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Featured Artist: Steven Russell Black

Artist Interview Steven Russell Black

This month we caught up with pencil-pusher extraordinaire Steven Russell Black. Steven has a large and committed and organic following online and manages to create work for his fans in every spare moment. He is also one of our top sellers here at Every Day Original. We wanted to know how he managed to build his fan base, how he produces so regularly, and how he turns his fans into collectors.

Follow his instagram to see his daily process posts, and if you like what you see you can probably find it on his Etsy shop.

 

Artist Interview Steven Russell Black

 

 

1. I’ve been a fan of your work for a while now, ever since I found you on instagram. Where do you find the most traction for your work, online or off? How do you most effectively boost your signal?

Online for sure. Instagram is my is my personal favorite, but its more difficult to drive traffic to a purchase as you can’t post links there.

 

 

2. You have a pretty committed following online and sell well both on EDO and eBay. That must feel really good! Do you have a strategy when you post online? How do you convert followers to buyers?

I’m thankful and humbled to have the support of a such a big following for sure.
My posting strategy is process process process, and the 3 busiest social media times of the day to post. Morning, noon, and night. In the case of a drawing I work pretty fast so I’ll post the start in the morning. Maybe just a head or start to a figure. Which is pretty science fact based, then at noonish I post the drawing almost finished revealing its fiction aspect, completing the science fiction and horror I like to inject into the work .Then at 5 or later I’ll post the final and a link to where it’s available for purchase.

 

 

3. With all of that said, I know a lot of people have this idea that artists sit at home in their underwear and work whenever they feel like it. Myth or reality?

Myth. I work whenever I have the time. When I’m drawing I can work anywhere. I draw on the bus, in line at the DMV, anytime I’m waiting for anything. I carry pencils, paper, and a sharpener everywhere I go. If I’m at home I draw on the couch while listening to movies. I don’t own a drawing board. I draw on a piece of foam core. It’s super light and I can carry it from room to room or out and about.

 

 

4. Does art pay your bills? If not, what does and how do you manage that with all the art you produce every day?

It pays most. I have a 40 hour a week day job at a printer, which is why I’m always looking to squeeze in a bit of drawing time wherever and whenever I can. The art is right at the edge of paying everything. Right now I’m just nervous to take the leap without a safety net.

 

 

5. Did you study art, where?

I had a high school art teacher who was incredible and giving to me. He let me do live figure model drawing as a freshman, and we went on several art trips to Chicago, NYC, and Washington D. C. I had a ton of material knowledge before going to college. I then went to The Columbus College of Art & Design in Ohio where I studied with C.F. Payne and John Jude Palencar. I’ve been lucky to have amazing instructors.

 

 

6. You mentioned to me that you used to be socially awkward. Do you think that cost you any opportunities? What has changed?

Yeah it definitely does before the days of social media and to a lesser degree now. There are two jobs of the artist, do good work and get that work seen. And if you aren’t comfortable networking and being social, the people who are will get called first, because often people refer their friends for work, or shows, or introductions to the right people happen just while being out in the community.

 

7. You seem to be well connected in the fantasy art world. Do you attend conventions? Which ones? How do you choose where to be and when?

I’ve never attended conventions. That is changing this year as Patrick and Jeannie Wilshire offered me a table at Illuxcon. Really honored and excited to do more shows.

 

 

8. Do you have any other loves other than art? Tell us about that.

I love biking and I’m lucky I live in such a great place to bike as Marin. So any time not making art is spent on the bike or taking tons of photos wherever I go as possible reference material. Everything I do feeds the art obsession though really. It consumes most of my thoughts in the day. It would be nice to have a real separate hobby. Not enough time in the day.

 

 

9. In our conversations you have said that your work is about “beautiful decay” and that “If I can get you to feel what I feel for the subject I’m not alone.” Do you feel alone? How so? Do you think your intended emotion reaches your buyers and affects them in any way?

I am alone most of the time. Art is a solitary pursuit and you are just alone for hours on end working on things.I think my intended emotions connect with the viewer for sure. Not always. But its always the goal to get a rise out of the viewer to lead them to where you want them to think or go or feel. You know while your making the piece though, you’ll be half way in and you can feel it swell and its pure joy all the way through to the finish on a good one that’s working. Then usually those seem to be the pieces the audience reacts to the most.

 

 

10. Tell us about your favorite pieces of art that you own and how you found them.

I have two Palencar pieces John gave me for helping him move and I traded drawings with Troy Nixey whom I love his work. He’s the reason I’m obsessed with fish and octopi and ocean life in general. He started following me on Facebook and asked if we could trade and I was honored and more excited than I tried to let on. I don’t think he knows how much of an impact his comics had on me. Unless he reads this.

 

 

11. Do you collect art? How do you decide what is “worth” buying?
The only art I own is art I’ve been given or traded pieces an artist I like. But what makes art worth buying for me would be a connection to the subject matter or the artist, and then the highest attention to craftsmanship and the art object itself being a thing of beauty. I think the way most of us live in smaller spaces. Its more fun to collect a larger number of smaller pieces rather than one or two really large pieces.

 

 

12. In many ways, collectors are investors. They are not just purchasing art they like but they are literally helping fund an artist’s career. At an art show recently I overheard someone say “I really love the piece, but I don’t know anything about the artist.” What do you feel about this? What would you want a collector to know about you to make them feel like they’re investing well?

My main interest in collecting a given artists work would first be a connection to the piece and wanting to know more about the body of work and their goals and aims and to know that the dialogue will continue, do they plan on making work for a long time to come. I am in this for the long haul, it’s all I ever wanted to do. I’m completely in love with making images and I’m always looking for ways to be better, to make a better product and to entertain my audience along the way.

 

 

13. We’ve talked a lot about making a living as an artist. Does the financial aspect of selling art affect your work? How?
Sure, it defines the playing field you are able to work in to some extent. If giant pieces aren’t selling you make smaller work. And you make work that is appealing at market, but I use that to define the playing field, never the content. I’ll also work larger or smaller or float between different media to fit a market. That feels like staying true to the vision.

 

 

14. If you could be besties with any artist living or dead who would it be and why?

I’ve been really lucky to get to meet some of my heroes and spend time with them. Mike Mignola and I got to meet finally at a show here in the bay area. I love that guy. So that would be the living.

As for the dead, We’re just dreaming so I’ll shoot big. I’d love to have known and partied with J.C. Leyendecker and Charles Beach. I’d love to have a drink and then fight with Jackson Pollock. Afterwards take Lee Krasner away from him to run my studio. Make collaborative pieces with H.R.Giger and Moebius. Hold Picaso while Dali punches him in the face and we both luagh and laugh. I’d love to adore women with Klimt while Egon Schiele looks on from the corner of the room and we tell him he sucks. I’d love to steal Frida from Diego. Told you I was dreaming big. I’d treat her right. And I would adore spending any amount of time with Durer.

 

15. Any final thoughts?
Thank you so much Marc and Lauren for creating EDO and giving my work a really great place to live online.

If you love an artists work, take a minute to tell them so and support them in whatever way you can. Buy a print or piece. Start with all the amazing work on everydayoriginal.com It really is the perfect place to start a collection and begin a dialogue with an artist you love.

 

ORIGINALS FROM STEVEN

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Featured Artist: Kristina Carroll

Kristina Carroll

For our first artist interview we reached out to Kristina Carroll to find out what makes her tick, how she made the leap from acting to art, and her main form of winter exercise.

 

Kristina Carroll

 

 

1. What are you working on these days? Paint us a picture 😉

I’m planning out my next several months right now. Spectrum Live is just around the corner so I want to try to have something new for the show. I also just signed on to illustrate interiors for a book project which I am very excited about because I’ve been eager to do black and white interiors for a while now. I am going to start working on a book collecting the best art from first few years of the Month of Love and Month of Fear challenges. I’m already thinking about the next Month of Fear challenge and how I can up the game even more on that. On the teaching end, I am looking forward to working with Gamblin oil paints soon, doing presentations and workshops around New England. (I get to fly out to Portland in June to visit them and learn more about how they make their products) I’ve been doing something similar for Strathmore for a year and it has been great. I love teaching and I’m a materials geek so working with these companies is perfect for me right now.

 

2. I met you when you were assisting Donato Giancola. Did you seek out that opportunity? How did you land that gig?

I met Donato when I was just starting to get back into art after a disappointing first career with theater. We were both interviewed for this documentary about Dungeons & Dragons and how it inspired people to be creative. Because Donato is one of the nicest and most supportive artists in the industry, he invited me to his studio to chat about the industry and what direction I wanted to go in. I had such a great time, I kept going back to the studio to talk and to paint and we became friends. It was the exact right moment for me to meet someone like him because I was just starting on a plan to go back to school for art and had to quit my full time office job so when I mentioned it, he offered me the position of studio assistant. For the 4 years of school and one year after, I worked with him.

 

3. How did that time influence your career and/or your work?

It was immensely important in my life. I don’t believe I am understating it when I say I would not be nearly who I am today (both as an artist and person) without his support. SVA is a wonderful school but Donato’s mentorship really pushed me to another level entirely. He took me to several conventions. As a result, I got to meet wonderful people. I started asking for portfolio reviews sophomore year in college. Donato taught me a respect for craft and method that I use to this day. He is a professional in so many more ways beyond his extraordinary art. That is a bar I continue to strive for. I will always be grateful for the experience.

 


nautilus4. Best client ever is _______. Why?

The next one who hires me of course! Actually, I loved working for Realms of Fantasy before it disappeared. Doug Cohen was art directing at the time and he was very supportive and enthusiastic. I got lots of creative freedom and just enjoyed the whole process. I am so sad that magazine isn’t around anymore.

 

5. After working with Donato, you moved to Boston. Why?

It’s the classic story: I met a guy. Scott lived in Boston when we met in NYC. Things were going well but long distance is rough so we decided we liked each other enough for me to give Boston a try. Here I am still 4 years later so I guess it was a good decision!

 

6. How much snow is too much?

When the snow piles become taller than me, and then I have to climb on top of the piles to rearrange them so we have room to put MORE snow…yeah…that’s too much. At least we broke the record this year! 2015 is officially the snowiest winter in Boston’s recorded history.

 


7. You started the Month of Love and Month of Fear projects. What are these projects and what pulled you to create them?

These are month-long art challenges twice a year in February and October where I invite a bunch of artists to join me in weekly art making. The goal is to set aside time to create a bunch of new personal work. I come up with new challenge prompts for every week and everyone creates art inspired by the prompt. While I do like to have a core group of artists who commit to the challenge, it’s open to everyone. I repost the best work I find via Tumblr to our page and I have discovered some amazing new artists as a result of this challenge. Many of these artists use these challenges to create standout new art and level-up in their work. It’s really wonderful what a little community and pressure can create. Many of these challenge pieces end up in annuals and get artists noticed on a larger scale. The first Month of Love started as a need to reconnect with the art community. I had a pretty vibrant social life in NYC but Boston turned out to be a very different vibe and I was feeling isolated and a bit stale. Plus it was January and winter out here just makes everything worse. I needed community and I needed motivation, so I had this idea for a big group art challenge and started sending out emails before I could talk myself out of it. Luckily a really great group of people thought it also sounded like fun! I couldn’t have asked for a better bunch of artists to get this thing off the ground. The first MoL started as a daily art challenge. That was amazing but a bit intense so I changed it to weekly challenges when I did Month of Fear later that year. Now we are 3 years in and still going strong!

 

nautilus by kristina carroll8. Freelancer’s are understandably protective of their time, why start a project that features other people’s work?

Because being an artist is hard. Art is a self-sustaining community. This world is not kind to artists. If we don’t help each other, be each other’s cheerleaders, constantly strive to create an environment that makes it just a little bit easier to be these nonconforming creative weirdoes without starving- then who will? I could go on about the importance of community or the benefits of cooperation and shared experiences on happiness but I think the truth is pretty simple: We make each other better through engagement. Better artists and better people. Call it karma or enlightened self-interest or just good business but when you invest in the community, it invests back in you.

 

9. You’re dating another illustrator, Scott Bakal. Do you influence each other’s work in any way? How?

I don’t think you can be so close to another artist (or another human) without some things bleeding over. We’ve both introduced each other to new artists and I know my perspective has broadened considerably since being in a relationship with him because our tastes are so different. I love that. As far as seriously influencing the actual art, I really don’t know. We enjoy each other’s work and it’s great that we both like art and can talk about it. But our work and personal aesthetics are so different that there is not a lot of room for overlap. I think the way Scott thinks about art and looks at art (he’s a very conceptual illustrator) has certainly been influential. I love the way he thinks and he often comes up with ideas that knock my socks off. I think I’ve probably been more influenced by him simply because of where we are with our art and who we are as people. Scott is very comfortable in the way he creates since he’s been doing this longer but always striving to be better and trying new things.

 

10. Do you think you could date a non-artist?

I highly doubt it. I absolutely have to be with someone motivated, passionate and supportive so I’ve almost always dated some sort of creative person. Being a professional artist is sort of like being from another country. Relationships are hard enough without having to navigate a culture gap. And, as a woman, it is even harder. There are a lot of reasons for this and I think a whole book could be written about it. There’s generally a lot more scrutiny, jealousy and insecurity involved when the woman in a relationship is passionate and dedicated to an art career. Women are still fighting against a culture that is structured to give us less confidence and less respect, so take all the ups and downs of an art career and just put a magnification on it. Finding a partner who can be supportive of this life, especially in the harder times – because there are always harder times – is absolutely essential.

 

11. Do you collect art? What kind, and from whom?

I have a very minimal collection so far. I have not previously had a lot of space, stability or disposable income, so haven’t developed the drive to actively collect. Much of what I have is from trading with friends and a few very thoughtful gifts. The first piece of art I ever properly bought was an original from Ted Naifeh. It’s a beautiful page from the “Good Neighbors” Graphic novel he did with Holly Black. I have some precious gems from Michael Kaluta, Omar Rayaan, Charles Vess and a small collection of lovely cookbook art from Alan Witchonke (which is a long story) and I’m about to get another food-themed original from Anna Christenson, which I’m excited about. I guess most of my art collection is related to food and comics!

 

12. If you could have a piece of art from any living artist, what piece and from whom?

This is a really hard question and this answer will probably change weekly. Right now I think my answer will be something by Allen Williams. Apart from being one of the sweetest guys around, he is one of my absolute favorite artists currently. I have a few of his prints around the studio: Tree of Tales and his Minotaur drawing. I just get lost in them and would love to have the originals. He also started a painting at the IMC last year that I’m crazy about. I would kill to be able to look at any of those every day. (http://ijustdraw.blogspot.com/2014/06/a-new-painting-started-at-illustrators.html ) I think Allen would get a lot of my money if I ever started collecting in earnest.

 

house of leaves by kristina carroll13. How do you stay sane and keep from burn-out?

At some point in this career you do get burnt out and you do go a little nuts. I think the trick is to 1) Understand it’s temporary and 2) Forgive yourself and learn from it. I believe in order to grow you have to occasionally push your limits. This also this goes back to what I was saying earlier: If you have cultivated a good community and you realize you aren’t alone, this becomes much easier. Don’t be afraid to ask for help and treat yourself with respect. Mental and physical health are your business partners and they will screw you if you don’t give them their due. Practice mindfulness. Meditation is a wonderful way of exercising and strengthening mental and emotional self- awareness and control. Exercise regularly! Your body’s stress response system doesn’t know the difference between sprinting on a treadmill and running from a tiger. When you get your heart-rate up, you condition your body’s ability to deal with ALL stress among many other wonderful chemical reactions that make you smarter and happier!

 

14. There’s been a growing conversation around women in art. Do you have any thoughts on what it means to be a woman creating art at this time in history?

I have many thoughts. I’ve mentioned a few already but overall I think this a very exciting time to be a woman in the illustration industry. Particularly in the science fiction/fantasy genres because it’s fiction’s responsibility to give our collective conscious the tools to shape our world. Right now we are reaping both the benefits and some of the backlash from the previous women’s rights movements. There are some very important conversations being had that still need to be had. I am certainly learning a lot and very grateful for this community of so many thoughtful, smart and well-spoken women (and many men too!) The difference now is a lot of very intelligent and successful women are now in the upper ranks and becoming significant voices in many of these conversations, lending them an authority and perspective that is very important. I feel that I not only have the responsibility to affect change but I also have more power and confidence thanks to them.

 

15. Where can we find you this year? Conventions, coffee shops?

All of the above! I will be at Spectrum (table 15) and Illuxcon. Though whether I am able to snag table space at Illuxcon remains to be seen, I still plan on going. I’m hoping to show at Dragon Con this year as well but those jury results are not in yet. In the meantime you can always find me at the local Starbucks!

 

16. Any last thoughts?

Thank you so much Marc and Lauren for not only creating this terrific community in Every Day Original, but also inviting me to participate. Both personally and with the Month of Love crowd. I’m excited to see where all this goes next!

 

 

ORIGINALS FROM KRISTINA

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Curator’s Picks

Original Art Curator's Picks

Did You Miss These?

We post every day, but we know you don’t look every day. We have Google, trust me.

As Curator of Every Day Original, I see a lot of great art, both on the site an in our submissions file. I also watch all the site stats and I know the daily post is an ephemeral and sadly missable event. I will be doing a semi-regular post here about available art we love that you may have missed.

Here are three pieces we feel went above and beyond and are worth a second look. The first from Scott Fischer who is taking on new media like no artist we know. The second from Dave Dorman who is a living legend in the Star Wars and comics industries. Finally, from Randy Gallegos a new piece from the MtG artist himself.

And if you want to make sure you don’t miss anything, sign up for our mailing list!

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“Rose” (Oil on Copper 5X5)

by Scott Fischer

The second in my series of oil paintings on copper clad board. It is am FW ink underpainting, which is then oil painted upon with Gamblin Fast Matte oilpaint, and finally, the piece is engraved into with a scratchboard technique. In person the light will dance across the surface depending on where you stand and even plays across the direction of the engraved marks.

The painting is 5×5 and comes with the frame in picture.

I will post a video here soon. In the meantime you can check out a vid on my Instagram (ScottMFischer) or Facebook I am (Scott M Fischer)

$475 $475

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No interest for 6 months.
Just click Paypal Credit on the cart page.

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Founder and Curator of Every Day Original. I also make art, teach art, and art direct. Thanks for visiting!

My Website: https://www.marcscheff.com/






 

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The Creature

by Dave Dorman

A tribute to the wonderful early days of horror films. This piece is painted on a wood block and is ready to hang.

$400 $400

EDO now offers installment plans.
No interest for 6 months.
Just click Paypal Credit on the cart page.

Out of stock

Founder and Curator of Every Day Original. I also make art, teach art, and art direct. Thanks for visiting!

My Website: https://www.marcscheff.com/






 

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This Twilight Garden

by Randy Gallegos

6×8″
Oils on canvas over panel
$395

Inspired by the song of this title by The Cure.

$395 $395

EDO now offers installment plans.
No interest for 6 months.
Just click Paypal Credit on the cart page.

Out of stock

Founder and Curator of Every Day Original. I also make art, teach art, and art direct. Thanks for visiting!

My Website: https://www.marcscheff.com/