There’s a difference between performance, and practice. But in our social media driven world, the lines are blurring, and nothing infuriates me quite as much as all those artists out there who are doing ‘quick sketches’ that aren’t sketches at all.
This is thumbnail sheet of what I call ‘quick sketches’:
And, if you search the #quicksketch hashtag on a service like Instagram, it becomes pretty evident, very quickly, that I suck and that there are so many other people who are faster and better drawers than me.
But, then maybe there’s another possibility.
Knowing what I know now, having practised as a professional illustrator for almost 6 years at the time of writing, is that the vast majority of “quick sketches” I see online are NOT quick, or sketches. A timelapse makes something look quick. My timelapse? It took 6 hours to do! Six. Hours. Maybe I work slowly? Maybe I should be faster? Do I really care? The answer is no. My work looks the way it looks because of the time it takes.
So I’m beginning to tune out. I’m done with looking at others’ ‘quick sketches’ from the internet. I’m sticking with my ‘slow’, ‘unformed’ and let’s be frank, sketchy sketches. I’m fine with that, because if you’re trading in scarcity, speed doesn’t matter.