Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts

Monday, September 22, 2025

My Latest TikTok Video of Me Painting Just Surpassed 10,000 Views

Check out the TikTok video here.

Hey folks, I'm happy to share that my latest TikTok video just passed 10,000 views - with over 1500 likes and 65 saves. Now, that might not seem like much in the grand scheme of the social media art world, but for someone like me, it's amazing! I'm so happy that this latest painting -- The Daydreamer, 24" x 24", acrylic on panel, still in progress -- has connected with so many people! Whether they enjoy the colors, the theme, the appearance of something that looks three-dimensional but is actually flat, or just something they can't quite put their finger on, having that many people enjoying my work makes me feel like these new cookie landscape paintings of mine are heading in the right direction.

That is quite honestly a tough thing for an artist -- to know if there's anyone out there who will actually like our work or connect with it in a meaningful way. We artists, we're kind of loners, making art in the quiet little corners of our homes with almost no one else seeing it, until we begin to share things in places like social media. 

Taking on this new body of work is quite a big risk for me, personally and professionally. I've been painting ice cream and other traditional still life for a long time, and while I'll still keep painting those on occasion (after I finish the cookie landscapes for my March 2026 solo show at Hidell Brooks Gallery), trying something that I think is totally unique to me, that gets better with each piece I paint, and that unleashes a creativity in me that I can't quite describe, it's a good feeling. 

I am very grateful for every like or encouraging comment. Thank you for your support as I continue to grow and build my work. I've got a lot planned!

-KIM

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Wednesday, July 23, 2025

Want to see how I make my Cookie Landscape Paintings?

Hey folks, if you are interested in following the daily progress of my Cookie Landscape painting series, which I'll be debuting at my March 2026 solo show at Hidell Brooks Gallery in Charlotte, North Carolina, make sure you check in on my TikTok or my Instagram stories to see the latest (remember that the Instagram stories are only up for 24 hours, so to see all of the clips, check my TikTok). 

Check out the latest video, where I show you some insights about the complicated planning stages for the cookie/frosting paintings. In case you are curious, there's no AI of any kind here! Just my brain and a bit of imagination creating a good old-fashioned sketch and color sketch, followed by me baking and decorating a real cookie/frosting scene, then spending many many hours painting it. 

Like this one, still in progress: Butterflies in the Sky, 24" x 24", acrylic on panel.

Check out my latest behind-the-scenes video if you want to see the crazy process I have for making the models for my Cookie Landscape paintings. This one, Butterflies in the Sky, is still a work in progress!

I hope these paintings bring a little bit of joy into your life! Thanks as always for your interest!

Friday, March 7, 2025

Broken Wrist Surgery Update - And I'm Starting to Paint Again!

Post-surgery x-ray of my wrist from Monday. Holding together with plates and screws. Those squiggly lines are the 30 staples I had removed, along with some stitches. You can see how I shattered the top of my forearm bone in the wrist area. I actually didn't know how bad the break was until after the surgery, nor did I realize that I had 30 staples in my arm until Monday. No wonder I was in so much pain!

If you read my last post, you know I took a bad, albeit quick, fall on the ice in my driveway in February, and broke my wrist, which required surgery. It was my left wrist, which is not my painting wrist, but it has been pretty painful, on top of a bad case of the flu. In other words, it's been a rough month.

But today I'm happy to report that my surgery sutures came out on Monday, and I'm now wearing a removeable brace instead of a cast, which enables me to do the necessary stretching exercises four times a day on my wrist, plus finger exercises, to try to get my range of motion back in place.

So even though I'm still very much in recovery, the pain is much less, and I have been able to start painting again. Here's a quick photo of a painting I'm not almost finished with, "Balance," 30"x20", which I had started and titled ironically before my fall.

Biggest lesson: Be grateful for the things you have, the people who love and support you, and for the days when everything is going okay. I'm excited to be getting back to being me again. Thanks for your positive thoughts as I heal!

In-progress, Balance, 30"x20", acrylic. Being able to paint again just makes me feel more like me.


Saturday, February 22, 2025

Fell on the Ice, Shattered My Wrist & Caught the Flu - When Making Happy Art Goes Wrong

 

Shattered my left wrist, which has had to be surgically repaired. At least I'm right-handed for most things, like painting.

Warning: This post is about my recent injury and may gross people out. Please feel free to skip it and return when I start posting my happy paintings again!


Two Saturdays ago, our driveway was quite icy, so I thought I should put something down to help melt it before starting my day. It was two steps, not even two steps, more like one and a half. My left hand was in my jacket pocket, both my feet slipped out on the glassy ice surface, and crack, straight down on my left wrist. Ow, I said out loud. It hurt but I almost continued on with my task until I looked down at my wrist and knew something was very wrong. Maybe it’s dislocated, I thought, so I pushed on it and heard crunch crunch crunch. 


If there’s any big blessing in this, it is that I broke the left wrist, but I am right-handed. Thank God!


Two hours at urgent care, but they said it was too bad to set. I got sent to the trauma ward at city hospital. About 9 hours later, including 30 minutes in a makeshift traction unit, I was told I’d need surgery. 


At the ER with my fingers suspended from a makeshift traction unit, in an attempt to bring my long bone back into alignment. 30 minutes, really painful, but it did move the bone quite a bit in the right direction.  There is a weight attached to my arm, pulling things downward, while two of my fingers are looped into tight gauze. 



I hadn’t initially realized the extent of injury, but let’s just say it was very bad. Broke the long bone, which became severely out of place and was manually pushed back with the help of an ER doctor and the makeshift traction unit; then shattered the piece at the top of the wrist into a bunch of shards. Now, two weeks later, I have been stabilized, the surgery seemed to go well, and I’ve been stitched back together by a talented surgeon and a lot of plates, pins and screws.


Not gonna lie, it’s been painful most of the time and incredibly uncomfortable the rest. And somewhere in the process I caught a bad case of the flu, which I also gave to my husband. It severely sapped our energy among other symptoms. We’re on the mend, but it’s been rough.


I’m sharing this not because I want anyone to feel bad for me (although if I can save someone else with a cautionary tale of being overzealous on the ice, that’s good enough for me), but because I want to share what’s been important to me in the process: the help and support of my husband, without whom I cannot open a tuna can among other things; the love of my two elderly cats, one of whom lovingly tried to lick my cast and has kept watch over me every night since my accident, the support of my family, and my desire to start painting again. 


When things get taken away from you, when you can’t function at the same level you used to, when everything, even very simple things, becomes harder (like the fact that I can only type with one hand right now), you see more clearly. I’m not well enough yet, but I am trying to rest, eat right and strengthen myself enough to get back to my painting. I don’t make happy art because everything in my life is always perfect. I make happy art because it’s not, but the art brings me joy and lifts me up when I need it. I hope the pieces I’ll be putting out in 2025 do the same for you! That's the biggest thing I'm dreaming of right now.


Be back soon! 


Remember to check out my latest painting, Bee Dancing with Daisies, 12"x12", acrylic on panel, on view as part of the 2025 Richeson75 Small Works Show at the Richeson School of Art & Gallery in Kimberly, Wisconsin, through April 2. See all of the finalists online here. It's my first finished trompe l'oeil cookiescape, but I'm excited to do more!

Watch my process video here. Feel free to share!



Thursday, January 16, 2025

Why I Paint Sugary Treats But Don't Eat Much Sugar - and a Tease for My New Project

 

Raspberry Sorbet, acrylic on panel, 16" x 12". Prints available on my website.

I recently donated a print of my Raspberry Sorbet to my old hometown as part of an art auction fundraiser. My mom said people were very complimentary (which is always nice to hear!), but that one of her friends said, "She must really like ice cream!" I don't think this is an uncommon reaction, but the truth is the three things I like most about working with sugary foods for my paintings the most are: 1. the sculptural quality, 2. the nostalgic quality, and 3. the colorful nature of it. The reality is I don't eat much sugar, but I find beauty in the foods that connect us to our past and incite a bit of imagination. 

Years ago, around 2012, when I began painting, I painted a body of work based on the concession areas of the baseball spring training stadiums my husband and I frequented. I made six very detailed, very complex oil paintings in all, featuring concession stand workers essentially doing their jobs or lost in a moment of thought. A couple were of stadium attendees. The paintings were good, some even won some prizes at local art shows. One was reprinted as a 20-foot-tall banner that hung at the exterior entry of an art organization's gallery for a year! I really enjoyed the work, and I still have all of the paintings in my personal collection (at my husband's request). I sold some prints (I may make them available again this spring), and I progressed a lot as a painter. But the thing I struggled with the most was taking photos of people for the references. 

Photographing places and people just wasn't pleasant for me. It made me feel like people were staring at me, wondering why this crazy lady was taking photos out in public. Occasionally, I got yelled at. I also couldn't control the lighting, or the crowds. So what I gradually ended up doing was moving to still life painting, and eventually I learned that I could control every aspect of the painting in my kitchen (and never fear getting yelled at!). 


One of my early paintings, around 2013, 24" x 12", oil on panel. Featuring a half-empty crowd shot of attendees to a Yankees spring training game in Tampa, Florida. Still in my personal collection.


Very soon, I'll begin sharing images of the new body of work I'm working on. And while it, too, is sugar-based, like the ice creams I'll continue to paint, the work is primarily about having something I can sculpt in my kitchen and create a bit of magic with on my painting panel. I really feel like it's the culmination of my work, from the baseball stadium paintings up through now. I'm building a world, the world in my head, the beautiful, happy, crazy thoughts that blend my visions from childhood to the state of things today. 

I'll begin by sharing these new pieces to my email list first. If you'd like to get the first previews, please feel free to sign up for my VIP list. Help me make some magic this year, and share a little happiness with the world. 

Friday, January 10, 2025

The 2025 Annual Art Mailer from Hidell Brooks Gallery

Such a nice way to start off the new year! I just received the annual mailer from Hidell Brooks Gallery in Charlotte, North Carolina. So pleased to see one of my ice cream paintings right in the middle, among so many wonderful works by other represented artists. Thank you to the ladies at Hidell Brooks! It will be a good year, with a lot of new stuff coming...

 


Monday, December 23, 2024

My Three Favorite Weird But Inspiring Holiday Movies

A number of years ago, I made a little recipe book (left) for members of my family that featured our traditional holiday cookie and dessert recipes. To illustrate the book, I photographed some of my old Christmas ornaments, like this little stained glass snowman, which I colored on with a pen when I was about 3 (he needed rosy cheeks, I thought). The other book is a well-worn gingerbread house book that belonged to my aunt. She helped me make my first holiday gingerbread house.


I love Christmas. I love just about everything about it. I experienced many beautiful, magical Christmases throughout my lifetime. But let's be honest. As adults, sometimes we can lose a little of our holiday spirit here and there. We're busy or stressed. Maybe something sad happened in the past year or something that just seemed to take the wind out of our sails. I'm an optimist, and I say that doesn't mean you can't right the ship a bit for the holidays. 

When I paint, I watch a lot of movies (as well as TV shows, youtube videos, etc.). Well, mostly, I listen to them, but I find myself coming back to certain ones over and over again that help to keep me in a positive mindset. After all, I am making happy art!

This month, I've enjoyed watching/listening to many holiday classics. From the cheesy Santa Claus movies to those that tug at the heartstrings, I've seen just about all of them. But there are three that stick out in my mind, that I'll watch multiple times each holiday season, and they help me to keep all the challenges of life in perspective, so I feel more in the holiday spirit and more appreciative of what I've been blessed with. 

My Three Favorite Weird Holiday Movies

1. The Man Who Invented Christmas (2017). Who doesn't love A Christmas Carol? I've read the original and seen just about every imaginative film retelling the tale. But The Man Who Invented Christmas is by far my favorite because it's about how A Christmas Carol was written by Charles Dickens way back in 1843. While I'm sure the film takes many creative liberties in presenting the story, the spirit of Charles Dickens and how he both developed the story and struggled with it deeply connects with the artist in me. I sent a DVD of this to my mom a few years ago, and she responded with, "Hmm, it's pretty dark..." True, I suppose, but for me, this is a film about overcoming both exterior and interior adversity to make something beautiful and meaningful. If you are a creative person, or a fan of other creators, I think you'll appreciate it. 

2. Last Holiday (2006). Starring Queen Latifah, this is not a traditional holiday film, but it takes place during the holiday season, and it is a funny and beautiful reflection on life and how we spend our time, facing the things we are afraid of, and choosing the make the most of each day. The main character discovers she only has three weeks to live and decides what she is going to do and who she is going to be in that time. It's a comedy, but it's also rooted in sincerity. It always holds me accountable and makes me choose to live each day better than the last. 

3. One Magic Christmas (1985). Okay, so this one is certainly one of the most obscure but perhaps most poignant holiday films out there. Starring Mary Steenburgen, it's about a struggling woman who learns about what is most important in life with the help of an angel. I don't want to spoil too much of it, but I'd encourage you to go in with an open mind and check it out. It's got some weirdness and some flaws, but the message of the film is important enough that I don't care about the flaws. So yeah, I'll watch it every year. You can stream it on Disney+.

And that's my list. Now, artistically, I've started a magical new group of paintings that I'll be presenting in 2025, something I'm really excited for and I am hoping will be seen as both an evolution in my work and a culmination of everything I've been doing for the last decade. But for now, that's a secret (though there is a little clue somewhere in this post!). Today, I'm just sharing these three weird holiday movies in the hopes that they will lift your spirits and give you a little bit of a new, more positive perspective on life. I sincerely hope you'll enjoy them! Happy Holidays! See you in 2025!


Tuesday, December 3, 2024

It's Giving Tuesday - 10% off prints for you & 10% donated to the ASPCA

 


Happy Giving Tuesday! Just a reminder that 10% of all of my print sales goes directly to the ASCPA (American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals). And through the end of the month, you can save 10% on prints on either my website or my Etsy store. Just use the code HAPPY10.

One more thing: For any original art sales this month, I'll make a personal donation of 5% of what I make to the ASPCA

I hope you'll also consider donating directly to the ASPCA or your favorite animal charity this Giving Tuesday! Thanks so much!

- KIM 

Friday, November 29, 2024

Special Announcement: 10% of Art Print Sales Will Be Donated to the ASPCA (American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals)

 

My two cats, ages 19 and 17-1/2.

Happy Friday after Thanksgiving, everyone! I have a special announcement. I've given myself a Christmas gift of sorts. It's been a dream of mine to make my art not only bring smiles to people's faces, but to also have a more measurable impact on some of the causes I care about. I've decided that from this point forward, 10% of all of my print sales will be directly donated to charity, and right now, that charity is the ASPCA (American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals)

For me and my husband, our cats have been such a huge part of our lives. Both of our girls, shown above, were diagnosed with kidney disease in the last year and a half. They require a great deal of love and care, and we are happy to provide it for them. I am so grateful to everyone who has supported my art, especially now, as it has helped to pay for prescription food, medical bills and other expenses associated with keeping our kitties healthy and happy, enjoying their long and peaceful lives. 

Not every animal is loved and care for, though, and that is why the ASPCA has a special place in my heart, acting as a voice for the voiceless. I encourage you to visit their site and discover more about what they do, and consider donating directly to them. And, if you buy any prints from me through my website, you'll see a message indicating that 10% of the sales will be donated to the ASPCA. If you buy anything through my Etsy store instead, I'll make a donation directly based on the sale. 

ALSO, THROUGH THE END OF DECEMBER: If anyone buys an original painting of mine through Hidell Brooks Gallery, where all of my originals are carried, I'll personally donate 5% of my proceeds to the ASPCA.  

AND FINALLY, AS A SPECIAL END-OF-YEAR THANKS TO YOU: You can save an extra 10% on the prints, on top of the 10% that will be donated to the ASPCA. Just use the code HAPPY10, through December 9th. You can use this on my website or in my Etsy store.

I hope that everyone had a wonderful Thanksgiving, that you take a few moments this busy weekend to appreciate what you have, and that you consider giving back in some way to those who need it and aren't able to stand up for themselves. 

Thank you again for your continued support as I keep making happy art! I've got some new things in the works, and I'm pretty excited to be able to bring them to you. Happy Holidays!

- KIM 

19 different prints available on my website.
10% of all sales will be donated to the ASPCA.


Tuesday, September 3, 2024

Tuesday Rambles: C.S. Lewis and Striving for Authenticity in Art

Recently, artist David Kassan, whom I follow on Instagram, shared an inspiring quote from the famous writer C.S. Lewis: 

"Even in literature and art, no man who bothers about originality will ever be original: whereas if you simply try to tell the truth (without caring twopence how often it has been told before), you will, nine times out of ten, become original without ever having noticed it."

I found this quote quite inspiring, interpreting it as two things: the job of an artist is to tell some form of truth in their work, and the evolution of that truth through the work naturally leads to a greater originality, or what I would call authenticity. In other words, just be true to yourself and your vision, and keep working on your craft. The rest of it will come on its own.

Years ago, when I worked at an art magazine, I interviewed artist Kent Williams, whose work is what I would call bold and painterly. I naively asked him how his painting style evolved, and he said (I'm roughly paraphrasing), that style naturally evolves. It is not something planned or chosen. Like many great artists, Williams' paintings are identifiable at a glance as belonging to him, yet it would be hard to describe exactly what is in the art that makes it so. We as the viewer simply know through some combination of Williams' technique, composition and subject that the work we are looking at was done by the artist Kent Williams. That, to me, is truth in art, and in the artist's relationship to his work.

Similarly, if you've ever seen Kassan's portraiture work, you'll probably be able to discern that truth is indeed embodied in every piece he paints. The portraits are stark, emotional, and not traditionally flattering, instead showing every wrinkle and mark on his sometimes elderly sitters, many of whom were Holocaust survivors. As for the second part, his craft as a portrait artist is unsurpassed. The stronger his paintings in technique and composition, the more convincing the truth from the works becomes, and so it goes, back and forth, building on the other.

In college, my art professors discouraged the use of what they called "devices," the things we young artists thought were so clever in including in our works, either to create a style, pop a design, or to emulate a more famous artist. At the time, I didn't really understand why this was bothersome. Sometimes, I enjoyed seeing these "devices" in other students' works. Now, all these years later, having worked my way through many hundreds of paintings and developed a painting technique and vision that is wholly my own, I finally get it.  

Working upside down on one of my large paintings.

Authenticity is, to me, both about what you make and how you make it. It took many years of painting, but I no longer try to be "clever" in my paintings. I don't copy other people, and I rarely use reference photos that are not my own. I want to be more than just a person who paints "things." Instead, I simply try to share my vision and create some kind of happy truth in my pieces. 

I'm sure many people look quickly at my work and see that I paint a lot of ice cream and think, well, there's another ice cream painting. But if you look more closely, it is so much more than that, at least to me. It's not the cold sterility of photorealism. It's emotional; it's joyful. I spend hours sculpting and photographing my subjects for reference photos, and editing the images, and many dozens of hours on each piece using a very unique painting approach to convey the depth, colors and details that bring my pieces to life. I go beyond the reference photos, too, often putting them away for the final stages of my pieces, so I can just paint what makes the pieces feel more joyful and colorful, as well as more convincingly real. They aren't just still lifes to me; they are vehicles for connecting to moments of happy memories, thinking back on childhood or family. They are moments of innocence and joy when you have a giant ice cream cone in front of you and that is the only thing on your mind, not the worries of the other parts of your life. So, I will keep pushing to paint that elusive happy truth I'm trying to share with others.

While I continue to develop the ice creams, I have also been eking out a little time here and there to develop a painting series that honestly has been rolling around in my mind for the last couple of years, a natural progression for me as an artist on a mission to make happy art. It's not a forced thing; it's who I am. Every piece that I paint is a little bit of me and how I see the world. It will be some time before I share this side project, but it is something I feel really good about, and it is definitely all authentic to me.

I hope you can pull a little bit of your own inspiration from the C.S. Lewis quote above and incorporate into your life or your art. And if you do think I just paint ice cream, I hope you'll take a few minutes to see something a little more in it and that it will bring a few moments of happiness into your day. Thanks for stopping by!

Strawberry Sundae, 2023, acrylic on panel, 48" x 36". SOLD.


Thursday, August 22, 2024

Why I Want to Support Other Artists - and Why You Should Too

 

Gummy Bears, 2022, 16" x 16", acrylic on panel. SOLD.

Happy Thursday! 

I just wanted to make a very quick post about something on my mind today: showing support for other artists. Sometimes, I think people, artists included, think every artist is in competition with each other. I guess the thought is that there are only so many customers in the art world. But it's really important to consider that this type of negative, combative approach brings very little reward, either monetarily or emotionally. If anything, it will make you feel way more stressed. And being a ruthless, stressed-out business guru is not why I left the business world to become an artist.

Instead, when I get a nice comment from another artist on my social media, or when I send one to another, I feel like it's a little moment where we are choosing to lift each other up, learn a bit from each other and grow in our work. I can't tell you how much it means to me to receive a kind comment from a talented artist (and there are many out there!). I also try very hard to send a few meaningful, positive comments to other artists each week. Sometimes, it's just a brief, "Great work! Love!" Sometimes, I try to be very specific, which I think can make the comments a lot more personal and sincere, like "Amazing colors!" or "Exquisite detail!".

So today, even if your day is crappy, even if you are stressed about your work, or your life, take a quick moment to send an artist a compliment, either on social media or through their website, blog or email. Do this no matter if you are an art fan or an artist yourself. It's a simple way to make someone's day a bit brighter and make yourself experience the art world in a more positive light. We all have the power to make a little more happiness in the world. 

Thanks for stopping by! 


Tuesday, August 20, 2024

Happy Inspiration for the Orange & Yellow Sherbet Painting

 

Orange and Yellow Sherbet realistic ice cream cone painting by Kim Testone
Orange & Yellow Sherbet Cone, acrylic on panel, 16" x 12".

I thought I'd share a quick post this morning, to get myself back in the groove of sharing on my blog. It's just some thoughts on finding inspiration for your painting, or at least where I find mine. 

There's a very famous saying from the amazing artist Chuck Close: "Inspiration is amateurs. The rest of us just show up and get to work." I do certainly believe this. I don't wait for lighting to strike before I start on a project. I work every day no matter what my mood is. But when I think about inspiration, it's not so much about being inspired to begin an individual project. Instead, I try to open myself to inspiration all day every day, so that the ideas and designs start to naturally percolate in my little brain. Then, once I'm started on something, I try to find a bit of inspiration around me to help me keep things going. 

For me, finding ways to get inspired every day doesn't mean traveling far away or having grand experiences. I'm a collector, I like vintage items, and so I like to surround myself with things I love in my home so that each time I see them, I feel a little bit uplifted. Though it may be surprising, I actually have a lovely collection of vintage items from McDonald's. 

Now, I haven't eaten McDonald's food in many years, but I love the toys and marketing promotions from decades past - long past, like 70s and 80s. I have pleasant and happy memories of the occasional trip to McDonald's with my family, or when my aunt worked there in the late 70s and early 80s and would bring the Happy Meal Toys home to my sister and me. 

Not too long ago, my husband bought me a vintage McDonald's mug, from 1977, that was exactly like a mug my grandpap used to have. I suspect it was something my aunt had brought to him, but I always remember it being in my grandparents' kitchen. 

Vintage 1977 McDonald's mug.

When I was working on the reference image files for the Orange & Yellow Sherbet Cone, this mug was sitting on a shelf within my eyesight. Not only did the colors coordinate exactly with my painting, which ultimately helped me select and edit the final reference photo in my Photoshop program, but the cheerful presentation kept reminding me to keep the piece happy and cheerful as I painted it, so that every day it seemed like it was saying, "Good Morning!". 

Anyway, I hope the painting makes you smile and maybe feel a bit uplifted. Thanks so much for stopping by! Painting is available at Hidell Brooks Gallery

Friday, April 7, 2017

How Being a Disney World Caricature Artist Changed My Art Outlook

I shared this post initially to my email list, but wanted to make sure others got a chance to read it, too. You can sign up for my email list and get previews of my artworks before they go up for sale to the public by signing up here.

"Dots," acrylic on cradled panel in a handcrafted floater frame, 6" x 12". SOLD


 Art is, and should be, a very personal thing, both for the artist and for the viewer. While a mysterious landscape or exceptional portrait can momentarily move me, I am most frequently drawn to the paintings that make me smile, laugh or reminisce about a pleasant memory, which is why I paint what I paint - toys, candy, bright colors and quirky trompe l'oeil. For this, I owe a great deal of inspiration to my time as a caricature artist at Walt Disney World.

When I first began painting in college, I had no idea what to paint - and I was a pretty terrible artist then, too! I painted the usual painting exercises - vases, plastic skulls, copies of master works, but I didn't have any vision, and so I gradually lost interest in my work. Not long after graduating, a very gracious lady decided to give me an opportunity to work as a caricature artist at Animal Kingdom, one of the four Walt Disney World theme parks. She did this, despite the fact that I had no colorful or funny works in my portfolio - just dark, brooding, 20-something tortured artist works. This was, I suppose, a moment that changed my whole outlook on making art.

All day, I'd shout and point to the children and families walking by - as I was trained to do - "You'd make a great cartoon! YOU'D make a great cartoon." Doing dozens and dozens of drawings of people every day, making them look cute or funny, my goal was always to make the person sitting and their families laugh at just how adorable they were. It fed my creativity and enthusiasm, and I wanted to get better and better, and make better work, get more creative, and produce things faster.

While I had a long hiatus from making art not long after that job until just a couple of years ago, I often think back on how much I learned there about making fun art that makes people smile. Life can be a bit too serious sometimes, so if I can make art that momentarily removes viewers from our super-serious world and feel what it's like to be an imaginative kid again, full of wonder and fun and color, then I'm a happy camper.

What's New

My Blog is Moving to MakingHappyArt.com

Hey all, just a quick post today. I've neglected my blog for a long time. Part of that was because the functionality on Blogger is just ...