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About Me Member Animator Mohd Syukri26/Male/Malaysia Recent Activity Deviant for 7 Months
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Just love playing guitar..

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I hope one day I can create an artwork like one of these...

10 Top Tips To Become a Better Artist (CGTalk)

Fri Nov 6, 2009, 11:57 PM
  • Mood: Optimism
  • Listening to: The Sims 2 Soundtrack
  • Reading: Anatomy Book
  • Watching: Transformers 2
  • Playing: Mafia Wars
  • Eating: Bread with honey
  • Drinking: Orange juice
(from CGTalk)

To become a better artist takes years of dedication, passion, energy and time. There are no short cuts but here are some art tips to send you in the right direction. I hope you enjoy what I have wrote here and look forward to the community's response.

Tip 1: Learn the Importance of the Sketch

Sketching is one of those things that every artist MUST do and do often. Sketches don't have to be perfect, nor do you have to show them to anyone. They can be as rough or as scratchy as you like but the thing to keep in mind is it's readability. The purpose of a sketch is to quickly illustrate or develop an idea you have, to capture or study some form of reference so that it can be worked on at a latter date. Because of this, the sketch only needs to convey the right information to you and you alone (unless you are drawing an idea out for a client then the message needs to be crystal clear).

Tip 2: Draw, Draw and Draw Some More!

This is a similar tip to the first but what I mean by this is draw anything that comes to mind or visually interests you. Sketch on the bus, train, in bed and even on the toilet. Seriously! The more you draw from your mind and from reference, the better you will become and the quicker your skills will develop. Take the time to doodle lots of different subjects and in lots of different environments as this will all help build up a mental cataloge of images to draw upon latter when you may become stuck for ideas or inspiration.

Tip 3: Build a Reference Library

This is a great tip that I learned from years back. As you begin to fill sketch books with illustrations of ideas and reference material, you should build up that stack of books with more books. By this I mean buying art books, books on clothing, guns, tanks, other cultures, animals etc. The list of what you should look into is endless and should extend beyond your general interests. But it mustn't stop there. You should also collect images off of the internet and save them to your computer and organize them correctly. Take photos of things you see if you don't have time to sketch them. The purpose is to have a nice big collection of images that inspire you, inflame your imagination and, more specifically, if you need to draw something right, having the material there to draw from will add realism and clarity to your work.

Tip 4: Explore Different Mediums

This is when you take an idea from sketch to final painting. Exploring other methods of creating that end piece can really yield some unexpected results and challenge you to push yourself further into new situations. Playing with different types of paints such as oil, acrylic, water colour or gouache are the options most people would suggest trying, but there is more than experimenting with these. You could try air brushing, pastels, using charcoal or taking the leap into the digital realm. All these different mediums have their strengths that you can harness but you will never know them unless you try them out.

Tip 5: Learn Some Colour Theory (At Least)

This is a big one. Colour theory is a massive, massive subject and I can't do it justice here. What I would strongly suggest is investing time and money in a good colour theory book and learn from that. Even learning only a little bit, will help your work massivley. The more you push yourself to learn, the better and better you will become.

Tip 6: Play With Perspective

Now, by this I don't mean completely bend the fabric of reality or attempt to mimic the works of M C Esher (but looking at his work couldn't hurt). No! What I mean is take the time to learn about vanishing points, 2 point and 3 point perspectives and how to create objects in three dimensions correctly. As this is just a tip, I'm not going to go into the details here but there are numerous books and places on the web that cover this important area. Learning the rules of perception will open up the possibilities of what you can draw and will broaden your artistic horizons greatly.

Tip 7: Hunt Down Your Artistic Weaknesses & Destroy Them!

I was told this by an incredibly exceptional artist called Chet Zar. This tip is something you should approach regularly and be really tough and honest with your self. By knowing what your not good at artistically and making a conscious effort to attack it (them, could be lots of things), will enable you to systematically grow. For instance, if you draw a lot of humans but avoid drawing feet because you know your not that good at it, set aside time to draw lots of feet, over and over again until they look right (just be sure not to get a foot fetish). This links to a previous tip I did of Draw, Draw and Draw Some More! Drawing things that you don't draw often or at all will increase your repertoire and will enable you to paint and illustrate more complex pictures.

Tip 8: Ask For Help & Critiques

I heard this one from numerous sources and I have to say that this is something you don't have to do all the time. Joining online art communities and forums will give you access to professionals who do know their stuff and can really help you improve, but having thick skin is advised. At one point or another, you will get some harsh and unfair comments but that is the risk of being an artist who puts art out for viewer consumption. Never be afraid to ask for help.

Tip 9: Develop an Original Style

Ah, a real tough one this as developing your own style takes time and experimentation. By exploring lots of little different mediums and genres, you'll soon get to know what you like and how you like to do things. Over time, by doing things the way you want and in the subconscious way you approach a painting, a style will emerge that will be recognizable and more importantly, it will be your style.

Tip 10: Learn to Accept Failure as a Positive Thing.

Possibly one of the most important lessons an artist (or almost any professional) can learn. Not every picture you create will come out looking the way you wanted it too and the same goes with any experiment to try out. There is no such thing as a bad result... there are just results. Learning to take something positive out of everything you do will change the way you look at you next piece and how you approach it. If something doesn't work or you don't like it, don't do it again or use it as a bench mark to launch yourself from in your next piece.

So, I hope that that is enough information to digest and apply into practice.

deviantID

Do not try. Do, or do not, there's no try. - Master Yoda.

My lightsaber began to glow brighter. A sign of improvement.

Devious Info

  • Current Residence: Kelantan, Malaysia
  • deviantWEAR sizing preference: who wants to know?
  • Print preference: i hate printing
  • Interests: Racing, painting, manga, anime, animation, illustration, games
  • Favourite movie: The Matrix, Animatrix, The Incredibles, A Scanner Darkly, 300 and so much more
  • Favourite band or musician: Too Phat
  • Favourite genre of music: eurobeat, electro, techno, hip hop, pop rock
  • Favourite artist: all of them, and none of them
  • Favourite poet or writer: Zairul Darney
  • Favourite style of art: is it matter?
  • Operating System: Windows XP
  • MP3 player of choice: Winamp
  • Shell of choice: you mean the gas station?
  • Skin of choice: I only have one skin - the currently i'm using
  • Favourite game: Need For Speed series
  • Favourite gaming platform: PC
  • Favourite cartoon character: Takumi

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:iconadila:
:wave:

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MUST eat like there's no tomorrow
:iconshsn:
I tolled you something about a contest a month aga.. well the link to the group that the contest is on is here:
[link]

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Clubs/ Groups *Muslim-Manga
:iconluanalani:
:heart: Thank you for adding me to your watch list. I really appreciate it.

XOXO,
Luana

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:iconmakomi:
Wowowowowowowo..... cuba lukis yg fantasi plak, tapi kearah relism
teruskan yeeeeeeeeeee yeah wooohhooooo
:D
:iconmohdsyukri83:
Tengah ke arah fantasi, tapi wat masa ni nak biasakan diri guna table. Asyik guna mouse je wat artwork sebelum nie.
(Dah biasa guna vector).

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Don't try, do or do not; there's no try - Master Yoda
:iconnasrul-ds3:
thanks for the watch! :D

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No comments. I'm just a normal human like you (if you are human, though ^_~).
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A Naruhina doujinshi, ~so-over-you!
:iconshsn:
I am having this contest that I thought you might be intesrted in. Please check out my profile fo rmore info

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Clubs/ Groups *Muslim-Manga
:iconschmoek:
Thanks for the +fav!
:iconshecro:
welcome to dA!
hope to see more illustrator-works from you in the future... (:
:iconmohdsyukri83:
thanks. it's nice to view other people's artworks too.

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Don't try, do or do not; there's no try - Master Yoda

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