasional date – for most of them.

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

Thankfully not so much prejudice in my particular experience, though there has been some ignorance, mostly in the form of misunderstanding where I’m coming from on certain projects.

I have ended up having some interesting conversations with other artists about the difference between sexual and aesthetic attraction. I think what has helped in my case is that many of the artists I know are also LGBT+ or allies so they have at least some idea of things to start from when they learn of my asexuality.

image00031

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

That I just haven’t had good enough sex, or sex with the right partner yet. Which is extremely condescending and annoying. Often when this is said to me I’ll give them an abbreviated list of all my sexual partners and the various fetishes I have tried out with them all. Normally this makes them shut up, so I can then give them a basic Asexuality 101 class.

I wouldn’t recommend this for everyone, I only get away with it because I’m in my 30s and I’m normally talking to other people my own age; I also discovered my asexuality late, after a series of relationships, so I actually have a laundry-list of info to dump on people who say this.

image00038

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

I discovered asexuality very late – I was 28 – and it took me both by surprise and as a huge relief, it explained so many things that had been confusing me and causing stress and anxiety for most of my post-pubescent life. It’s been amazing to know that what I experience is actually a thing, that there is a community I can become part of, that there is a name for me to use.

My advice is to own it.

image00040

Read up on it, talk to other asexuals, get to know the community, find your particular flavor of asexuality and own the hell out of it. There are haters – as we’ve seen in the Tumblr community – but they’re not as many as Tumblr makes it look like, I promise, Tumblr’s just a very noisy place, so you can ignore them fairly easily in the real world.

Accept that the majority of the world is sexually oriented, accept that you’ll have to deal with annoying advertising and friend and family comments and opinions. It’s difficult, but it’s not insurmountable, I promise. There are people who get it, who are like you, or who will accept you. There are even people – even non-asexual! – who will date and love you just as you want (if you want! I’ve been mostly single for 5 years now and I have been thoroughly happy!)

There is a place in the world for you, for us, and we are absolutely allowed to take it, on our own terms, whatever they are. So go ahead, own it.

image00045

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

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/hannahlkingart/

Website: http://hannahlking.wix.com/hannahlkingart

Tumblr: http://hannahkingart.tumblr.com/

image00048

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

Interview: Beth

Today we’re joined by Beth.  Beth is an amazingly talented visual artist whose work is incredibly gorgeous.  She was the first person to contact me a while back in March I was looking to commission an artist for C2E2.  I could not be happier with her interpretation of Blitz (the finished product had me a bit misty-eyed).  Beth is a very versatile artist who does a bit of everything.  My thanks to her for taking the time to participate in this interview.

Autumn Chill
Autumn Chill

WORK

Please, tell us about your art.

I’m pretty much a jack of all trades. While my primary focus is illustration (mostly of children’s books and games), I also do logo and graphic design, fine art, comics, writing, and I occasionally dabble in 3D arts like sculpture and mask-making.

What inspires you?

I have a couple favorite subjects and themes, particularly birds and space. But my biggest inspiration is probably stories; I really enjoy the challenge inherent in taking a description of a scene, character, or concept, and bringing that to life in visual form. A great illustration can really add a whole new dimension to a piece of writing (just think about how iconic illustrations like Where the Wild Things Are or the Harry Potter covers became) and that’s something I find very inspiring.

Birdazzling Blue Tit
Birdazzling Blue Tit

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

Pretty much. My mom is an artist, so I grew up watching her paint and following her around to various art fairs as a kid. I’d spend the whole weekend wandering around talking to the other artists there. My mom was also always exposing myself and my siblings to different media and techniques, letting us experiment. She used to sit and teach me the basics of composition, color, and other important aspects of art by pointing them out in her own paintings, which was incredibly helpful to my own understanding; I had internalized a lot of really important concepts long before I started formal training.

As far as my specific field, I’ve always had an interest in pairing art with storytelling. As a kid, I would spend hours making up stories and filling up notebooks as I drew out the scenes. It was a bit like a comic, although I never bothered to write in any of the dialogue; that was all in my head. I loved (and still love) animation, and initially considered becoming an animator, but I wasn’t really impressed by the idea of working for Disney with their formulaic storytelling (this was well before Dreamworks or Pixar formed) and the immense amount of work involved in animation was daunting. So I opted for illustration, which still has a big focus on storytelling and communication, but in a few dozen images instead of thousands.

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?

I sign most of my pieces with my initials, “BZ.” However, I don’t really like the signature to be too visible, as I find it distracts from the piece, so it’s often blended into the background or somewhat hidden.

What advice would you give young aspiring artists?

Find the thing that you like to draw and draw it. Yes, you need to learn the basic stuff like anatomy and value and everything, even if it feels boring sometimes. But don’t let your art teachers or anyone else pressure you into what you “should” be drawing. My art school was very fine art-focused, and I often felt pressured to draw more realistically. So I waffled back and forth and didn’t fully allow myself to push my own style until after I graduated. Guess what? The art that is getting me jobs now is the art I enjoy drawing, not the realistic pieces that my teachers wanted me to do.

Also: learn how to work digitally. You don’t have to create the art digitally, but you need to know how to do basic stuff like scanning or photographing it, cleaning up that file, and resizing it to display well on the web. The internet creates the possibility for your art to reach around the world, but you’ve got to get it presentable online first.

That said, don’t feel like you need a certain program or tool to make art. You can make art out of practically anything, so work with what you have and keep challenging yourself. You will get better.

Pheonix Dancer
Pheonix Dancer

ASEXUALITY

Where on the spectrum do you identify?

Asexual biromantic.

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

Not so much, although this is probably because I’m only out to a few close friends. This interview is kind of my debut. (Hi, Internet.) So we’ll see if I get any nasty comments. If I do — eh. I’ll probably just delete them. Life is too short to give that kind of negativity any response.

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

I think most people just don’t even really ever consider asexuality as a possibility that exists. I know I had no idea that this was something I could be. I found a brief reference to asexuality online, and felt incredibly relieved when I started reading about it. It was incredibly validating to know that other people felt the same way I did and I wasn’t just weird or sheltered because I wasn’t interested in sex.

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

You’re not alone.

You don’t need to have a romantic or sexual relationship to have a fulfilling life.

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

My website is SpaceTurtleStudios.com, and I’m on Deviantart, Etsy, Facebook, and Tumblr as SpaceTurtleStudios too. You can find me on twitter at SpaceTurtleArt.

Song of the Space Turtle 2015
Song of the Space Turtle 2015

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