IT’S TELEVISION TUESDAY

Illustration Master Course – Ep. 5: STORYTELLING & PRESENTATION
๐Master Course Diamond Collection (Hi-Res PSDs + Template Sets)






*I’m assuming you drink Starbucks?ย
Haha! This strikes me as an interesting way to phrase this question. Is this assumption just because so many people do drink Starbucks, or because I said something that made it sound like I drink Starbucks? O.o Haha! ๐ Actually, Iโm not a big coffee drinker, so I only go there occasionally. Most of the time, Iโm much happier with a proper cup of black tea with cream and sugar. ๐
Hah! Just wondered. Most people from the Pacific Northwest are hardcore Starbucks fans. I like black tea as well minus the cream and sugar. Earl grey to specific.ย

*Your profile says you’re a story-inspired artist, can you elaborate?
The short answer or the long one? ๐ If I were to sum it up, I would tell you that I greatly prefer to create art that is based on stories, or has a sense of story to it than working in real-life subjects for their own sake. I can enjoy still life, portraiture, landscape, and figure art to a point, and there are many wonderful artists who work in these genres that I positively love, but ultimately, Iโm more interested in how those things can be used to tell stories than I am in those subjects for themselves.
Ok, hereโs a more elaborate answer if you want one:
Stories have always had a special place in my life. I jumped from learning to read โBob Booksโ at the age of five to devouring the entire Narnia series at the age of six. I can still remember a surprising amount of detail about how it felt to visit some of the different places and events in Lewisโ fantasy world for that first time, despite the fact I was that young.
My love for art started early as well. My mom has frequently recalled that I was about two when I started carefully drawing circles with features that were recognizable as faces, and I could easily spend hours playing with crayons or play dough, even at such a young age. I suppose I heard that story often enough to not feel much wonder in it. I talked, read, and drew โearlyโ. That was just me. Now, watching my nephew and two nieces beginning to grow, Iโve realized that for a two year old to draw anything recognizable or to have the patience and interest to invest that much time in one project really is somewhat of an unusual thing.
I continued to devour books as I got older. โLittle Womenโ, โThe Princess and the Goblinโ, the โAmerican Girlโ series, โTreasure Islandโ, โThe Wind in the Willowsโ, โThe Lord of the Ringsโ, – I was constantly surrounded by beautiful story worlds. We wonโt talk much here about what a struggle math was for me all through school, but my reading comprehension was quite high from the get go, and it stayed that way. I was that weird kid who read a short, illustrated adaptation of โA Midsummer Nightโs Dreamโ, and liked it so much I decided to read the original play – at the age of 12. I was also the kid that would critique โterribleโ jobs at casting in book-to-film adaptations when it was obvious to me that no attempt had been made to match the descriptions of the characters in the books. (โHow could they cast a BLOND in that role when the book CLEARLY said they had DARK hair?!โ Oh the horror.)
I think it was this knack for reading comprehension that made the idea of combining my love for stories and my love for art such a natural concept for me. Even as a child, I drew pictures based on stories I read and loved. I particularly remember a long season filled with drawings of Tolkienโs characters. I also wanted to write my own books and illustrate them. For years, I said I wanted to be a โwriter and illustratorโ. I remember an attempt to create an illustrated story as early as kindergarten, and although that attempt didnโt really get too far, it is interesting to look back that far and realize how much of an inkling I had even then of what I wanted to do.
At some point in early adulthood, I dropped the โwriterโ from my quick comeback when people asked โWhat do you want to be?โ. Insecurity may have been the wretched imp that launched the decision to โshelveโ the writing-related part of my dream (โThereโs so many people out there who write better than I doโ), and practicality was likely the culprit that sealed that decision (โHow many art forms do you think you have time to master anyway?โ). Together, they whispered something along the lines of, โBetter just focus on your drawing and painting, and then you can illustrate other peopleโs booksโ. I bought it, and so fiction-writing and I largely parted ways for a while.
After high school, I attended a classical fine arts atelier. I am beyond grateful for the foundational things I learned there, but at the end of four years of painting still life, landscape, figure studies, and plaster casts of famous statues, one thing could not have been clearer to me – I had very little love and passion for those things in and of themselves; I was interested in them mainly for how they could help me to tell stories visually. Around the time I graduated art school, I was also forced to take a fresh look at my attempt to โstuffโ the idea of being a writer. What called it into question for me was the jealousy I felt spring up when someone I knew made the simple statement that they were writing something. I was not jealous of their story or ideas – those were their own to explore, and I was happy they had that – no, I was only jealous of the fact that they were writing at all. That feeling was an indicator for me, and I began to realize that I really couldnโt walk away from that old desire. I landed on an idea I decided to pursue as a story, and it was a joy to โun-shelveโ that part of myself again. At first, I thought I would do an illustrated novel, but that left me with the problem of having to muscle through an entire book before I could also draw the characters I was longing to portray visually as well as through words. I began to see graphic novels and comics being done in styles that varied widely off the โMarvelโ model I had always associated with comics, and I realized that telling my story in a sequential art format like that would allow me to fully indulge both my writing and illustrating.
Wow! You’re quite a unique individual. I’ve never heard anyone say this before. Story based art is something new and fascinating to me. I’m starting to see a connection with stories we read and appreciate with a pattern of imitation. Many times children do this by imitating or pretending to be characters in their books. Their imagination attempts to recreate what they’ve apprehended in a story. ย With you, it’s a ruthless desire to create story based art. That’s so cool!

*What were your influences early in life towards art?
I would sum this up quickly by saying the stories that sparked my imagination, and my mom, who taught me the first things I learned in art, and who has supported me in my artistic pursuits for my entire life.
That’s so sweet! ย In no particular order; you gotta love stories, the imagination and moms.ย
*What are your favorite mediums to use? Painting, drawing, writing, photography?At the rest of sounding slightly crazyโฆALL OF THEM!!! ๐ SOOOOO many kinds of media! ๐
Iโve actually been trying to come up with a short, descriptive phrase to sum up how I work, because I tend to interconnect and flow between different media. I sometimes start a drawing in digital media and transition to finishing it in a traditional media, or vice versa, or I may mix a couple traditional media, such as watercolor with color pencil. I donโt want to just draw or write, I want to interweave the two. Iโve even wondered recently if I could take my hobby pianist skills and create a soundtrack for the webcomic Iโm writing. (That would be an adventure!) More recently, Iโve been looking at using photos as a base for digitally painted backgrounds in my story too. Thereโs so many amazing possibilities out there!
That’s great, have at it! Sounds like you’re having a lot of fun.

*Your Facebook profile says after highschool you attended Atelier Maui art school where I received a….?ย
I am a story-inspired artist from the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. After graduating high school, I attended Atelier Maui (formerly Ashland Academy of Art), where I received a Certificate of Completion of Four Years. I have also received training as an artist through the Masterpiece Christian Fine Arts Foundation, and I continue to study to improve my craft through self-teaching and other opportunities. I am currently writing/illustrating a graphic novel and teaching art classes though Grumbacher at Michaels Arts and Crafts. I am available for online and/or in-person art tutoring, and I also do commission/freelance work. If you have any questions about working with me, feel free to contact me atย jngarrettart@gmail.com.
Don’t miss Jennifer’s epic website atย J.N. Garrett Art.ย

*What made you chose art school?
Well, I knew I wanted to be an artist, and the idea of spending four years in a traditional college where I would be forced to re-hash general education subjects felt like a stifling waste of time to me. I also knew a lot of former students of the teacher I studied with, and I loved the quality of the work they did, so that really influenced my choice to go to that specific school. It also happened to be right in my backyard, so to speak, so that was a huge plus too. I love the perspective of an artist who chose to mentor me for a number of years, that an artist should be a perpetual student. I may have finished school, but there is always more to learn, and the bar is always being raised for the standard of what I want to achieve. I think thatโs such a huge part of what I love about art – there is no โpeakโ, no ultimate mountain top or end of the road. There are always new ways to try things, new levels of ability to push toward.
That’s what I love about art. It’s a continual journey of discovery. What an adventure!ย

*You’re an Art instructor where do you teach?
I am currently certified with Grumbacher to teach drawing and painting courses at our local Michaels store. I love the opportunity to connect with people in meaningful ways through teaching, whether itโs pouring into a particularly passionate student, or just begin to able to encourage someone who needs it.
I like it. Connecting with others in meaningful ways through teaching. An you do sound very passionate about it. I think passion begets passion in my book.ย
*Some people say art can’t be taught, is that true?
Muahahahaha! Are you sure you want to get me started on this topic? It might cause a very long rant that wanders into other areas that I see as being connected to this issue. ๐
Honestly, that is one of the most frustratingย perspectives I encounter as an artist. Do I believe people can have a natural inclination or bent toward being good at something in a specific area? Sure. In that sense, I do believe in talent, which is the thing inside you, and no, I would say that canโt be taught, because I think that God gives us each areas that he wires us to naturally gravitate toward. HOWEVER, art is just like any subject out there. Just because Iโm not a math genius doesnโt mean I canโt learn my times tables and algebra. Just because I donโt enjoy writing chemistry equations doesnโt mean a teacher canโt help me wrap my head around the basics. Just because someone isnโt a โnaturalโ artist doesnโt mean that they canโt be taught how to draw. I have a problem with the โart is talent that you either just have or donโtโ perspective, because every artist I know who is any good put in a lot of work to get there, and people donโt talk like that about any other skilled craft I know of. A doctor is not just โtalentedโ – everyone knows he worked his tail off to get through school and learn how to do what he does. A businesswoman isnโt just โgiftedโ or โluckyโ – she learned how to observe and work with the structures and systems in place in order to make smart decisions that would help her make the most of the opportunities that came along.
There are a couple other issues that I see as being related to this. First, thereโs the view of art being the โeasy classโ, that art class is a way for students who donโt want to work hard to get an easy credit. This is a devaluing statement to the students who are there because they DO want to work hard and get better at their craft, and who, if they succeed in any degree, will hear it again as adults in the forms of โOk, youโre an artist, but whatโs your REAL job?โ, and every kind of variation on, โWhy should you get paid to do something you enjoy?โ I feel it also allows a skewed perspective of the arts to start forming for people at a very early age. If students were being taught construction drawing, and having to wrestle through all the complexities of learning form, tone, and color from an early age, I canโt help but feel that art would be taken a bit more seriously by adults who had taken those kinds of classes as children, and therefore understood the inherent work involved in becoming a good artist, even if they werenโt artists themselves, any more than I can appreciate the talent, dedication, and work involved in someone becoming an engineer, because I had to take a certain amount of math and science in school.
Second, a more modern issue I see as being connected to this is the tendency to marginalize digital art as not being โrealโ art, or somehow taking less skill/talent/work than traditional media. Again, I think if more people were exposed to drawing digitally, it would help dispel some of the myths people have bought about this medium. No, the computer is not doing it for us. No, just because certain things are easier to fix than traditional media or there is more wiggle room to experiment in some ways, it still doesnโt mean itโs โeasyโ to do.
I donโt know. I get it that writers come up against things like this too, and thatโs in spite of the fact that most people have had to take English classes, so I donโt think classroom education is the sole key to fixing problematic attitudes towards the arts and artists, but I canโt help feeling that better education on the subject would still be a great place to start in combating some of the misconception artist of all kinds – writers, photographers, painters and more – have to face throughout their lives, and I do feel that visual arts in particular suffer from a lot of these misconceptions.
EXCELLENT. Spoken like a true passionate person. I wasn’t aware of some of the misconceptions you mentioned. I find it hard to believe anyone would find art as *easy*. No art is easy in my mind, especially digital. To me, digital art is harder and more complicated with all of the technology involved. All the Adobe platforms, Wacom tablets, digital brushes, settings, layering, CS 6 etc. That stuff is definitely not a walk in the park.

*According to your current understanding, what is art?
Wow, big question there! I like it though. Itโs a โthinking cap questionโ. ๐ I think art can be many, many things, but one of my favorite definitions of art that Iโve ever heard was from Madleine Lโengle in the book โWalking on Waterโ. She describes art as something through which we get to bring order and beauty, or โcosmosโ, into the chaos and destruction we see in the world, that the truest form of art as it reflects our Creator is in the creation of things that ultimately affirm what is true and lovely and real and alive. Seen in that way, art is a way we can make a little rightness in a world where there is so much wrong. Thatโs why, for me, I will never buy into the idea that art is merely โentertainmentโ. It can be very entertaining, and that is not a bad thing, but if it is creating that โcosmos in chaosโ to any degree, then I feel it is also something more than entertainment.
I also like C.S. Lewisโ perspective on this, which comes out in this quote on friendship: โFriendship, like art, is unnecessary; it has no survival value. Rather, it is one of those things that gives value to survival.โ It is interesting in light of this quote to consider some of the articles written in recent years that talk about the damaging physical effects of chronic loneliness, which some studies have claimed can be worse for our bodies even than smoking. You could make a strong case that the reality is that art, beauty, and meaningful connections are actually not only important, but actually ARE necessary, not only for the health of our psyche, but ultimately because what affects the heart and mind affects the body, and so those things are actually quite impactful on our physical well-being as well. There are reasons people like Hitler were hellbent on destroying art and the physical beauty of the land. I feel like thatโs largely what Lewis is getting at in that quote – there are things that are necessary in other ways than in having immediate survival value.
Very beautiful. Your whole statement stands like a piece of art. Well put.
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