Art journals, junk journals visual journals travel journals bullet journals sketchbooks visual journals scrapbook...These are but a few search terms that can be looked up.
This is not my work but while looking up images, I got distracted and this amazed me:
Its called hyper or photorealism, even more impressive because cutting around the sparrow's head makes it look like it is walking across the page. This is similar to what I draw or paint, but takes an incredible amount of time.
Once I start a painting, I'm in the endorphin flow, everything falls away and it must be completed. Leaving out all of my supplies until the muse strikes did not work and I stopped painting for a while.
I was also getting disenchanted with contemporary art, walking into an exhibit where red string was conceptualized to mean something and there were no new truly creative ideas.
Over a decade ago the library had a display on art journals. I leafed through them and....checked out everything that I could. Page after page of the gaudiest, tackiest, kitschy crap imaginable. Journals with fabric, ribbon, buttons. Colorful untalented scribbles and doodles, Zentangles. Pure visual eye candy. Illustrated poems, photographs. Did I mention tacky? It was fantastic.
We all draw paint and collage as children those who are not artistically inclined stop. When Keri Smiths wreck this journal came out I thought there was no way anyone would buy it. They became bestsellers. Along with it my art MOJO was back. Finally, I had the motivation to sit down 15 minutes a day, incorporate tickets and scrap paper. If I did not feel like drawing, I would lay down gesso on art journal pages to resist all the things I was going to glue on, paint and sketch and use supplies not good enough for professional work. Of course buying all the Japanese art supplies fueled creativity and my motivation to create just for the sake of creating was back. I was having fun again.
There are many names for different methods and different reasons to create them. These are the visual journals of wildlife photographer Peter Beard, who used photographs and negatives he wasn't happy with to write and doodle on.
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Peter Beards Journals |
Beard also called them a waste of time, underappreciating the therapeutic value of these journals. Taschen published a two volume set, which I bought for inspiration.
I have about 28 journals on the go. Different themes and topics. As life sometimes works I ended up teaching art journaling for goal setting and art therapy. As far as addiction goes this is a healthy one to have.
Any experience with journaling, feel free to share.
If anyone is interested in some of the instructional books, let me know, I'll add them to the post.
This is Danny Gregory. After a tragic event, he started drawing at 40. I like his earlier stuff better. He's a little verbose now.
https://youtube.com/watch?v=F5viqBfh3PQ
Books for inspiration
1000 Artists Journal pages by Sokoff
An illustrated life by Gregory
Field notes in Science and Nature
There are many more depending on interest.