
Here's life after the tarot --
Well, backtrack a bit.
June 2004 I started on a project to create a tarot deck. 78 pieces of art. Not for any client, just for my own pleasure; though I soon found embarking on a long project like that, regardless of whether there's someone holding purse strings on it, sets its own terms.
It had to be cohesive: in style, in tone, in color. Concerns about the first item on that checklist did give me pause. I knew that without someone actually paying for the project to happen, it would necessarily take several years to complete. Over the course of which my style and skill was bound to change. At least...I should hope skill level would change (One could wish for the better, right???). And the second two items, well, those are the parameters for the pieces really. The boundaries I'd have to work within.
When I got down to #71 and the end was in sight, I started to wonder what it'd be like when I was done. For so long now (over 4 years) my "free time" has been dictated by "the next card." I have the paying jobs I do on commission. And when I'm not working on those, it was the tarot.
72, 73, 74 slipped by in between conventions. Then paying project deadlines and holidays took over briefly. Signing with Llewellyn to publish the deck. (Hurry up finish the rest now that there's an actual deadline for THIS too.)
75, 76 between mouthfuls of Thanksgiving turkey. (I can see the end.)
77 with my brother's dog running neurotic Australian shepherd circles around the table and around the Christmas tree. (Reluctance a bit...what will I do when this is done? Don't think about that too much.) Write the book.
78. Send it all in.
Done.
(Now what?)
Do I have to learn what this thing is called "artist's block"?
I think artistically it has pushed me to be a better artist in numerous ways (forcing me to paint male and female figures in equal number, facilitating gradual experimentation of perspective, size, and color). I can see the differences from the first cards to the last, and could bore anyone with the details of the progression.
Even though the project was my own from start to finish, dictated by parameters I set myself, it was still a boundary. A safe zone for me to fall into easily. While it may have stretched the technical and craftsman's muscles in my brain, there hasn't been need to really push and brainstorm wild concepts and subject matter. Or even color schemes for that matter; since for the sake of cohesion I focused on matching color sets for each suit.
So now I sit here for the first time in years and with a bit of "free time" again... and there's no "next card" to work on. No fixed color scheme to match. Any subject, any colors. It's a bit daunting. My paper seems too big, too white. My palette seems too varied and overwhelming. Green. No, purple. No wait...green with purple shadows!
It's a lovely feeling to do a piece of art again "just because I feel like it". Not that I felt the lack before, because I loved every minute of that 78 card journey, and am very proud of it. But it's a feeling a freedom you don't really notice until it it's there with you again.
Ink drawings of the nearby ravine have been sprouting under my hands; with a profusion like the greenery that they depict (rain rain rain this past month). And some dragons; with any colors I feel like painting!
----------------------------------
FAQ [link] | Bookmarks [link] | Prints [link]
Pencil, Watercolor, & Acrylics tutorials: [link]
Books:
Inklings [link] | Dreamscapes [link]
blog: [link]
Facebook: [link]
Etsy: [link]
Devious Comments
--
I believe in Jesus Christ, my Savior. If you do, too, and aren't scared to admit it, then copy and paste this in your signature.
--
~Saya
--
Dreams Contest
And [link] for [link]
Your works are truly unique, inspiring and amazing.
Thank you for sharing them with us!
Always, Jaime
--
"We all had to start from somewhere..."
Again, congratulations!
--
Sensible people always think before they act, but stupid people advertise their ignorance.
AFFORDABLE COMMISSIONS: [link]
I can't wait for your deck to print, by the way. Its the best deck I've. I'm very picky about my tarot decks, and it seems like a lot of artists pick and choose which cards they want to spend full effort on and which ones they don't, so there's frequent and obvious differences in the art of a deck, and it bothers me endlessly. Your deck just seems to flow, and all the pieces fit with each other. Its great!
--
With no power comes no responsibility.
Previous Page12345...Next Page