Even if they don't sell, they're out there being looked at and I like to hope admired by comic book nerds and I beleive that's exactly where my art belongs. I've known some people I went to school with who are getting their art in galleries and getting involved with artsy-fartsy festivals and community events and things like that. I'm sure I could have some level of success if I applied myself to working on the kind of art that you see in art galleries, but the truth of the matter is, I love making fantasy art. It's the kind of thing that the stuck up art gallery people turn their noses up to, dismissing it as a lower art form if they're willing to consider it art at all.
I think the most important thing I learned from getting my Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from a university who tried to spoon feed me this stuck-up "high art" crap was that I'm allowed to have my own tastes in art, even if it means rejecting the entire artworld that they're birthing me into. I'll take a poster of a naked barbarian chick riding a polar bear over any of the crappy art that's hanging up in the Museum of Modern Art any day.
Devious Comments
As someone who does comic art, even though I could do traditional-style art (not that I would make money at it, or have shows or anything like that, but I could do those styles if I wished; I give you a big cyber high-five for saying 'fuck what's expected', and doing what you want to do.
I hope all your sculptures sell (even the spider lady lol), and that you go on to wonderful things in the world of fantasy art, which, I'm sure, is full of far more interesting people then you would find in most galleries!
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Once my friend told me that he had found Jesus. I thought to myself, "Woo-Hoo! We're rich!" It turns out he meant something different.
- Jack Handey
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