How to find you ARTISTIC VOICE & find your ART STYLE

 

Coinciding YouTube video found here!

How to find your art style ist he most asked question in the art community. However, along my journey I realised that finding an art style is…overrated? Instead, our artistic voice is what matters and defining out why is where it begins…

An artist has many styles but only one voice. As we grow as an artist our voice is inevitably going to change, when we pick up new techniques, new mediums, inspirations and have different experiences that fuel our creative drive to communicate.

I hear many people say that they have a lot of different styles but when I go and view their portfolio of work, I can tell that all the pieces are created by the same person.

It’s about how you hold the paintbrush both figuratively and literally, that authenticates the work as yours.

 By dictionary definition a person’s art style is cultivated through a collection of the artist’s inspiration, skill set, skill level, personality and experiences- it is a ‘distinctive way only you paint’.

 But this definition doesn’t stress the most important factor, that your art style is always evolving, changing, and adapting with you. I don’t think we should focus on finding our art style but instead focus on defining our artistic voice.   


Defining your artistic voice

The first step to develop your unique art style is finding you artistic voice.

 You need to ask yourself:

Why you paint?

What do what want to say through your art?

What do you want to communicate?

What message or meaning to you have behind your work?

For me, my work always needs to have a deeper meaning. I want to communicate something that is easier understood through an image rather than words. That my subject would have a bigger impact on the viewer if I painted the message rather than if I articulated it verbally.

So, ask yourself the question of why you create art?

Perhaps it’s a variety of things. You may paint to go, you find it therapeutic, you need to communicate, spread a message, change someone’s perspective, activate change, or convey certain feelings and emotions that can’t be put into words.

Perhaps you paint for fun or perhaps you paint with no meaning at all. However, art with no meaning is saying something isn’t; that art doesn’t need to have meaning. And that is meaningful!

It’s all well and good to dive into finding your art style, but what do want to say through your art style is the question we want to answer.

The answer that question will have a huge impact in what media, subject, and techniques you choose.


Consciously creating your art style

I think once you have ruminated on what direction you want your art to take, you can make steps into formulating your art style, through understanding what subjects, mediums, techniques will make up the composition of your work.

Subject

What subject do create in your art? Photorealism portraits, whimsical landscapes, abstract shapes, animations, sculptures…? What you want to your art to focus on – the subject of your attention- will dictate what medium, techniques, and composition you create.

Medium

What medium do you want to work in? What medium is going to lend itself to you to create specific elements that you need to convey your artistic voice.

Working in graphite will only allow you to work in black and white. Do you want to work large or small. Does the medium lend itself to be applied fast or slow, controlled, or free? For example, watercolour has freedom of movement. While oil lends the work to be more controlled. Perhaps a combination of media will allow for you achieve what you desire?

Technique

What media you use is going to follow on to what techniques you use? For example, you have alla prima techniques in oil and wet on wet in watercolour…rendering in your digital art, etc. The way you use specific techniques in your work is going to make them unique to you.

Composition

These three elements are intertwined, and all come in the composition of your artwork which is glue that puts it all together. All the parts in one coherent hole because we have a voice and a vision that we want to share with the world.

We give expression to our authenticity.

If you ask 12 people to paint or draw the exact same thing, you are going to get 12 completely different artworks. That is the crux of your style! What you want to paint, the medium, subject, technique and composition is going to shape your voice into a unique style.

You are going to need to experiment with many elements in your art. You’re going struggle and feel absolutely frustrated in your inability to stick with one style. You are inevitably going to expand your skill set as an artist of course your work and style in going to change!

Personally, I don’t think we should ever focus our energy on finding a strict art style that we should confine ourselves to, but instead find our artistic voice that we can change and adapt with each art piece and project we create.

Once we become fluent with being flexible in our art style, you open your potential as an artist and widen the possibility of projects and pieces that you can create- as we not always confined to a specific art style but instead are expressing our voice artistically.   

Love you guys x

Chantal

SELF-MOTIVATION // how I stay motivated as an independent artist

How I stay Self Motivated as a independent artist

Coinciding YouTube video found here!

As an inspiring independent artist working in very is(land)olated setting, physically away from art communities and university many people come to me with the question of how I stay motivated.

I always answer that if you want to achieve your dreams you need to stay SELF-motivated. You cannot rely on external factors to give you motivation – sure you can use them as a springboard or a catalyst for your own inspiration, but you cannot solely rely on them for motivation. External factors such as money, fame, people, friends, influencers, social media attention is there one day gone the next. You have no control over what they say, how they act and when when they provide you that most important motivation.

Even if you are the most unreliable person in your life, you are the only one you can rely on day in day out. Although changing, you are the only constant.

If you continue to base your motivation on unreliable factors, you’re not going to be able to push through times when you doubt yourself and feel unworthy of your life choices.


There a three ways (possibly more although these are the major ones!) that I stay self-motivated…


Number One

I feel as though every self-help, spiritual book touches on the concept of finding your why. But does that not reiterate the importance of it? Absolutely. So, I state it again. You need to ground your gaols and dreams in your Why. Why do you want to achieve your dreams? Why do you deserve to?

Ask yourself whether your why benefits you or other people?

If you base your why in the existence, inspiration, and assistance of others then your why has a greater COLLECTIVE purpose. This will provide further motivation as now others depend on the achievement of your goals and not just you.


Number Two

If you ever lack motivation remind yourself that you owe it to your younger self. The one who had worked their ass off to get where you are today. The past and present you deserve living life as the future you has achieved their goals. Remind yourself that you cannot give up on all the hard work you’ve put in to get where you are today.


Number Three

Have clarity in your long-term goals and how you are going to achieve them in realistic steps. Formulate a plan that will inspire and self-motivate you every day throughout times that you feel undervalued, worthless, uninspired, or unheard. Remember and remind yourself that you voice is the only one that matters when defining your goals. Every time you make a step in the right direction – like posting a small little blog :) - even though it may not feel like it you absolutely are a hell of a lot closer to where you need to be.

 

As I like to say…

ONE STEP HAS A RIPPLE EFFECT!

Lots of love,

Chantal xx

OPENING MY OWN ART GALLERY AT 20 YRS OLD // taking risks and stepping outside your comfort zone

Hello friends! This is my first blog post in connection with my first YouTube video (which you can watch here) !

At the beginning of this year, I was faced with two options. One was to continue full-time university study and change my major for the fifth time! Or two open my own studio and pursue art full-time. I decided to choose the later. Life is short, you only live once, and I am a firm believer in saying live life by you own terms and no-one else’s.

 Five Telegraph road Kingscote, Kangaroo Island is the location of my new adventure. The 30min drive to town is taking a toll on the petrol tank and my savings (welp), but the 7 feet square room has a charming personality with north facing windows that allow in a steady stream of sunlight, creating the perfect space for inspiration.

I named the studio, Bloom by the Ocean, as way to encapsulate my aspiration to flourish artistically and individually whilst surrounded by the ocean. In the beginning I fitted in gallery lights, new carpet, furnished the studio with desks and tables and I also reached out to a few local artists if they were interested to exhibit their art in my gallery.

The studio is a growing space, there is still so much I would like to change and create. For example, I am still reorganizing all my stock and materials that have been in boxes behind my desk!


I get many remarks asking, ‘How was I bold enough to open my own space going against the norm and expectation of attending university.’ I want to look back on my life and be proud of a person who took risks regardless of the initial outcome. You are never going to know what will happen unless you take the risk.

When first taking the risk don’t worry about the outcome; whether the action will be a success or failure. If you don’t take the risk initially, you’re failing yourself.

If you have the desire to dream big and achieve your dreams; take the risk and don’t look back. Don’t stop yourself because you fear failure or prevent yourself from taking the risk because you don’t think you will be successful. Let me tell you right now, if you think you’re going to successful initially you’ve already failed. The term success itself is relative to the individual, making the entire concept irrelevant (in my opinion). It is completely acceptable for it not to work the first, the second or the third time. The point is after you take the risk don’t give up. Don’t give up even if it takes you years.  


Taking steps outside your comfort can be very rewarding, but today I see less, and less people do so. In the art community stepping outside you comfort zone, experimenting with new media and style is looked down upon and traded with the urgent hurry of discovering your art style and making a consistent body of work to be follower worthy. The movement neglects the ongoing importance of stepping outside your comfort zone to discover new things about yourself and to grow individually.

It is extremely daunting to commit yourself to something that you’re not good at but once you do everything you feared is longer as stressful. Stepping outside your comfort also is not always positive. Holy heck! Most of the time you learn about what you hate and don’t want to do but being comfortable with that is very powerful.


So, I urge you to take the risk, step outside your comfort zone in weeks, months, years from now your future self will thank you.

 

Chantal xx