After about an hour of hiking and taking the long way around Chautauqua, I was lucky to get to this sunset at a breaking point in the trees right above the park trailhead.
1 year, No Alcohol! Thoughts on Quitting Alcohol
After a year of no alcohol, I have put together my thoughts on how I became sober, what it was like to quit, what I did to stop, as well as what I see in the future for anyone who wants to stop.
My At-Risk Social Groups
It was no mystery to me that I am in two groups where drinking is deeply integrated into life: the tech world, and the art world.
Every artist and art enthusiast loves going to art openings and drinking wine. Artists are also often seen as, well, a bit colorful, and with that comes the stereotype that we all love drugs and alcohol. There are only 1 million depictions in movies, books, and magazines of artists being drunks, smoking, or artists using drugs somehow. Drugs and alcohol are posited as a way that we artists get our ideas, or as an escape hatch from the trauma of our exciting lives (haha). I used to love drinking with my friends in school, Drink and Draw was sort of our thing.
Add to this the other biggest facet of my working life, the tech world, where drinking is so normalized that most software companies pretty much have beer on tap. I’m not so special that I avoided all this, in fact I indulged in this for years. On several work trips, I would drink every single night with my coworkers. Monday, Tuesday, every single night - and it wasn’t because there was a holiday or anything to celebrate, it was just how life was lived. After a full day of working through intense story problems and software issues that would make any grown man cry, nothing sounded better to me than crashing through some margaritas. I crashed through a lot of margaritas in my time in software.
In addition to the art world (wine and cheese) and the tech world (beer at the office), I’m a part of a third group that is extremely at risk for abuse due to alcohol: women. My take is that women are marketed alcohol left and right. There’s also overlap with women in art and women in the business world - Too many go-getter women-power self improvement business books geared towards women talk about wine culture and enduring negative experiences by getting drunk. If I open a book that is supposed to be empowering to women and it starts talking about wine, I usually stop reading it immediately. I know this sounds harsh, but I’m just not that into it.
Around when I was 19, one of the most liberating moments of realizing adulthood was that I didn’t HAVE to finish reading some books. Unlike in school, in life, if you’re reading for fun, you don’t have to finish anything for the assignment or book report. You don’t have to do what everyone else is doing. If you don’t like it, nobody will be mad at you for turning it down.
That said, I didn’t learn how to turn things down with alcohol until much later.
I Break Down My Own Argument: Why Would My Social Groups Even Matter?
Am I thinking too hard?
Sure, students, passionate artists, and high-octane, high-stakes techlife people are going to be vulnerable to drinking, but, in parallel to all of this, I can’t help but think that alcohol has simply done a very good job of infusing itself into many different kinds of social groups. I could have probably written all of the above if I were a member of a bowling group, or if I were a pro basketball player, a cook, a racecar driver, or bridge enthusiast.
No matter what I chose as a profession or identity or social group, chances were good all along that alcohol was going to be somewhere near it. It’s simply everywhere.
Professional Noticer
In my professional life I am a pattern-weaver and noticer. It is my job. I am rewarded over and over again for identifying and improving patterns and behaviors, and also noticing problems, making small adjustments for user experiences. One second saved by one user is days and weeks of time saved for hundreds of thousands of users. One process tweaked for a team means the whole team is improved. One experience made happier for one user is thousands of satisfying, happy experiences for thousands of users. What is simple? What makes people happy? What is least risky? What makes life easy? To lean on a well-used analogy, I’m often in the weeds on issues with technology, but I’m also at 30,000 feet, looking at the geography of the weeds.
The same is true in painting. You’re working with detail, and with scale. The smallest detail matters, and so does the whole thing. The details are the whole thing.
Same thing with comics - each panel matters, and so does the whole book. Being a software executive who paints and makes comics doesn’t make a lot of sense at first, then it makes more sense than anything at all. Once you run into one of us, you’ll start to see more of us at various companies.
To me, taking a sky-bound professional noticer view of alcohol, what it looks like is dozens of well-loved people of any gender, in any walk of life, rich or poor, racecar driver or painter, getting taken out left and right by accidents or problems directly caused by alcohol.
In the weeds, it doesn’t look so bad. It looks quite nice, actually. One beer isn’t a big deal, neither are a couple margaritas.
Living in The Weeds
I think this is part of why quitting is so hard. At first, when I quit, I started to see the weeds around me in perfect detail. It’s terrible, I’d rather have them be fuzzy, but that’s the problem… whether I drank or not, I’d still be in the weeds.
Even when I was drinking, I would tend to surprise my friends by how much I can remember events, people, or things. Having a fearsomely accurate memory might be one reason why drinking was so attractive to me. Who the heck wants to remember all of life’s most terrible moments, all of our personal failures, rejections, and losses, when all one has to do is drink a couple beers or some wine?
The good thing about an accurate memory is it can be used to summon up positive memories as well as bad memories. If the brain is so powerful that it can bring up trauma or remind us of how terrible some parts of life are, it can be powerful enough to bring up whatever redeeming moments are out there.
Sometimes, there may need to be a jumpstart in this process, like therapy or medication or rehab, if anyone is caught in bad thought cycle or depression. We all get stuck. It happens.
For me, the jumpstarter was exercise and running.
What I Did To Stop
As far as what I actually did to quit, I did very little on the psychological side, I mostly got into exercise in a big way, and this distracted me from drinking. I didn’t think very hard. I took a lot of action.
My official quit date is June 1 of 2020. Here are the events leading up to that date.
In January of 2020 I was getting into running again after taking a multi-year hiatus. I would knock out 8 mile runs after work from time to time. I hit a goal of running 6 miles in 60 mins near the end of January 2020, and was super happy about it. I hadn’t run very seriously since high school, and I am in my mid thirties, so the idea that I could have some kind of speed was very exciting! At this point in time, however, I still was drinking from time to time.
Like for so many, it was March of 2020 and Coronavirus that simply cut me off from my social groups. No more fancy openings, no more meetups, no more after-work brews. March pushed me further into running, life at home, and life away from social events. Yet, for a couple months, I still drank. I would mow my lawn and then have a beer or two while reading books. It was a fraught time, a time to read the news and try to ignore it. It seemed like every hour in April, ambulance sirens would be wailing down the street outside my house. There was always something. I started to feel like I lived in a cursed disaster place, like Gotham or Thebes. Then I realized this was probably pretty selfish - this virus was a disaster everywhere. We were all in one big disaster boat together.
Near the middle of May 2020, I’d had enough, I just didn’t buy liquor or beer anymore. Drinking in my yard wasn’t fun, there was nobody around, and it seemed like everyone was getting sick. I just stopped, I didn’t even think about it. I wish I could say there was some sort of striking, dramatic event that happened, an event which finally pushed me over the edge and made me quit. That would be logical, right?
Running big miles in the DMV
But no, nothing about when I quit was very dramatic on the personal level. I think, in retrospect, it was the world that caused me to stop. I’d finally been so overwhelmed by the news that I realized no amount of drinking would fix anything, it wouldn’t fix me, it wouldn’t fix the pandemic, it wouldn’t soften the blows of division being struck everywhere. If I was going to get wiped out by a virus, I wanted every second before that to count, even if it hurt.
My running took off in the summer of 2020, where I would do 10 and 13 mile runs across Washington DC and Maryland. Wearing an Osprey water backpack, even in the soggy heat of a DC summer, I could just run forever. I’d never run this far in my life. Even in high school and running cross country, a training run would be, at max, seven miles. Deciding to come crawling back to running was pretty funny to me. And also, it made a lot of sense. I had to deal with my problems somehow, why not figure it all out on a run?
My History as an Athlete
I always saw myself as an average runner. I would usually finish third in my group in school. I liked running because I never felt too nervous about it, I never thought I would be the best at it or that I had to beat anyone else at it. It was entirely something that I could do against myself - if I could beat a goal or a time I had set for myself, I was very happy.
I am an average runner but I am even worse at team sports. I have absolutely no aggression or a will to win against others in team sports. In school, I could get behind kicking a ball, but not stealing it from someone else. I could block an inbound volleyball but if I spiked it on someone, I would feel guilty somehow.
Running was perfect for me, because that’s all it is. I can make little games in my head while doing a race and see how many people I pass, but that’s about it. If I don’t pass them, I don’t pass them. I’m still doing something that is fully for me. Have you ever been in a win-win situation?
Running Doesn’t Fix Everything, Either
My burgeoning running obsession didn’t take me completely out of harm’s way - on one of my runs in June, a man ran after me up a hill and touched me near my hip. I was pretty surprised and stopped.
I am not sure, but I think he may have been on drugs. I ended up calmly talking to him and he went off in some other direction. Since he’d chased me within the first half mile of my run, I ended up finishing seven more miles after this, which sounds absolutely bizarre to me now.
Even though this event was traumatic, I didn’t think about drinking then or diving into alcohol to get the trauma out. I doubled-down on exercise. I would run very repetitive loops in areas that I knew were safe. I would check the public sex offender list and avoid areas dense with offenders. I had a couple canisters of pepper spray.
Seeing the weeds in perfect detail is so hard, but it’s also liberating because they’re easier to understand. My negative experiences with street harassment and street assault kind of pile up in my head as a sober person, but as a drunk person, it was all a trainwreck. Each moment is at risk of bleeding into another one, as if my brain files all of the events into the same cabinet. As a person who is sober, I can compartmentalize and figure out issues faster with less bullshit cutting in. Namely, with street harassment, that none of it is my fault at all, and I’m going to keep running no matter what.
How I Feel About Social Life Right Now
I have no issue and harbor no ill-will towards my friends and connections who still drink. I also have 0 regrets about all the time I spent at clubs or bars with friends or people I dated, or drinking in the art major. It was great to drink sake in Tokyo, wine in Paris, and whatever that crazy thing was that we all drank in the Bahamas. Ultimately I love my friends and all of my romantic partners very, very much, and any time I get to spend with them is treasured by me to no end. Possibly the funniest thing about being dead sober is that my art is exactly the same if not better, and the person I am is exactly the same person.
If someone wants to open some brews on a zoom call, I have no negative thoughts about it. In fact, I have almost no thoughts about it at all. Since life is, er, coming back to life, and we’re all going out again, if someone offers me a drink or a drink menu I politely decline and pass. It does take energy to decline, but that’s okay. I’m sure a lot of people might be tired of me repeating my sobriety milestones online, yet they are very important to me, because the more people who know that it’s a part of my life, the more I am living authentically.
I sort of have to make a big deal of this for myself, first of all, because during 2020 there just weren’t too many people around. I can’t even remember what I did for my own birthday in June of 2020. I think I must have gone on a run.
What’s in the Future?
More sobriety for me in the future!
For all of us, who knows? I hope if you read this entire blog it was meaningful to you in some way. I don’t like to give a lot of advice out or tell people what they should do, first of all because I am not a doctor, and also because everyone is always at a difference place in life. The person reading this in Kansas is going to be different than the person reading it in California. Instead of issuing judgement or advice to people I’ve never even met, I find it much better to discuss experiences and events as they come, and go from there. If you do ever want to talk about sobriety, or, you know, art stuff, haha, you know where to find me. xo 😴
Whatever it is, the way you tell your story online can make all the difference.
Sketchbook Confessional May 2021
In May 2021 I had an active month of art and everything else. I got my iPad out and made a couple illustrations over the weekend after my second COVID shot.
I made a couple alternate versions of this too which you can scroll through below:
Drawing on the iPad has been fun. I never know where a lot of my ideas come from for digital art, yet I do like to iterate on them and get them out.
I was thinking about how when our eyes are closed, we can still see quite a bit.
It was also fun to paint indoors on a couple instagram lives. I painted this cat and also the flatirons in Boulder below on stream.
A cat I painted on an instagram livestream
The beginning of May 2021 will probably be the last month for a while where I am cooped up and only interacting with friends and fans over the internet and Instagram lives. In 2019, right before coronavirus struck, I was able to get out to comicons more and see people, and was also making paintings in public.
I painted this vision of Boulder’s flatirons from Chautaqua park using a photo I had taken a few weeks prior.
In May I painted outdoors in remote locations so much that it’s almost too much to write about what happened every day. I just love May and June, and all of summer really - there is so much light outside, tons of time to paint. During the last week of May, I went outside and painted 5 out of 7 days. In the spirit of the Calvin and Hobbes book: “The days are just packed.” The main reason why I can get out so much is all I really need is an hour to go paint. I can drive my car for five minutes and be somewhere spectacular near Boulder. Since I’m using gouache paint now instead of oil, I can paint quickly and the paint will dry quickly. It can still be very hard to carry the easel but I can usually get it to remote places pretty easily.
The best place to keep up with my plein air work is Instagram.
The paintings I came out of from plein air are what they are, what’s most important is that I get out and do them. Even if the painting on a certain day isn’t the best painting I’ve ever made, that’s okay, not every run I go on is the best run I ever have done.
My favorite painting from my recent outdoor paintings is this one I made of the Northfacing view from Artist’s Point on Flagstaff Mountain. Though the colors of the hills in the distance changed as I painted and led to some confusion for me, haha, I thought I got the curves of the mountains nailed down pretty well:
Plein air continues to be a process of chaos management. The colors of the mountains change as clouds go by, revisions have to happen, bugs often attack me or land on the painting (looks like a flower), it rains, I get poison ivy sometimes, I forget colors in my studio and have to remake them out in the world, or I ruin brushes if I run out of water to wash them. I’ve made enough mistakes to be overprepared most of the time, but there is always something to improve. Plein air painting is one of those endeavors that looks fluffy and quaint on the outside, and is in reality quite a tough experience. It reminds me of ice skating or ballet. The key I think is to just let the chaos happen and paint no matter what. At the end of the day, it’s all completely and totally worth it.
Reading Watching Playing:
After getting my second Pfizer shot, I felt a bit fragile. I took up playing Octopath Traveler again for a few days. I still can’t finish it, I get stuck on the bosses and grinding. I still play Dnd each week on zoom with some really lovely people.
I found Super Mario All Stars at Game Force in Boulder and started playing Mario 64 again. I bought the entire game to just play Mario 64. I remember playing Mario 64 on demo at Wal Mart in Frisco, CO, which was the closest Wal Mart we had. I eventually owned the game for 64 in the 90s and played the heck out of it. It’s very fun to play again on Switch, brought back a ton of memories.
The other 64 game I am playing again is Banjo Kazooie. Tons of fun, another late 90s 64 game, which, like Mario 64, also involves giant paintings of worlds in a big navigating dungeon.
I can’t really even put to words how fun it is to play Banjo Kazooie again.
To put myself to sleep at night, sometimes I will play Banjo Kazooie levels in my head. I did this even a year ago before re-owning the game. In my head, I will make an effort to imagine the map of the game. I will go through every puzzle of the first level, and also Treasure Trove Cove, and get every puzzle piece, note, Jinjo, and honeycomb piece. I’m not sure why I started doing this, but I think the maps of Banjo Kazooie are just big enough that you can imagine every piece of them pretty well without getting stuck. If I tried to imagine a map of something like Elder Scrolls I would just get lost. Overall it’s a good way to fall asleep. It gives my brain something to do that isn’t too overwhelming and isn’t too easy.
Fitness:
Whatever it is, the way you tell your story online can make all the difference.
In fitness news, on May 1 I was able to finish the 25 mile Collegiate Peaks Trail Run. Wow, this was quite the race. I finished in just under 8 hours. This sounds like a wildly long time for a marathon-length race. What accounts for the time was the fact that the race has over 3000 feet of elevation gain and gets up past 9000 feet.
I could tell when the elevation of the race was kicking up a notch even without looking at my phone, because whenever the elevation increased to a certain point, I would start throwing up water. At first I threw up three times, then I lost count of how many times I threw up during the entire race.
The first hill in the race, I could laugh at a bit. You can see it rising like a friendly challenger from far away, and I sort of thought to myself “Haha, what masochist designed this course? LOL.”
Sure enough, at the top of that hill I was throwing up water at the aid station in front of a half-dozen volunteers. If a volunteer was there to witness it, I would start throwing up, like wave-particle duality. I wouldn’t throw up if a volunteer was not present. If a volunteer was there, I would throw up.
Whatever it is, the way you tell your story online can make all the difference.
There was a nice downhill after that, until there was another hill that seemed to Go. On. Forever. And you run up the hill in sand. This is the “Full-On Wake-Up Hill” in the map. That is not the name I had for it in my head while I was running the race. Calling it a ‘hill’ might also be too quaint, it makes it sound like an anthill, where it’s really more like running up a mountainside.
After the second mountainside/hill, the whole race is mostly downhill from there, which sounds nice, except my quads and hips were screaming. I didn’t merely walk a lot of the race. In addition to walking, at several points I cried, other times I sat down under a tree and tried to sip down some water. I crossed a river and a bunch of thorns tore up my leggings. I ended up getting a sunburn that didn’t melt off until a week later.
Possibly more traumatic, more exhilarating than anything, I did dances in my head during this race. I thought about a lot of things in life, and then there were moments where I didn’t have what anyone would call ‘thoughts.’
Whatever it is, the way you tell your story online can make all the difference.
I was running alone in a high mountain desert for almost 8 hours. I was fully struck, fully exposed to how bad 2020 was.
I’d lost a few family members, young and old. In addition to family members, almost every week in April, I could think of several friends of friends who had passed away. Loose ties, people I’d met or known about maybe just for a couple minutes, gone. Every single week was like this, every week another person or friend of a friend had passed.
In our routine lives, while we are checking emails, looking at data, driving to the store, it is very easy to forget trauma. When you’re alone in a desert, you don’t forget a single thing. Through the pain of running this race, I finally allowed some of the pain of loss to fully be felt, felt it deeply and in a very real way as my body carried me down the mountain.
On top of grieving people I’d lost, I started to get overwhelmed with feelings of love for my friends and people I missed. Have you ever had a dream and it seems like every good person you’ve ever met is in the dream? It was like some kind of Grand Friend Parade was playing in my head. “Remember all these people you love! Aren’t they great?” was what it seemed my mind was trying to say. If we’ve had a warm interaction in the past couple years, online or off, I probably thought about you during this race. Maybe what it was, was my mind summoning up as many reasons to keep going as it could find.
I finished 91st in the 25 mile overall, which I am happy about. This was very close to last. Just finishing was an accomplishment for me as I felt that several times during the race, a volunteer was going to have to ATV my butt down to Buena Vista and I would have to be rehydrated in a hospital after throwing up too much water.
The strangest part of the race happened the next day. I felt totally fine, as normal as I ever felt. I woke up in my Boulder apartment at 6 am and made coffee. Like I could run six miles no problem. This experience has led me to believe that many physical accomplishments truly are very mental, and to reiterate what one of our Leadville local legends says: we can do much more than we think we can.
Other exciting news: I took first in my group for Maxim Covergirl, and finished at 5th in Quarter Finals on May 27th! Thank you so, so very much for supporting my efforts in this. My page was able to raise over $2000 for Wounded Warriors, which is super exciting. With or without being in a contest, I’m still doing lots of bikini photos when I can. The swimwear photos are a form of proofing to myself that I can clean up okay, even if most of the time I am cranking away at computer stuff or covered in dirt and sweat while out on a run. Since I’ve had my second vaccination, I’m happy to say I might be taking swimwear photos at a real beach soon instead of just at my house.
Ra! More art!
Sketchbook Confessional April 2021
In April, there was a mix of snowy days and warm days in Boulder, so I was lucky to get out and do some plein air painting around Colorado.
I was able to go to The Garden of the Gods in Colorado Springs and paint some of the monumental rock formations there. Even though I grew up in Colorado, for some reason, this is one place I’ve never been. It was very accessible and easy to walk around. There are a few places slightly off the trail where I could set up the easel without straying too far or disturbing the local ecologies.
There are a ton of interesting moments to see and paint at Garden of the Gods. It is fun to puzzle over the many layered formations and also paint the terrain around the formations.
It was cool in the morning at the Garden of the Gods, yet the clouds burned off and the weather became quite toasty. I had water but should have packed even more.
In other paint efforts in April, I was able to get out and paint around Boulder too.
This view of Mount Sanitas is so pretty every time I see it. It’s not as iconic from this angle as the flatirons, yet you get to see so much of the valley from North Boulder if you look south. It is very fun to watch the sunset from here and paint the dramatic shadows on Mount Sanitas and the nearby rolling hills.
I also painted right in Chautauqua park! Occasionally I will complete training runs in Chautauqua Park and get benefits from the elevation and hills. I have never painted there before until this April.
I was able to knock out about 6 paintings of the flatirons on this day, some are definitely the kinds of paintings to take back to the studio and work on a bit more. Others were very good, in my opinion, for having been made on the spot. Not every plein air painting is perfect, yet it is always nice if a few of them are.
Lately I’ve been painting with gouache, which has been transformationally easier to do than painting outdoors with oil paint. Oil paint is tough to paint outdoors with because usually you have to have turpentine or makeup wipes to clean brushes. Turpentine is terrible, almost nothing will make turpentine better. That is why using the makeup wipes seems better to me for oil paint.
But that doesn’t matter in these photos since I’m using gouache! Gouache is so nice because it is such a bright paint, and, it dries fast! Painting with gouache is a lot like drawing. It’s also very easy to layer and add different colors on top of one another.
Lessons I learn from plein air painting:
1. Planning - Where does everything go? In what order should I paint which colors? Blue is a stronger color than yellow, so I should probably paint the sky first, and then the middle ground, and finally the foreground.
2. Chaos Management - The wind might come up and throw a bunch of dirt on the canvas. Bugs might get stuck in the paint. Bees are attracted to bright colors so painting can involve a lot of hornet and bee encounters.
3. Communication - What does the painting say? What does it fail to say?
In other art efforts, I sprinted to get some abstract patterns done and uploaded to Society6 and also the POD service running on this website. I laid down quite a few swatches of gouache on yupo paper and uploaded the designs to Society6. Here are some of the swatches:
I took a Saturday and sprinted to see how many designs I could upload in one day. This involved a lot of reformatting and ascertaining the quality of the file sizes. My record for daily design uploads is 12!
Uploading ~12 designs onto ~70 products turned into about 850 unique product listings generated by Society6. The designs can be had on clocks, towels, shower curtains.
It was fun to turn uploading art into a game like this. There is definitely some downtime involved in making a big upload, since I would wait for Clip Studio Paint to make the files ultra-large, a lot of watching-of-loading screens and shuffling files from Dropbox to my computer. It’s fun to listen to podcasts while I am doing the not-art part of art. I hope to make a similar effort in the future where I try to upload as many files as possible in one day.
The funnest part of uploading these abstracts onto products is that I usually have no idea how the product will turn out, and after a couple tunings, iterations, and reuploads, the products look… amazing, like look at these backpacks:
You can find all of these backpacks and other products on my Society6 store here: https://society6.com/beckyjewell/backpacks
My other products on Society6 are still ‘good’ but abstracts are going to be more accessible for everyone.
Reading Watching Playing:
I’m still playing Dungeons and Dragons with some friends online on Zoom. We’re up to something like session 35 after starting a game in July of last year! It’s been a ton of fun to play our campaign.
Arlina the Changeling Bard is my character in our Dnd game. She’s really fun to play and has had some good Vicious Mockery moments. Now that she and the party are level 4, she’s able to deal a bit more damage in battles, where previously she was kind of just a healer, she can now do more like 8-10 damage instead of paltry 3s and 2s.
During the last couple days of April, I was able to get some Warhammer miniatures and build them. Earlier this year in March, I painted a D&D dragon miniature and had a bunch of fun. I never really ‘got’ model painting until I painted that dragon. Painting models kind of looked like a strange hobby to me, it didn’t make any sense, until I actually tried it and loved it! It is quite a lot like coloring, in 3D, and just like a coloring book, you can kind of take it as far as you want it to go. You can go hyper-detailed, or you can diligently follow the suggestions on the box, or, you can kind of go wild, and paint the figurines whatever you want. Technically there is no rule against the Gryph-hounds having rainbow feathers. I think when Robin Williams played he had a bright pink character, which is endlessly sweet to me.
I find building and painting the models to be very relaxing because a lot of the other tasks I do all day are so incredibly heady - looking at big swaths of data, figuring out 40-part problems, bug triaging, ect. Painting feathers on some Gryph-hounds, by comparison, is very relaxing. Plein air painting is relaxing too, yet, there is more puzzling to be done because nothing is done when you look at a blank canvas. In painting a gryph-hound, the gryph-hound is already created for you.
As far as actually playing Warhammer I’m still a few weeks away at least because there are so many figurines to build. Who knows, I might just like to paint the figurines, and that will be the extent to which I take the hobby. We will see!
I’m reading What I Talk About When I Talk about Running by Haruki Murakami. It’s an interesting book, and very easy to read. The other two big running/go hard books I’ve read in the past couple years are Finding Ultra from Rich Roll and Can’t Hurt Me by David Goggins. Where Rich Roll and David Goggins go into their upbringings, Murakami’s book is a bit less about his early life, it’s more about running in general. He’s a little grumpy about some topics, but he usually only gets grumpy at himself in terms of running. I’d say the highlight of the book is when he is running a 100k race and he has a couple interesting experiences. I won’t spoil it though.
There are also a couple other running books out there I want to read. I am not sure if many books like this are by women, but I’d like to get a running book by a woman in my reading schedule soon. Maybe that is a book I could write someday.
Fitness:
This month I completed a couple big training runs for my race on May 1!
I was very happy with my low 11s pace on this 18 mile run:
My high 10s pace on this 15 mile run was pretty exciting to me as well:
If you’d like to follow me on Strava, check out my link here: https://www.strava.com/athletes/60020136
In April I was also able to get my first shot of the Pfizer vaccine. This was exciting to me. 2020 was a wild year for me as I moved from Washington DC back to Boulder, Colorado. A lot of the positive changes in my life probably wouldn’t have happened if the pandemic hadn’t struck. I was taking running more seriously in January of 2020, but I probably would have kept drinking and plugging away if it hadn’t been for Coronavirus. With everything else going on in my fitness world, I almost forgot that May 1 is my 11 month no-alcohol sobriety milestone! I quit drinking sometime near the end of May in 2020, so I rounded up a bit and decided June 1 is my formal anniversary.
Even with cutting alcohol and celebrating the freedom and clarity that came with it, I had some major challenges this year and getting my first vaccine installment cleared up a lot of stress and worry for me. Immediately after getting the vaccine, I started to think about my comic, Tilted Sun, once again, as I was driving in my car home from the hospital.
There seems to be a limit to how many things I can mentally think about at one time. Tilted Sun is a big project, and it my guess is it was too complex to manage while trying to stay safe and get some of my basic needs met. As soon as one more worry was removed, I was able to consider a complex project again.
One of my fitness-category art efforts in April has been ‘running’ for Maxim Covergirl 2021. This is a very fun and exciting thing for me to do. I uploaded my favorite swimsuit photos of myself to my profile and am asking my networks to vote. What is super cool is that if a dollar is donated to vote, the dollar goes to Wounded Warriors, which is a super important cause to me.
It was exciting to make the top 15 of my group in the first cutoff on April 29th. As of writing, I am in second place in my group and hope to make the top 10 next.
If I win I am planning on giving the $25,000 prize away to art programs for kids and teens in Leadville. I did some thinking about what was the most important thing I learned in life as a young person in Leadville, and I realized that the most important thing was having environments that encouraged and supported my creativity. This is why I plan on giving the money away to art efforts for young people in my home town.
If you’re reading this blog, thanks for all the support on this project and my other efforts!
The “Sketchbook Confessional” Is a blog that I write each month where I write down all of my accomplishments in that month in terms of my chosen categories of Art, Reading/Watching/Playing, and Fitness. Like a retro meeting on a project, it’s a way for me to observe my accomplishments and progress, or a ‘done’ list rather than a ‘to do’ list. In some months, I meet my goals and succeed, in others, I fall short of what I hoped to do. These blogs help me identify places where I can improve or where I may be spending my time in ways that I can change.
Thanks again for stopping by! Ra, more art!
Who wrote this
Sketchbook Confessional February 2021
In February I continued a series of oil paintings of Mt. Elbert near Leadville and also lupine flowers. I will keep painting these as time goes on.
I also tried something new this month and I wasn’t sure if it would work. In the first week of February, I painted a D&D mini of a dragon using the oil paints that I usually keep in my studio.
A couple of quick google searches revealed that yes, oil paint would be all right for these minis. Turns out oil paint is almost preferred, as long as it is thin.
Overall, painting the dragon mini was really fun and relaxing. It felt a lot like coloring in a coloring book. All of the hard parts of the artwork are already solved if you paint on a pre-built mini.
I couldn’t help but thinking that the dragon kind of looked like it was very happy and smiling, so I made a few instagram stories where the dragon was singing.
I ended up liking this so much that I bought another dragon to paint.
I sort of bought the dragon on a whim. I went into a game shop in Boulder and was so bummed about how empty everything seemed. The game shop, which would normally be full of people playing Magic and tabletop stuff was just empty and dark. I had to buy … something … so the dragon was what I picked out.
In other Dnd and ABBA related art realms, I drew a picture of myself, my Elder Scrolls Online character Averle, and my DnD character Arlina having gal time together with Geddy the Poodle.
I had an active and busy mid-February so it was fun to unwind with this silly just-for-fun drawing.
In a way, I do spend a lot of time with Averle and Arlina. I realize that this is sort of like looking at a grown adult who has imaginary friends, yet they are also extensions of myself. It’s fun to play Arlina because she can change into any kind of character, however, for my next Dnd character, I want to try to vastly branch out and play a character who is much different from me IRL, maybe an orc or tiefling one of the new 5e nonhuman characters.
Reading Watching Playing:
I’ve been very into Book of the New Sun by Gene Wolfe. I started reading this book in April of 2020, and it gets more and more interesting with every page.
There are so many moments in this book that would be fun and challenging to draw. I’ve made a list of things I want to draw from the book
Severian and the Star Men
Severian and the Avern
Severian and Dorcas in The Green Room
I mapped out Severian and the Star Men below, haven’t gotten much further and I sort of want to model this one out or pose to get it right.
Fitness
In February I got some nice training in at Leadville, CO with trainer Alex Willis. I did a couple miles running around Harrison Avenue in Leadville, and a few miles of skiing at Mt. Massive Golf Course. Getting up to Leadville from Boulder always seems to take a lot of energy from me. Even though I was born in Leadville and grew up there, it is still difficult to go from 5000 feet to 10000 feet and exercise a lot. This might go to show you that elevation is an incredible challenge no matter who you are.
I was able to knock out a couple big runs in February, like a 9 mile and a 10 mile. I hit my best efforts on a 10 mile and 15k. The scariest thing about the 10 mile run is that it goes … relatively fast. Mentally, it doesn’t seem like a drag at all, I sort of go into a mental state where I am not experiencing any stress while running, I seem to be somewhere else. Here are some results from Strava:
I also became “The Legend of Wonderland Lake” on Strava, which sounds pretty badass, haha!
It’s nice to have all of these stats and times in Strava and to have had them for a while. I can look back at my times from running in DC/MD/VA and compare notes. In the DMV I was running 12-14 min miles almost every mile. In Colorado, it looks like I am a lot faster in Colorado, about two minutes per mile faster on average, with 11:30 min miles being around my average. Given that Boulder is a lot higher in elevation than DC, that’s pretty good.
I don’t see myself as very fast, but I am able to endure and persist through just about anything. At the end of 10 miles, I feel like I could go 10 more.
In other fitness news, things are going well with sobriety. It is a lot easier to hit my goals with running and fitness by having alcohol just be automatically out of the picture. I’m still very hooked on caffiene - this might be something I work on kicking next, but at this time I don’t see any health benefit to doing so on the same level as kicking alcohol, so I’ll probably be sipping coffee for a while.
Thanks for reading!! xoxo
Who wrote this:
I’m a painter, I make comics, and sometimes I do computer stuff!
- Becky Jewell
Sketchbook Confessional January 2021
I started writing these blogs, Sketchbook Confessionals, in the fall of 2019, as a way to take inventory of all the art that I made, books I read, and fitness things that I did in the past month. Writing these blogs has helped me remember what I do each month, a kind of ‘done’ list rather than a ‘to do’ list.
I made several paintings of Mt. Elbert near Leadville in January 2021:
While painting Mt. Elbert and lupine flowers, I made a couple sheer abstract paintings using the paint left over. It is very fun to just cut loose and let the paint flow freely on these kinds of pieces. I call these Leftover Paintings, and I’ve been making them off and on since 2015:
Sometimes, in my opinion, the leftovers are even better than the mountain paintings.
In January I made a ton of Rainbow Cats too. I’d estimate I made about 95 of them.
The Rainbow Cats are fun for me to make because they are all different, all handmade, yet they are simple enough to get repetitive, zen, and very satisfying. A Rainbow Cat is kind of a relaxing art that I make. I draw the stripes for the Rainbow Cats while watching Twitch in the background. I can’t do this with oil painting - if I try to paint and have something on like a video, it doesn’t work very well.
Another art form that I worked on in January was video art, as I got my art projector to work again. I am not sure what I will do with it yet, but I made a couple videos for Instagram where I projected an animated gouache painting onto myself. The process for these is:
Make abstract painting using gouache
Animate the painting in an app like Pixaloop, using simplistic paths
Save the file, load it into the projector, project the animation onto a wall
Stand against the wall
There has to be more I can do with this but I am not sure what, or how to make it into more meaningful art.
Reading/Watching/Playing:
A sword, drawn by our party DM, the “Sword of Songs” utilized by Arlina, the Changeling Bard
The funnest thing I am playing continues to be a D&D game I am playing with several other artists and designers, where I play a Changeling Bard named Arlina. I think we are up to almost 20 sessions now, all happening over zoom/videocall. Playing D&D is something I look forward to, specifically because of its improvisational nature. It turns out that I really like the feeling of being on my toes, unexpected monsters, funny changeling hijinks, and our DM is doing a great job.
I realized how important D&D was to me when I went too hard on a big 10 mile run in the summer in DC, got dehydrated and too sick, and couldn’t make a session that night because I was struggling to keep down water and ibuprofen. I was so sad I couldn’t make the session, which I had been looking forward to all week, and pretty much had to say “please go on without me comrades.” At that moment I realized, wow, I really, really like D&D a lot. Now I plan my runs more carefully, haha!
My drawing of Arlina, the Changeling Bard
It’s fun to play Arlina, she has become like Averle, my character in Elder Scrolls Online - an extension of myself who has stayed with me for some time. Changeling hijinks, like changing into an Orc but not knowing Orcish, changing into an antagonist yet not knowing exactly how he would act, and changing into an NPC who had passed away - all of these are moments that were interesting to play as a Changeling.
Even though Arlina is like me, in her base form, it is fun to be her because she can kind of be anything. Since she is a Changeling, similar to Mystique in the X Men, she can be a big dumb orc if she wants, or a shadowy thief.
It’s wild to remember that our D&D experience is different for each person in the party. Whatever we are all imagining in our heads is completely different from the next person. If we happen across an ice cave, the ice cave is totally different for me versus the person in the zoom window next to me, and the person next to them. In this way, D&D is a lot more like five people reading a book, than five people watching a movie or playing a video game. This is why it is so special, I think.
This month, I also started playing Octopath Traveler again. This might be one of those games that I just keep playing throughout life. Witcher 3, Final Fantasy games, Ocarina of Time, all of those are like that for me.
When I think about how I first started playing Witcher 3 in my Austin apartment, and later moved to Houston, Maryland, DC, and back to Colorado, I remember what a longevic, eternal game it is. I remember Witcher 3 specifically because I got CARDED to purchase it at Target in 2015, which was quite flattering and also very funny and entertaining to me. Some games just hold up forever. Octopath and Witcher 3 are like that for me.
I wish I had read more books in January, however, I was very tuned into the news. I don’t think there is anything wrong with this, there were a lot of important moments in January for the United States.
Fitness:
This January, I hit a couple big runs, including an 8 mile run at the very end of January on the 30th. When I am feeling my best and running well, the miles pass very quickly, as they did on this particular 8 mile run.
I’m getting better overall fitness too. Aside from not drinking alochol, I don’t watch my diet too closely, though I do try to eat well enough overall. I will eat lots of bagels, lots of mexican food and thai food.
More oblique ab definition in January! Not sure why, must be all the running + strength + dancing?
For some reason, this month, I started getting more definition in my oblique abdominal area. I don’t think I deserved this at all, because I haven’t been doing planks like I used to. I think it all must be coming from running big miles, and the strength routine I am doing as part of my training. Sometimes I also dance in my studio since I miss doing Zumba.
Completing long runs on the weekend to the order of 6-8 miles reminds me of when I was in Tokyo, and I would walk 5-10 miles each day to see all the art that I could. I was so tired each day and so hungry from all the walking, I would struggle to find enough food to stay energized. Since portion sizes in Japan were so small, I would order things like three croissants from Starbucks and buy several sodas from vending machines. Walking and running really do take a lot of energy from me, and, I suspect, from most people. Whenever anyone asks me for fitness advice, I will always say ‘run'! and if you can’t run, walk! And once you feel pretty good about that, do some planks. My advice will always be pretty simple like this.
Jan 1 marked 7 months of no-alcohol for me as well. It may sound strange but I don’t even think about alcohol at all, I don’t seem to have cravings. It might be that my exercise routines have replaced alcohol completely, and that staying at home for COVID, ie, not going out to bars, ect, has made it even easier to forget about alcohol.
To sum up: In January 2021, I did a ton of work in painting and video art. I completed a total of 10 paintings. I played a lot of D&D and ran something like 75 miles total with a couple large runs mixed in. I hope to continue this trend in February.
Who wrote this:
Sketchbook Confessional December 2020
A lot of 2020 has reminded me of the searing feeling where you can’t tell if something is hot or cold.
I made the above piece in Clip Studio Paint to memorialize 2020 as a year where I spent most of it pretending I am on a beach somewhere. I think about my trip to the Bahamas earlier this year all the time, and how I can’t wait to go back there and to other islands soon.
Art:
For Christmas day I hiked up a hill near Wonderland Lake in Boulder and painted with gouache on Yupo en plein air. This was tougher than I thought it would be and the paper did fly away a few times before I taped it down. This was one of the few plein air sessions I’ve done where I had truly thought to bring everything I needed. I painted in gouache because I couldn’t find any turpentine to paint in oil, which was probably for the best.
I’ve worked on the next few pages of Tilted Sun and have decided I just need to get them done even if they are not perfect. It’s still very hard for me to work in sequence, I am much, much more adept at cover-like illustrations or singular ideas. Drawing Sam and the Gray Woman over and over are fine, it is just very hard for me. I have an even bigger swooning admiration now for artists like Bill Watterson who seemingly can just fire off consistent Calvins, panel after panel.
So I’ve been doing some low-stakes work on my iPad and even polishing off a couple pieces.
I love putting up photos on Instagram. It was exciting to do a shoot lately with artist Julie Tierney of JMFT Industries at Twin Lakes in Leadville:
Games:
I finally downloaded Hades on my Bill Gates machine and am loving it. There is so much to love, all the details are just brilliant. Character art, environments, voice acting, all of these are good.
At first I kicked myself for not getting Hades on the Nintendo Switch, yet, I love looking at this game on my PC. It is nice to have my eyes being just about 18 inches from a big ol’ screen with all of this glorious art on it. It is so, so sharp. I’m in love.
I also bought the Ace Attorney trilogy for Switch and am enjoying the theatre of gamified law. The sheer amount of crashing noises and random smacking sound effects in this game gives me life. I don’t know why it is so funny, it just is.
Other than those two games I am still loving a zoom D&D campaign I am playing with some fellow artist friends. I have to reiterate that D&D is like some kind of therapy for me. It isn’t like a video game where you can look up answers, it also isn’t like MtG where you are trying to crush everyone or be the best. It’s a perfect game for this particular time. Shoutout to our DM Michael for doing such a good job.
Reading:
I’ve loved the new book, Moment of Lift, by Melinda Gates. It’s out on Kindle right now and will be in paperback and hardback very soon.. A lot of anecdotes from this book can be found in other interviews with Melinda Gates, yet it is nice to see her thoughts in book form and at length. We have an enormously long road to travel with ending gender disparity and misogyny, this book is a step forward.
Whenever I see the world being tough on women, the long-term thought part of my brain has to ask “Why?” What societal benefit is there to selling child brides, telling women they don’t matter, or keeping women out of schools? Of course, the answer is ‘absolutely no benefit’.
It’s an important book to read now, too, as many women are at home with kids and are still working or looking for work in the United States. It’s very hard to concentrate on ideas or get intellectual work done when you are responsible for most chores, childrearing, and have other family members to take care of.
I posted some salient passages in a twitter thread here. https://twitter.com/beckyjewell/status/1343695125239590912
Ultimately, the best that most women in developed countries can hope for is a woke partner. The best that countries can hope for are women leaders in power.
Fitness:
I’ve been running about 12-20 miles a week and have been enjoying a training plan from trainer and triathlete Alex Willis. It’s nice to have a training plan from Alex each day in my email inbox, it takes questions and uncertainty out of my day, because I have a plan.
Strava has been nice and I have made a few new friends on the platform. I try to go for consistency. I do dream of taking some huge runs in the future in places far from Boulder, until then, I stick to running around in the foothills.
Running Chataqua Park this December has been fun. I wear a mask for the most part while running and have liked how it keeps my face warmer than it would be otherwise. It isn’t as heavy as a neck gator either. People are pretty nice here and aren’t creeps, which has been good. The most fearsome thing I see while running is an occasional coyote or people who aren’t wearing masks. The most distracting thing I see while running are Little Free Libraries in nice neighborhoods where the books are all high-level self development books like Strengthsfinder 2.0 or books about coding Python or vegan parenting.
As of Jan 1st 2021, I will be a lucky 7 months in to my no-alcohol life, which has been fantastic. The importance of sobriety for me personally is that I never needed alcohol to be a good artist, and it only ever held me back from being a better athlete. There’s also marketing in alcohol where, much like cigarettes, drinking is posited as an activity that makes you wild and free. This appeals to the values of many artists, but ultimately it’s just marketing. The wildest and most free I have ever been has been in the past 7 months.
Who wrote this:
Notes on Kicking Alcohol
In late May of 2020, I was driving through my neighborhood in Maryland and decided to just go home instead of stopping by the local beer store.
Earlier that week I was sitting in my yard drinking a Corona, looking out at a fig tree and a Japanese maple that I had planted. I really missed my friends and family. I’d cancelled a vacation in March to avoid coronavirus woes, and I hadn’t been back to the office since March either.
I realized that drinking in my yard was the epitome of pointless - alcohol wasn’t going to bring my friends closer to me or make me feel better about how alienating COVID-19 measures had become. If anything, I would drink a beer and read a book, and sort of feel relaxed, but mostly I felt anxious, still.
And if beer was pointless during COVID, wouldn’t it be pointless all the time?
It is not beer that I wanted or missed, I missed people, I wanted interesting conversations.
So, I stopped. In the upcoming days where I had a choice to buy more beer or not, I just skipped it.
The other reason I stopped drinking was my careful tracking of my running goals on Strava. I saw myself running and getting faster and better, and drinking just didn’t seem to be something that would help my running goals. Earlier in 2020 I had hit a personal goal of running 6 miles in 60 minutes. While I was still having the occasional beer or two while hitting that goal, I thought about how well I could do if I just nixed beer altogether, and I got pretty excited about what I envisioned.
The improvements I’ve seen in life are very good, I’ve detailed them below.
Financial:
I estimated that I spent at least $40 a week on alcohol. This would probably be much, much more if I had a week where I would go out with friends in DC and pick up even one drink on my tab. ($40 sounds laughably low when cleverly-named DC cocktails roll in at $15 each).
I used to stay out until 1 am at DC bars with friends, talking about nothing more than - you guessed it - politics. So, if I had a 1 AM Politics Night, my weekly alcohol spend would be more like $70.
I think if I were to do the same thing now and kick alcohol, I could, I’d just stay up until 1 am drinking kombucha or diet coke or something.
Fitness:
Even with stopping alcohol, I have some issues with sleeping. My sleep got better, but it’s not perfect yet. Admittedly I pump too much caffeine into my system, and I have a kind of undercurrent of anxiety about COVID that I can only occasionally shake off with exercise. Sometimes the COVID anxiety just doesn’t shake off, but if I do stuff, I feel better. The main improvement right now is that if I feel myself getting anxious, I start doing tasks or reaching out to my network instead of drinking a beer. I did just order a Sleep Number bed too after about 10 years on an old mattress so I will keep you posted on that, too.
When I stopped drinking my running performance went off the chain. I started running 3-4 miles on weekdays and built up towards a 10 mile run every weekend. The 10 mile runs were a challenge because I became so dehydrated - Maryland/DC in the summer heat is pretty tough.
Not everything went perfectly when I started to run a lot, though. One day I became so dehydrated and sick after a 10 mile run that I ended up throwing up (losing even more water), and struggled to even keep down water and ibuprofen, and had to sleep for the rest of the day. It was pretty nasty - 10 miles isn’t a marathon or anything, but it’s the furthest I’d ever run, even after training for 5ks in high school and for 10ks in my 20s, I’d never really hit a 10 mile run until 2020 at age 34 and alcohol-free.
Life:
For me there are two levels to being alcohol-free: Deep and shallow. I am able to handle deep and shallow problems with equal measure, instead of drinking them off. The problems might be as small as deciding how to sort and organize my clothes, or as big as deciding where I want to live and who I want to spend my time with. Either way they are way easier to solve.
I am a very visual person and I thrive on activity and momentum. I typically read three books at any one time, I don’t finish a book and read the next one. I also do the same with work that I produce - I don’t finish a painting and start the next one. I will work on several paintings at the same time, and rework paintings from years ago.
This mode of operation can be at risk for distraction - something which is reduced by quitting alcohol.
So with one distraction down, I was able to solve problems both in art and life. I realized I would be happier back in my home state of Colorado, so I took steps to make the move. I probably wouldn’t have realized this if I had kept drinking. I would have been ensconced in whatever was right in front of me, instead of taking the time to realize that I could make a change. I imagined myself getting too settled and realized that it wasn’t what I wanted.
Artwise, I’ve made a lot of my ‘happiest’ art this year while being sober, mostly in the form of animated gifs and low-risk illustrations. Sobriety has taken me back to a more pure place as an artist, which has been really enjoyable.
Artists are often perceived and cast as people who drink a lot. Or, there’s the trope of the drugged-out artist, too. Even when I did drink, I rarely would drink and produce good art. If anything, I would drink when I had thrown in the towel on making anything good that day.
Many artists produce a ton of great art after a beer or two - I am not one of those artists. I do my best stuff after a cup of coffee on a weekend morning, like Saturday Morning Cartoons only as an adult making the cartoons.
I can tend to seem like a very random person to some people, even dead sober. I think this is because I live life very fully and with a lot of love - a lot of people are caught off guard. Ultimately, I don’t need alcohol to be a free-spirited, loving, kind person.
The biggest question I answered for myself after a few months of being sober was: Why not me?
I spend a lot of time fawning over other people’s accomplishments… their artwork, their fitness journeys, and I decided, why not just stop hiding and be out with who I am? What on earth am I waiting for? I am talented, smart, I’ve helped a lot of people, and I’m pretty proud of how far I have come. So I’ve started posting grids on Instagram of all of my work - paintings, comics, and bikini photos alike.
To sum up:
Fitness:
Slept better. Started running 7 - 10 miles, up from 3-4 miles.
Financial:
Saved at least $500 over three months, probably much more.
Life:
Big and small problems were easier to solve. I sorted my clothes effectively and also decided to move back to Colorado. I made art that made people happy and started asking “Why not me?”
Advice:
For anyone who wants to kick alcohol, I have advice, but I am a person who doesn’t like to tell people what to do unless they ask for advice explicitly.
I never want to make one of those Youtube videos or Medium posts that are titled “Stop drinking alcohol!” or “Women Who Drink Too Much are (insert demeaning XYZ trope here)!”
For this reason, my story will probably never be very popular and will definitely not get millions of views. I want to stick to my code of being non-judgmental towards others. I wouldn’t presume to judge people who drink or people who don’t drink.
So, if you would like any advice or have any interest in this, please message me any time by tweeting at me: @beckyjewell.
Who wrote this?
Sketchbook Confessional: August and a Half 2020
Welcome to the Sketchbook Confessional for August-to-mid-September 2020!
It’s the future and we live in the time of COVID-19, let’s live heroically, let’s live in style. #jewell2020
August represented a bit of an art slump for me since I am in the middle of packing, moving, and driving across the USA back to Colorado.
Many years ago I realized I went through times of art production and times where I would absorb, rather than produce, art and information. I try to not beat myself up for falling into a series of weeks where I don’t make paintings or comics, and intentionally categorize this time as Learning Time, or an absorption time. August and September have been absorption months for me so far. I have been reading more than writing, and looking at art more than creating it.
Art:
In terms of art I have been making 2-4 frame GIFs and uploading them to Giphy: I added a few GIFs here to Giphy: https://giphy.com/beckyjewell6
Overall Giphy has been super interesting to participate in as an artist. My whole set of GIFs had about 1.1 million views in early August. Later in September, the number ratcheted up to 20 million as one gif took off like a rocketship, for some reason. The GIF that got the most views was an animated version of Be Nice Make Art.
I don’t know what this means or why it got so many views. Instagram? Giphy front page? I’m glad it was popular as original art, and wasn’t a spongebob cutout or something. Though, those are pretty cute, too.
Writing:
Usually I don’t write very much about, er, writing in these updates. This month I did work on writing some key moments in my comic Tilted Sun for future reference when I get back into art production mode after my move. Ultimately I know what Tilted Sun is about, I just am disappointed with how slow I am moving imagistically with the comic. Someday, I might move back to writing, or start writing a fantasy book in addition to writing and drawing Tilted Sun, simply because writing moves faster. It is way harder to draw a flowing scarf than describe it.
So, I have the themes worked out in my head and the characters, it just takes me longer to complete than the ideas hit me. A lot of good paintings are like this. They look like they just zapped into existence, like Athena from Zeus’s head… yet they actually took years of work and failure.
So, the allure of writing has been fun for me lately while I am moving boxes around and energetically am not working deeply enough in my head for drawing.
Reading/Watching/Playing
Reading:
I finished reading the Jim Carrey book, Memoirs and Misinformation. This book probably isn’t for everyone, but if you’ve read and liked Pynchon or other absurdist-bent books you’ll like this. Ultimately the book does a great job of recreating what it is like to be an artist with a capital A - reality and art blur together, until you’re not sure which is which, and you can hardly afford to care. Distinguishing art and reality isn’t the point of this book, the point is wholly something else, which I will save for you if you read it! I personally loved this book. I just loved it.
I picked up Barking Up the Wrong Tree at a Fedex hub and read it in a couple days. It’s a good success-anecdote book, something I’d usually read on an airplane. There were a couple good paragraphs on art specifically, and the Dunning-Kruger effect which I thought was interesting:
After learning about Adele’s weightloss and seeing one of her Instagram posts, I finished reading: Untamed by Glennon Doyle. I really like this book. I think the earlier that women read a book like this, the better their lives will be. Mostly, I am all for making a life that belongs to you, instead of adhering to tradition or doing things by the book so that other people will like you. This book takes readers through a journey of Glennon’s life as she starts out following tradition and adhering to grueling perfectionism, and she ends up blazing a new path.
I empathize with the sobriety points. I can’t say my own experiences in love and life have been as terrifying as Glennon Doyle’s experiences - it’s one of those books where I read it and think “Wow if this person can get through all this trauma, most of us can do anything!”
While reading this book, I realized how the pursuit of art is a get-out-of-jail-free card for women. In art, you are praised and loved for pursuing new and different ideas. There aren’t many other paths in life, aside from athletics or study, that can help women transcend deeply pervasive misogyny. A lot of American and Christian default narratives that are supposed to apply to womanhood are pretty harmful, and discarding these narratives early, as early as possible, is a good idea. Whatever helps women do that is good, whether it is art, study, athletics, anything.
I also finished reading Braving the Wilderness by Brene Brown. I thought it was good after the introduction, which was a bit too namedropped for my tastes. Written in 2017, there are a lot of aspects of this book about racism and the racist divide that apply to struggles that we are still confronting in 2020.
On the fantasy side of things I am enjoying Cradle: Ghostwater by Will Wright. I like all of the Cradle books and am making a ton of fanart about the series. There are parts of this book that are so F*ing metal, man. They’re fun to read as an artist, and in a weird way, the books read a little bit like playing a videogame. The powers and characters’ skills in the book are clearly tiered, like advancing levels in a game. Plus there are flying clouds, giant turtles, sprites, treasures, and I do have to say I like the main character a lot, and his bff.
I read Business at the Speed of Thought by Bill Gates and it turned out to be an absolutely wild read because it is pretty much 400 pages of convincing you to turn your paper-based office into a computer-based office, which makes sense for the time. At first I didn’t realize the book was written in 1998. Reading it now feels like reading 400 pages of someone convincing you to purchase an automobile instead of riding a horse. I admit I had to skim parts of it. Interesting read in 2020.
The other book I read in the Bill Gates realm was the book by William Gates or Bill Gates SR - Showing Up For Life. I liked this book, it’s about 1-2 hour read. William Gates is about the same age of my late grandpa and had a similar life - both William Gates and my grandpa were in Japan after the bomb dropped. It is interesting to read books from people in this generation.
Finally, I finished reading I May Be Wrong, But I Doubt It by Charles Barkley, after finding a copy in a local Little Free Library. One of my favorite things in the world is Charles Barkley Shut Up and Jam Gaiden, to the extent that I wrote a please-play-this-game blog about it four years ago. I love the bravado of basketball and basketball references, and though I don’t follow the game right now, I follow a lot of what I call Basketball Drama. I love basketball shoes.
The saddest thing about this book is how it was written in 2002 and things aren’t much better when it comes to race in America. Barkley has several prescient talking points about confronting racism instead of sweeping it under the rug.
Playing:
I’m in the middle of a super fun D&D campaign with some friends online. D&D kind of works like … therapy for me, or how I’d imagine the perfect therapy to be. It takes me out of my day-to-day, gives me fresh perspectives, and, since D&D is so collaborative, I don’t feel like I have to mercilessly whip someone at something (ala Magic the Gathering.) Time just flies. We’re about 10 sessions in and it’s been just awesome. I think everyone should play this game at some point in life.
I also started playing Paper Mario: Origami King on Nintendo Switch. This game is a perfect game.
First of all, it’s funny, and about as random as Katamari. Nothing makes sense, yet, gameplay is perfect and easy to navigate. And it’s fun to look at. It’s also funny how confetti fixes everything.
The beginning is a little hand-holdy but it’s to be expected with how strange the battle system is. The line-em-up strategy vaguely reminded me of the group-and-attack battle methods in Radiant Historia.
Fitness:
Overall, August has been hot in Maryland-shy-of-DC and I’ve been staying indoors. The most exciting thing about August and September is that September 1 marked my third month of no-alcohol, which is huge for me.
I quit drinking sometime at the end of May. There was no momentous breaking point, no dramatic bottle-smashing. I just didn’t want to drink Coronas in my yard any more. I miss my friends a lot during COVID-19 measures, and realized I didn’t need alcohol the whole time, COVID or not.
I can’t remember the exact date, so I am calling June 1 my sobriety birthday.
I’d say for me personally, I’m much sharper mentally without drinking. The sharpness and competence permeates everything I do, from my professional career to drawing silly things like cat gifs.
The allure of alcohol for me, artistically, had to do with trying to relax my inner critic and fitting in. Similar to how, I guess, drinking can be a good way to lose inhibitions socially, when it comes to art, relaxing the inner critic feels good because self judgements can be shaken off quickly. I’d rather just try to ruthlessly ditch, to utterly abandon my inner self critic without drinking, which is going pretty well.
Not everything has to be perfect, and, I don’t have to fit in.
That’s it for now peeps! Next time I write I will catch you in Colorado.
Related blogs:
Sketchbook Confessional: June and Half
Making Animated GIFs in Procreate
Who wrote this:
How to Make Animated Gifs in Procreate
Welcome to this blog on how to make animated GIFs in Procreate! Here are the steps to making a simple and fun animated gif.
Step 1:
Open a generous workspace, the standard square workspace is good!
Step 2:
Decide what you want to animate - here are some ideas!
Animals - Cats, dogs, chinchillas! The options are endless!
Words or Phases - Phrases like “Dope” or “COOL” are fun to animate in Procreate. It’s also easy to do multi-word phrases, such as Black Lives Matter or Happy Birthday or Stay Home.
Objects - Sunglasses, pencils, lamps. Just about anything could fall under the ‘object’ category! If you’re brainstorming some objects to animate, try animating something on your desk.
Food - Apples, bananas, flan, mocha. Who doesn’t love food? Who wouldn’t love embellishing their Instagram story with some fun sparkling sprinkled donuts, or a mai tai with an umbrella? Though it can seem kind of stagnant compared to a kangaroo, food is a fun thing to illustrate and animate.
Places - it’s hard to make a full landscape scene as a gif, however, illustrating words like Colorado surrounded with elk and eagles, or The Bahamas with palm trees would be fun gifs to make.
If you’re out of ideas, another good place to start is just searching on Giphy, or the Giphy search on Instagram.
Step 3:
Know that before you start drawing, every visible layer works as an animation cel.
Step 4:
Start drawing and making what you want to animate!
Step 5:
Create a new layer and change the drawing slightly somehow - this could be adding a new color, or moving an element of a creature.
You can make the layer beneath semi-transparent, and this works as an' ‘onionskin’ or transparency.
Step 6:
Once you have at least two layers, make sure the layers that you want to be included in the gif are marked as ‘visible’.
Then, tap the Wrench Icon and then the Share area of the app, and hit Animated Gif underneath Share.
In the example above of the Mr. Blue Cat animation, you can see that the two overlapping drawings of Mr. Blue Cat are slightly different.
Step 7:
The Animated Gif area will ask you for the framerate - for simple gifs, I usually chose a framerate of 3. If you want your gif to be more ‘fluid’ looking, and the gif has about 5+ layers, you might have better luck with a higher framerate, such as 10 or even 15.
For uploading to Giphy for use on Instagram, be sure to toggle the ‘transparent background’ option
Playing with the frames per second and checking the ‘transparent background’ are key for making good animated stickers
Once you are happy with the framerate and background, hit the Export button!
What I usually do is email myself my animated gif, and then upload it to Giphy, embed it in tweets, use it as an emoji in slack, whatever you like!
Related blogs:
Sketchbook confessional: July 2020
Sketchbook Confessional: June and a Half
Would love your support on Patreon
Who wrote this:
Sketchbook Confessional: July 2020
Welcome to the Sketchbook Confessional for July 2020!
It’s the future and we live in the time of COVID-19, let’s live heroically, let’s live in style. #jewell2020
The last half of July was interesting for me on the personal side - I’m in the process of rethinking my studio location with COVID being so extant. More news on that side too, readers, just know that change is in the air for me! Just like it is for so many of us.
This month I made a few more animated gifs, like Mr. Blue Cat over to the right. I am learning more about making small drawings come to life in just a few frames.
Check out all of my gifs here on Giphy!
Other than a couple gifs, I did some sketches in Clip Studio Paint below, and the rest of July is in my June-and-a-Half update.
I’m putting a lot of content on Instagram IG TV of my processes in Clip Studio Paint on the iPad Pro. It’s been a fun way to connect with people from all over the world, and friends new and old, while staying at home for COVID measures.
There are a ton of great and amazing art video timelapses out there, where you can watch art come to life at a rapid pace.
What I aim to do in my Instagram art videos that is DIFFERENT from silent timelapses is to narrate my decisions and choices as I draw, so that my thoughts, not just my motor skills, are captured in the video.
I think that understanding artist thoughts, not just physical talents, is the ticket to developing art skills and becoming better artists overall. If we can investigate our thoughts, we can learn and grow in meaningful ways.
Instagram Video Directory:
Digital Collage - How I use photographs of abstract paintings and layer them into Clip Studio Paint to create textured, varied artwork.
Character Development - Drawing a couple character busts from scratch.
Animated Gif Process - How to make animated gifs in Procreate.
Smiley time on the IG!
IG TV is fun and it’s been a great way for me to get my work permanently into the world. I probably will go onto Youtube one of these days. For now, Instagram is where it’s at for livestreaming and art tips from me - plus you get to see my smiley face!
Life and Fitness:
I’m super pumped to say I’ve hired triathlete Alex Willis to be my running trainer. My goal is to eventually run a few long distance races, such as a marathon, and if I get there, a 50 miler.
At a certain point I realized that the longer I run, the better I feel about life. So at this point I am positively addicted to running in the purest sense of the phrase.
I’m two months free of alcohol at this point, however I’ve gone back on to caffiene. I could give up alcohol but not coffee!
COVID stay-at-home time was and is a perfect time for me personally to kick alcohol - otherwise it is just me in my backyard drinking Coronas, which is kind of, er, well it’s not very fun.
The good thing about kicking alcohol completely is that I am taking steps to solve problems in my life instead of just drowning them out. Things that I don’t like about life or myself, I am working to fix deeply, instead of bandaid. It’s been good so far.
To make life fun, I’ve gotten into treating myself by dying a strip of my hair various colors.
My hair changes just about every week. Right now I’m only using two colors from Manic Panic to get a range of pinks, purples, and blues.
Related blogs:
Sketchbook Confessional: June and a Half
Sketchbook Confessional: June and a Half 2020
Welcome to the Sketchbook Confessional for June and for the first half of July!
It’s the future and we live in the time of COVID-19, let’s live heroically, let’s live in style. #jewell2020
The sketchbook confessional is a ritualistic art process blog where I go into ALL of what I am making, thinking about, reading, and doing fitness-wise during a specific month - only, this month I didn’t get June finished, so I am blogging about June and half of July!
Making art:
Geddy the Poodle Gif!
I’ve been working on learning how to make animated gifs and have uploaded a few to Giphy! Thinking and creating in terms of animation has helped me create better artwork over all. It’s been fun to think about how things ‘move’ and how weight and direction affects art.
I’d recommend trying animation in Clip Studio Paint or creating layer-based animated gifs in Procreate if you never have - I learned a lot from this and have found that gifs are a great way to bring life to my static drawings and designs.
The GIF I am proudest of is the one at the top of this blog, I made about 6 or 7 four-frame gifs before drawing and animating an entire scene. Here is my process for the island gif
Drawn in Clip Studio Paint
Exported as a layered PSD File
Imported into Procreate
I watched a ton of great youtubes on how to animate via layers in Procreate. Someday I’ll make one too when I get a bit more time!
In addition to GIFs, I made some Colorado-based art in the form of a Topo Map of Leadville, Colorado. I also drew a patch of Columbine and added rainbow gradients in honor of both Colorado and Pride Month.
Both pieces are available as prints and more on my shop on Society6! Check them out here:
https://society6.com/beckyjewell
I worked a bit on Tilted Sun in June and am planning on finishing the first 100+ pages and releasing a print version. Keep an eye out for a future Kickstarter and an opportunity to support the print version of Tilted Sun!
For now, read the whole comic online at:
Start at Page 1 here:
https://www.tiltedsun.com/comic-1/2018/5/5/page-1
Reading:
I got a new Kindle Paperwhite and am cruising through books almost as fast as I used to when I rode the D.C. Metro each day. Here is what I am reading:
Call Sign Chaos - General Jim Mattis
This is a great read about leadership in general, and the leadership that goes into being a Marine and a Marine leader.
My favorite part in the book is a moment where Mattis goes into the importance and value of reading, where he states that if you don’t read hundreds of books, you’re probably going to fail. Well … he sort of puts it like if you don’t read or try to read and expand yourself, you’re kind of a moron. It’s nice to hear this from a Marine, and even nicer to hear it from one of the most loved and respected generals of all time.
Too Much and Never Enough - Mary Trump
This book is an empathetic look into the family that created Donald Trump. I think a lot of bravery went into this book. I’d had the book purchased for a week before it was released - it was recommended in my Kindle library after I read Call Sign Chaos by General Mattis.
This book is a tough read and I have to intersperse it with happier books to get through it.
Autism in Heels - Jennifer Cook
This book is a GREAT read for anyone who has an autistic family member, friend, coworker, or is autistic themselves. It is also a GOOD read for anyone. Even if you feel you have never met a person who is on the spectrum, you probably have, if you’re over 12 years old.
A ton of stereotypes get blown away by this author’s kind and funny narrative style, especially because she goes into such depth on the experience of being an autistic girl and woman.
The depth is important because most diagnoses and understandings of autism are built around how autistic boys and men navigate the world, where the diagnostic range needs to catch up with how autism is experienced by girls and women.
“Autism in Heels” is a perfect title to describe some of the hiding, mirroring, and acting that autistic women do in order to fit in - something that happens all too commonly since autistic women tend to fly under the radar, even to themselves. The author wasn’t diagnosed until she was in her 30s.
Please read this book.
Memoirs and Misinformation - Jim Carrey and Dana Vaschon
I love Jim Carrey and have been watching him in 2020 even more fervently than I watched Ace Ventura ever since he started painting and drawing. I also follow him closely on Twitter. I was excited to see this book being released and picked it up on the first couple days it was out.
This book is like Jim Carrey himself - it’s funny, wildly expressive, borderline absurd. I like the book a lot because it knows it is borderline absurd and, like Hollywood itself, sometimes it doesn’t try too hard to make things seem real. There’s a part where Jim Carrey and Charlie Kaufman and Anthony Hopkins get into a fight while eating Chinese food and, long story short, this anecdote almost killed me, it was so funny.
I think you might need to have a supermassive sense of humor for this book - otherwise it might seem too sad, but that’s also kind of what I think about life itself.
Cradle: Foundation - Volume 1 - Will Wright
I started reading the Cradle series in March and picked them up again in June after falling off my book game for a couple months during COVID.
I LOVE these books, they are so fun. There are spirits, warring families, mystical paths of study and skill, monsters, wealthy rulers, impossible goddesses, dragonbone cities… I’m all about it. The narration and plot reads a bit like a video game - the fantasy world has a very clear hierarchy of superpowers, and items and actions that help characters achieve those powers. The main character’s inventiveness is almost as charming as the second main character’s skill and power, and there’s a lot of deeper moments about invention vs. power, or the unstoppable teaming of invention + power.
Playing:
I’ve picked up a D&D campaign on Discord/zoom with some friends from Twitter and new friends. It’s been so fun to play D&D and have a couple hours each week where I don’t think about work, art commissions, or exercise. In a way it’s my main social time aside from zoom happy hours at my company and zoom family calls.
On one of those family calls, I explained a bit of D&D to my mom, who remembered kids in the 80s playing it when she taught high school English. It’s interesting, but not surprising, how storytelling and team efforts are attractive game concepts.
While explaining D&D to my mom, I realized that D&D, to me, is ultimately a bit more positive than Magic the Gathering - I used to feel bad about whipping people at Magic, and would also feel bad about getting whipped.
There are clear winners and losers in Magic, and Magic is a bit more about antagonizing others. On the other side of the fantasy game spectrum, D&D is about group survival - rather than beating your friends, you’re working together with them. The DM is not an antagonist (usually) either. Ultimately, I can see why D&D has had a resurgence and why it is sticking around. It’s a game about team/group success rather than competition.
Fitness:
Art and fitness for me are interlinked, both inform and balance each other. If I am stuck on an art idea or overly stressed, I just go for a run for a while and usually have my art issue worked out, and my stress melts away.
The myths that artists are physically weak, or that you can’t be both a jock and an artist, are myths that just sort of need to go away.
I think we are stuck with the myth of artist-as-unwell because artists would actually talk about their ailments, as opposed to being silent. So we have rich information about when van Gogh was in an asylum, but we forgot about the letter where he writes his brother about how his doctor mistook him for an iron worker. Same thing for artists like Frida Kahlo - artists themselves aren’t more sickly, they are sick at the same rate of everyone else, and they just make a painting about it.
Sometimes, the more stress I have, the more I run - because running helps me stay away from the computer and away from getting TOO invested in my phone, it helps me mentally reset.
June and July so far have been big months for me for running and biking. I have completed two ‘big’ runs at 10 miles and 10.5 miles in the past couple weeks - these runs are big for me right now, in the future they may be more standard. A year from now I might be reading this blog and fitting in 20 mile training runs on a Saturday. We will see!
I am training for marathons, and eventually, I want to do 50 mile ultra race. Who knows what racing will really look like in the future? I might just do a marathon and capture it on Training Peaks/Strava, and that will be good enough.
In other fitness news, I stopped drinking alcohol around the end of May, so I am calling my Soberversary June 1st. I feel… a lot better without alcohol. It was a good time for me to quit, because with stay-at-home orders, drinking just didn’t seem like something that needed to happen.
Now that hanging out doesn’t really happen, and therefore social anxiety doesn’t happen, I quit drinking and I feel like I am just thriving, soaring mentally and physically beyond my own wildest dreams.
Where I used to write a couple sentences, I now write a couple paragraphs. I identify problems sooner and come up with solutions faster.
I was thinking earlier this month that the last time I felt this sharp, this intelligent, was in high school when I was working with calculus and studying particle physics. I also wrote long science fiction fantasy books when I was in high school - sounds insane, but I remember looking at the word count in Microsoft Word and there’d be something like 180,000 words there.
So, I am off my own personal chain now, it seems. The dollars I save from not buying beer are one thing, but the time I save from not drinking is invaluable. I can’t put a dollar amount on that.
Ra, more art! xoxo catch you next time!
Related Blogs:
The importance of Personal Work
Sketchbook Confessional May 2020
Who wrote this:
Sketchbook Confessional May 2020
Welcome to the Sketchbook Confessional for May 2020!
It’s the future and we live in the time of COVID-19, let’s live heroically, let’s live in style. #jewell2020
May is a special month for me since May 1, 2018 was the launch date of my comic, Tilted Sun! It’s been interesting to look back on this comic and also look forward, but most of all, it’s been important to stay present with it too.
I think if I get too excited about what I have already done, or too nervous about what is to come, creatively and personally, I get trapped in my own kind of helix in my head.
For this reason, small projects and lots of exercise have seemed to help me get through stay-at-home life. I miss my friends and just generally talking to people because everything that everyone has to say (about both art and life) is always so surprising.
I miss telling my friends a joke and having them laugh, or staying out at the bars in DC until 1 AM talking about politics and ideas. I guess what I kind of found out during this whole coronavirus event is that I am actually kind of extroverted - my peers take me out of the helix in my head - and this is invaluable to me.
During COVID-19 and Maryland’s stay at home measures, I’ve been journaling and writing as much as possible to keep track of how I feel, even if it is a couple shorthand notes in my Hobonichi Techo journal, or a scribble on a document in Clip Studio Paint, I’m doing my best to keep on top of my mental states.
Around 2016 I was so sad at the polarization and meanness that I started seeing online, and I began making art that was explicitly about love and romance. I wanted to depict relationships and people that looked happy and safe, because that was the opposite of what I saw online. My studio in Austin, TX in 2016:
If you’re an artist working with themes like this, you’re immediately at huge risk of criticism that tacks it all ‘onto you’ like, “If you’re painting people who are making out, that must mean you either like making out a lot or you’re lacking it.”
I think times of social injustice need an overflow of art about love, trust, and safety, because it is what we are all lacking. Thinking back to the sex-positive 70s, it makes sense that social and racial revolutions went hand in hand with … sex, and being freely-loving.
I think the freely-loving kind of mentality is still a shock to people in 2020. I think the most shocking, punkass thing you can do is love someone, love yourself, love people, or love something relentlessly, ESPECIALLY if the world tells you NOT to. This does scare me a bit, that love is punk. But that’s all that I can think of as true.
More life:
During May 2020, I’ve also enjoyed connecting with my friends and wider audience over Instagram livestreams! The livestreams aren’t always perfect - sometimes the quality is bad, or some random trolls show up, or the signal drops. Yet, they are a fun way for me to get out of my head and into art, and back into chatting with people who I love deeply. Here are some works I did on 1 hour livestreams on Instagram in May:
I also did a couple livestreams featuring gouache on yupo paper, both translucent yupo and opaque yupo.
I made some flower art of flowers that I found around my neighborhood and used them for quasi-motivational poster like posts.
Some of the aesthetic of the “Way too Fucking Much” art that I made came from looking at Dasharz0ne posts, which are pretty funny satires of toughguy-biker aesthetic posts that circulate the internet.
I think if you share motivational messages, that is great, but it is true that some motivationally-aimed messages intrinsically tap into and exploit weakness in people. They can be very ‘this or that’ polarizing, and sometimes a bit judgmental, and sometimes they go after a straw man.
Take motivational messages that say “I am enough” for example. What? Who the fuck told you that you weren’t enough? Fuck that person. Even if that voice is you, and it’s ‘you’ saying that you are not enough, and this is the thing that the motivational message needs to fight … that inner voice needs to go. It’s not going to be fixed by a chipper post on Instagram.
So, the piece above came from thinking that asked: “What if, instead of stating that I am merely enough, I acknowledge I am already overflowing?”
I think this is true of most people, not just over-the-top artists. Our cup runneth over already.
In May, I was able to finish some Toonme work and a couple other fun commissions too.
Reading/Watching/Playing:
I read the second volume of ElfQuest and am in the middle of the third volume. I really like this series. It absolutely turns most comics on their heads, in that sometimes there is violence but that’s not the focus of the series. Overall it’s a series beyond it’s time. I don’t think I’ve seen a more sex-positive comic, or a comic that treats PTSD so well. At least of it’s time. Either way, it’s refreshing to read.
I have only been playing one video game in May: Breath of the Wild. I am not sure if I will finish it or not. In this game I spend a lot of time wandering around looking at butterflies and trees, and cooking food. I keep climbing towers instead of doing shrines, and usually with shrines if I can’t solve the puzzle in a few minutes, I leave and try again later.
Fitness:
My fitness routines lately are pretty lassaiz-faire as far as how ‘hard’ I go, I’m only able to measure time, or, the duration of my jogs in my neighborhood in Maryland-shy-of-DC. I run anywhere from 30-60 minutes, about four times a week. If I find myself helixing, I will run every day and force myself to take an ‘off’ day.
I’m also super into planks, and every day I step away from my computer or ipad and do at least one 30 second plank per day, usually in sets of three each day. I can now do about 40 seconds three times a day and will feel the impact of a 60 second plank for a full day.
I’m glad Geddy photobombed these shots of me doing a full-arm side plank - by the end of the plank you could see a lot of strain in my face!
Thanks for reading and catch you all soon!!
Related blogs:
The importance of Personal Work
More 2016 photos from my studio in Austin, TX
Who wrote this:
New Shop Prints up!
New prints are up on my shop! Check them out here: https://society6.com/beckyjewell
Staying Positive As a Creative Person During COVID-19
I have a hashtag that I love to use on Instagram, called #AlwaysBeCreating - or ABC.
#AlwaysBeCreating makes me happy whenever I use it, because it is a bit of a joke about “Always Be Closing”, possibly the best sales mantra of all time (and also the most cliche).
Sales and Creating Art aren’t always different, however the sales mentality and the art mentality are such an odd couple that .. Always Be Closing and Always Be Creating will always put me in a good mood.
I love the Always Be Closing moment of Glengarry Glen Ross so much, that I even make joke art about it from time to time, like in this mini painting of an office space that has a snack table with a bucket of art that says “Art Is For Closers.”
So, that’s how I got onboard with:
#AlwaysBeCreating!
Yet, there are definitely some days - especially during COVID-19 stuff - where I don’t feel like I am always creating. I start to get kind of stressed and worried “Am I doing enough?”
Taken too literally, “Always Be Creating” can’t be a healthy mentality, because it seems to pressurize. Artists are people too, right, what about eating and sleeping, and playing Zelda? What if by Always Creating, we get burnt out and exhausted?
So, I think Always Be Creating should be taken with the salt of more generous, kindhearted subtexts.
Generous, meaning:
If you’re eating a bowl of soup and the soup makes you think about drawing a ramen shop scene - that’s creating.
If you’re stuck in traffic and the traffic makes you think of an idea for a children’s book series - that’s creating.
If you’re drawing on an ipad or on paper or on a napkin - that’s creating.
If you schedule out your Instagram posts so that you can create later - that’s creating.
If you’re chatting with friends in slack or on twitter about your ideas - that’s creating.
If you’re organizing your home so that you can create more efficiently - that’s creating.
One of the best comics ideas I ever had came to me while I was driving cross-country from Texas to Maryland, and I was alone in a car bored out of my mind. Though I wasn’t in front of my art supplies, at my computer, or in the studio, I was still creating.
So, I think during COVID-19, it would benefit all of us artists to take the generous side of #AlwaysBeCreating even a bit further:
Even though we are all at home and staying away from people we might adore, even though cons are cancelled and zooms wax and wane between being cool and getting old, we’re still being as creative as we can. Nobody expects a global pandemic.
If you’re doing even the smallest thing for your health and well-being, that’s creating.
Always Be Creating! Until next time!!
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The importance of Personal Work
Who wrote this:
Throwback Thursday: Lessons from High School Art Class
It’s #ThrowbackThursday!
Here I am with my high school art teacher, Nancy Branca, winning some kind of prize for a painting of made of Stockholm, a place I'd never been to.
My mom had taken photos of Stockholm while on a trip. I made her photo into an acrylic painting. The real prize was my mom liked the painting so much she had it framed and it still hangs in her house in Leadville.
I still remember a lot of Miss Branca's advice about art, which I’ve detailed below:
Stand back from your work .
When you’re getting deep into a piece, try stepping back from it to see it from a distance. You will see new things and ways to improve the piece very quickly. With digital art, you can zoom out and see how it looks.
If you’re working from a photo, add small changes so that your piece is more personal.
It’s fun to make art look as realistic as possible, but it’s also fun to add your own flourishes and start developing a style. Cameras and photography kind of made hyper-realistic painting into more of a moot enterprise. Painting hyper real is great, but chances are good that your audience also wants your personal touch too.
When you draw, look at the thing you are drawing as much as possible.
It’s good to look at the model or object you are drawing and let your hand work while you are looking at the model. Looking at the page is ‘okay’ but try to look at the model as much as possible. Your brain will move your hand so that you follow the object whether you look at your hand or not.
There were a lot of other fun moments in high school art class, where I made fan art of Keanu Reeves and drew a lot of pictures from Victor Hugo novels for some reason! And, there’s so much advice that I didn’t list above, too.
I hope you enjoyed these tips from my art classes of days past!
Ra, more art!
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The importance of Personal Work
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Sketchbook Confessional: April 2020
Welcome to April 2020’s Sketchbook Confessional, where I get all of the art out of my system.
The Sketchbook Confessional is a place where I post and describe all of the art that I did in one month’s time, an effort to reel in the chaos of art and objectively know what I did and did not do.
I had a solid April creatively, and have been focusing on getting better at art all around. To do this, I started asking what I really liked about the art that I like, and piecing together tutorials and watching art documentaries and tutorials as well. I drew a lot of very random moments too.
Since I’m at home under COVID-19 measures, I figured I would just take what I could get creatively - not everything was going to be perfect in April, so I cut loose a bit and just started going after whatever themes struck me, or whatever themes I’d been wanting to tackle for a while.
I also had a ton of fun making these Six Fan Arts by request on a livestream. Drawing while live on camera on Instagram is definitely a challenge, and it’s helped me figure out a lot about creating off-the-cuff, and also public speaking.
Even though it is very hard for me to do, I will watch the full replay of my Instagram live videos to get better at how I speak about art and also watch how I create while I am not creating.
Watching my own Instagram live playbacks is kind of like watching a video of yourself throwing a football or swinging a golf club - outside of myself, I notice things that I can improve or change.
Also, I think people in general are a bit more video-genic than they are photogenic most of the time. Most people seem to look a lot better in videos - I hope I’m included in that category!
In April, I started caring less about cohesion or gridding on Instagram and everything being wrapped up in a bow, and I started posting just about anything and everything instead of sticking with one central idea.
I think this approach helped me get a lot of art done, even if it doesn’t really make a lot of sense or look like it was made by one artist.
Reading:
I’ve been reading Gene Wolfe’s Book of the New Sun and while Kindle reports I am a paltry 16% of the way through, I don’t think I’ve ever read a book so rich with detail. I really don’t know what to make of this book. It’s unlike anything I’ve ever read.
A couple illustrations from this series. Below I illustrated a segment early in the book, where Severian is swimming and gets caught in the roots of blue water flowers.
I also wanted to take a stab at this incredibly strange episode in the book where two men fight with large flowers or flower leaves, and the flowers are also kind of sentient - I am struggling to describe this and thought it would be a fantastic art challenge.
Whenever I run into something like this in fiction, something totally weird and hard to imagine, I like to draw it. I accidentally hit a filter in Clip Studio Paint and ended up with this alternate version of the water-flowers piece.
Writing:
I did a bunch of writing in April as opposed to reading. Now that I don’t spend 80 minutes a day riding the DC Metro, I have converted all of that time into either drawing, livestreaming, or writing.
I wrote these blogs in April:
Art Philosophy and Life:
The importance of Personal Work
Art How Tos:
Color Palettes from Moebius Illustrations
Color Palettes from The Little Mermaid
Before and After: How My Art Changed in School
Even after writing all of these blogs I have a lot of ideas that I need to get on this website. I have phenomenal energy around posting on Instagram, and am starting to bring that same energy to this site.
Playing/Watching:
I’m playing Breath of the Wild, and I’m not sure if I will ever finish it, not because I think it is a bad game, but because I think it is a good game and I never want it to end. So, after I stop my work each day I will turn on Breath of the Wild and run around and cook dishes, and usually not get a lot done.
I watched this mini-documentary with Jean Girard Moebius and grabbed some takeaways about what people liked most about working with him and his art. Mostly, his co-producers liked how fast Moebius was. I was a little surprised nobody asked him about where he gets his ideas - I think his speed was just so impressive that everyone forgot about the other part - his ideas.
I’ve also been watching Portfolio reviews from this fellow on Youtube - it is nice to see his active opinions about art, and, selfishly, it is nice to see other people get critiqued aside from me. I think watching portfolio reviews like this is a good idea if you are someone like me who is working in relative isolation and you aren’t surrounded by other artists every day. (True for me as of COVID and before COVID).
Fitness:
In April, to stay fit, I mowed my lawn a bunch and I also got some planks worked in to my daily schedule, where I spend most of each day at at a computer. Wow, planks have really moved my fitness along - I think I could do 500 crunches and it wouldn’t have as much impact as one 30-second plank.
I’ve been working harder at fitness for about 6 months and it’s been paying off. I’ve always been thin and have been able to pass as fit even without working out too hard, but I haven’t consistently been ‘strong’, so, my past six months of strength development have been an effort to change that.
Something I realized while looking at my website analytics was that almost nobody reads these posts, though they might be the best pieces I write. The most-read posts on this website are my how-to tutorials and product or software reviews like this one.
This makes sense. Nobody is going onto Google and typing in “Deep thoughts about art” — they’re usually typing in “Apple Pencil and Clip Studio Paint Review”.
A lot of people are interested in the ‘How’ of art or the speed of art, but we get lost immediately at the ‘why’ and the thoughts behind it all, but, like with the Moebius documentary I mentioned above - I wish we wouldn’t.
I think the most boring question you could ask someone like Moebius is “What pen do you use?” Tools do matter, but man, I would have loved to know more about what artists were thinking throughout the ages. So, this is why I will keep writing these blogs, even though almost nobody reads them.
Until next time, Ra, more art!
Related blogs:
The importance of Personal Work
Who wrote this?
Print Shop Open!
I’m happy to say I’ve opened my print shop on Society 6! Check it out.
New prints added each week!
Who wrote this?
I’m a painter, I make comics, and sometimes I do computer stuff!
- Becky Jewell
When Art Isn't Therapy
The problem with art is that it can be whatever you want it to be.
Art can be this dreamy, relaxing thing, or it is an excruciating, nigh-impossible endeavor.
It’s a bit like running - you can go for an afternoon jog, or you can be an ultramarathoner. At some point, you have to jog to get to the ultramarathon. It’s all running at some level. Ultimately, the degree to which art goes has to do with you.
Who wrote this:
I’m a painter, I make comics, and sometimes I do computer stuff!
- Becky Jewell
Daily Blog: April 15 2020: Personal Work
About a year ago I noticed a new term being used by artists in my community: personal work.
"Personal work" entails work that you make for no person, for no reason, and for no money.
Personal work for me is work that comes from the deepest part of me and 'demands' to be made. Most artists make Personal Work their whole lives, and only at a certain point, do we start making commercial work or commission-oriented art.
Personal work doesn’t have to make sense or cohere or be on time, and it often comes from a very deep place. It’s an absolutely liberated form of expression.
Though it is made for no reason and usually for no money, personal work is the most valuable kind of work artists can make for ourselves and for our culture.
Who wrote this?
I’m a painter, I make comics, and sometimes I do computer stuff!
- Becky Jewell