1/29/2009

A FLY ON THE WALL...

I'm sitting in my studio tonight, conflicted with a recent development in my career. As an artist and a teacher, I never had an honest gauge of the perception of my work, my life, and my affect on people. A recent post at Illustration Art, hosted by David Apatoff, has given me a bit of perspective on the matter. Every day, I live a full life through my work, by sharing what I know, by being good and honest, and by pouring my heart and soul into the things that I create. I have never taken an easy path to my ends. I have found that these things have yielded true loyalty from friends, former students, patrons, piers, and even followers of my work that I have never met. Some very flattering, and moving things have been said about my life (that is my work, and my person), and some very scathing things about my skill, and my mind.

I have been incensed in the past at the success of those who are undeserving of their recognition. The situations where an artist has taken the easy way out and used shock, cheap tricks, or fashion in place of thought, skill, raw talent, and discipline. For me, these emotions come from a place of jealousy, and desire for what they have gained. The reward disproportionate to the reality. Admittedly, it burns hot in me for days at a time. Yet, in every scenario, I have found a way to turn that seed of jealousy that grows in my gut, into a challenge. I set a new bar. I find new ways of rearranging my opinions; of rewiring my thinking to find the positive. I have been fortunate to learn from everyone who has found success with their work, even if I disagree with it. In reality, it is the success that I begrudge, not the human being.

I have realized that the internet can be honest. Calloused, distant, and often sordid, but often honest. Individuals get to hide behind anonymous titles and throw stones at arms length. As hard as it is to read the harsh words of a critic, there is sometimes truth in those words. If an artist can put aside their ego, and see their own work (somewhat) objectively, they can grow exponentially. I have never been able to be a fly on the wall in this away. I can only relate it to being at your own funeral. At 32, I live my life as an artist, through teaching, painting, drawing, listening, reading, creating, and most importantly, sharing. I have tried to create artwork as I have tried to live my life: honestly.

I feel emotionally ill when I look at artwork that I wish that I had created, or that I am not capable of making. I take something away from those works. Images pop in sequence in my mind at nights like an old flashbulb, sometimes keeping me awake. My studio is littered with dozens of failed personal experiments for every piece that is commissioned by a client. If critics want to dwell on the quality of a painting that I created on deadline, a year or two ago, let them. I have moved on to the next. You are living in my past. Please, tell me something about my work that I don't already know.

When faced with such criticism, you only have two choices- to cower and let them win, or to be emboldened and face that next blank canvas that we all recognize as "judgement".

My most sincere thank you to Mr. Apatoff, and all of my benefactors. You have honored, and moved me.
To my detractors- I'm just getting started.

27 comments:

Josh Burch said...

I was wondering if anyone had told you about that. Hope all is well Sterling

andreas said...

i´m not sure if i would call the internet honest.
its way more chaotic then that i think.. but you do get opinions and you can grow from them if you take the hate and put it into the "i´ll work harder" basket.

some work more because they want to be loved ("ill make them fans!") and some because they want to show them how wrong they were ("i cant draw feet? ill show them!").

either way, more work, more passion is always good.

thx for writing this, i had to write a comment even though i dont really SAY anything i guess.
your post made me think and brought up a discussion among me and some friends.

mclean said...

Always a pleasure to read what you put in here. For whatever reason, I always imagined your work as "detractor-proof", but apparently I was mistaken! Still though, I imagine its a only a select few who would gripe and nitpick over your stuff. You're a positive guy, and that attracts other positive people, and I think that alone will make you impervious to said critics and nay-sayers. Looking forward to the next time you post.

Francis Vallejo said...

Hey Sterling. I think the fact that people are willing to go to such lengths examining your work, negatively or positively, shows how powerful it is. If it didn't matter people wouldn't spend so much time talking about it. Keepp fighting the good fight!!!!!!

looking forward to the academy this summer!!

David Apatoff said...

Sterling, since I am the guy who unfairly strapped you across a bulls eye by writing about your work on my Illustration Art blog, I feel I should weigh in here. As of this morning, I have received 90(!)comments about your work on my blog, the vast majority of them wildly positive. They include some thoughtful positions, both pro and con, about how your work compares to the work of Maxfield Parrish, Rene Magritte, Toulouse Lautrec, Saul Steinberg and others, but at least you are in the right neighborhood.

I feared that the comments of the few (anonymous) critics would sting you disproportionately because you obviously care so much about your work. But if you read their words carefully, a substantial percentage of them are really critical of me, not you, for comparing your work to "Fine Art" or to particular fine artists they like. They think I am talking in hyperbole, and thus feel compelled to take a poke at my assessment of your work. Since you are too humble to blow your own horn using the terms I use, it seems unfair that you should feel vicariously a blow that was directed at me. I hope you will keep that in mind as you digest these comments.

For my part, I found myself educated by even the tough comments, as usual. One of the commenters, for example, forced me to go back and take a fresh look at the way you render hands. As a result of the process, I found myself more convinced than ever about the quality of your work in general and of your hands in particular.

Keep up the great work!

Best regards,

David

Andrew R. Wright said...

You created a dialogue, both good and bad, without saying a word. A testament to your work, my friend. I hope one day my work can do the same.

You inspire us all Sterling! Keep rockin!

Haylee said...

Sterling,

As Lemony Snicket has put it: "There are those people in the world that start fires and then there are those that put them out." You as an individual are very tolerant of many worldly things. So, although your integrity is not easily dampened: I only hope that you remember that those of us who have studied and befriended you will always help in upholding your character.

Like what was mentioned before: fight the good fight, Sterling. Refusing to allow such scathing words affect your person, and presenting the challenge back is quite powerful. Not to mention inspiring.

Can't wait for the academy this summer, and take care!

-h

sensei said...

live learn and love till u die.

David Kassan said...

Hi SH,

Awesome work!! I'm a huge fan, sorry to read your latest post, don't take that crap to heart, everything is subjective and some people are D bags, just keep making the really Awesome work, here today gone tomorrow!

cheers,

david

Anonymous said...

Hey Sterling,

Yeah, boy howdy, David's blog started a pretty lengthy conversation there...I would be honored to instigate such passion! But, from the limited interaction I have with you, I have a feeling you are taking it in stride.

Too many people hide behind the anonymity of the internet to say stuff they would never say in person...sometimes I get caught up arguing with these doofuses (doofi?), but most of the time I just try to ignore them.

It was nice to see that bunch of work...I didn't know you had a blog, but I will bookmark it and check back.

Ken Meyer Jr.

cEwald said...

like my boy kool keith said:
Haters come around from downtown
I get surround sound - I get big!
not really sure what it means, but it might make sense later.
what you do is honest and beautiful and so long as you do it for yourself, from the heart, you are doing it right.

Anonymous said...

I just found out about your work and it is great. Don't change your style just because a few people on the internet don't like it. People hated the impressionists and criticized Picasso and made fun of Jackson Pollack. People always criticize artists. I don't know why you should be the only artist who doesn't get criticized. If those otherr artists changed when people criticized them, they would never go on to be great like Picasso.

Brian M. said...

I'm one of the guys who thinks your work is okay, but nothing special.

What I'm really surprised at is not your own sensitivity to this kind of evaluation, but David Apatoff's. He seems personally hurt by the fact that his taste is not universally agreed with and lauded. Poor baby. You'd think a lawyer might be used to the idea of disagreement, and have a thicker skin! Gasp--other people disagree with you! The horror, the shock! Poor David. He'll get over it somehow.

I don't think your work compares with Maxfield Parrish, Rene Magritte, or Toulouse Lautrec, but that doesn't mean that I am being disrepectful or mean. That's a very high standard to be compared with (although I might disagree with that list too). Your work is good, in my opinion, but not great.

In fact, I think its almost impossible for artists nowadays to approach the standards of yesteryear, because the marketplace doesn't give them the time to do that. A Leyendecker or Rockwell or Cornwell would have a lot more time to do a piece (far more lead time at the least) than a comparable illustrator today.

So keep up the good work, and count your blessings. Its the rare guy who hits his peak at 32. You should be excited at the idea that there's more mountain to climb and time to do it. Most artists are that way. Good luck with your work and career.

Jorge Mascarenhas said...

Hey Sterling,
You're getting reactions out your work, mostly positive (I would say the vast majority) and some negative...the GREAT thing is that you're always fighting every day, and that's a quality very few people have...most would get discouraged. But that's the difference maker, as you said you take the positives out of the negatives. You have a great career that most people wish they had at your age. "The never die" mentality will take you a long way in the world of art where you are faced with denial, criticism, negativity, and jealousy every single day. Not everyone is going to be a fan, there's always people who will dislike whatever you do...no matter how good it is.
Hope you're well man...
Cheers,
Jorge

Derrick said...

First, I would like to thank you for creating this blog. It helps to put a human being in place of the mystified "uber-artist" whose work I admire. It's also inspiring to hear the honest reflections of an illustrator who has "made it" and know that he/she shares similar thoughts to me or my peers. As a recent graduate that is fighting an uphill battle to establish a career as an artist, words of encouragement from a recognized presence in illustration are always appreciated.

Thank you,

Derrick

Rahul krishnan said...

Dear Sterling,
I am an avid follower of ur works.(Me, Rahul Krishnan, an artist from India).I hav read ur post on David's comments. I really like ur perception towards the criticism and the way u see "that next blank canvas as judgement"!. that's really encouraging..
great works! keep going.. cheers!

http://rahul-krishnan.blogspot.com/

Duncan Barton said...

Hi Sterling, Just wanted to say thanks for creating a blog such as this. I've found every post incredibly relevant and inspirational, just as you are in person! Reading your posts is very helpful to artists such as myself trying to find his feet in the market and I hope to contribute to the discussion when I can. Take care!

naomiful said...

The Haterade only helps fuel the fire...

Anonymous said...

That's quite an exciting dialogue you've caused over there. I wish someone cared about my art so much.

Kenny Callicutt said...

I like the idea of when it stings, find that grain of truth, let the rest roll off and apply it to the next attempt.

David Sweck said...

I aspire to one day have my work create such a chatter as yours does. Regardless of who you're compared to, one thing is clear, your presence in history has definitely been written in.

Lune said...

"My studio is littered with dozens of failed personal experiments for every piece that is commissioned by a client."- I have only a few (because of my laziness), but they are laying on the floor and they discourage me every day. I'd like to know how you keep yourself going. I'm a fly on the wall, but the fearful one ...

burt said...

"I feel emotionally ill when I look at artwork that I wish that I had created, or that I am not capable of making."

Yes! I have this too! And I have felt this when looking at your work. This is like the day I discovered that I'm not the only person that feels chilly tingles up their spine, when music hits them a certain way.

Rot said...

Thanks for this post. I found it at the right time. Your work is beautiful and stunning and inspiring.

Anonymous said...

Hello Sterling,

I want to thank you for being a big inspiration for me!

Last year i had to write something about myself, as a art-student on an academy in Holland and i was looking in the book "Illustration Now"...
When i saw your illustrations and the text that you wrote, i could really relate to it, and i was happy to see that there was an artist who uses different materials and gives his own perspective to reality.

However, school didn't work out for me, because the teachers in the Netherlands are really stuck in old fashioned rules... abstract art and simplicity.
-I had to stop drawing,
-they didn't like 'nice-looking-art' because that was 'only for childbooks',
-a teacher said that i shit the same work everyday.

I get almost depressed of all the critics that i get, because it made me feel that i could never do something right, although i put e.v.e.r.y.t.h.i.n.g that i have in my work. I couldn't let them take my joy away from my art.
I decided to quite school and one week later i started my own company...

Now...Everything is going super!! I have so many projects that i don't know where to begin?! Walldesigns, paintings, illustrations, gamedesign, i love it all! I was reading your blog about the critics that you get and i thought: Yes, there will be always people who will hate your work or love your work. But the most important thing of making art, is that I have to be happy with what i make! You know the best if you devellop yourself or not. It really hit me when i showed somebody a masterpiece of art. The person said: "i don't like it, why do the humans look like aliens?"
Then i thought: "Some people just have an other taste than me, and i will never be able to satisfy everybody!"

Sorry for my long letter, but i just had to share it. A LOT of things that you write are like the same thoughts that i have. Being proactive, make art because you must, dream big, high goals. You're like a preacher man, i'm like: "Yeah Sterling, AMEN!" here. Hahaha.
Thank you!!!

Marjolein

Sterling Hundley said...

Josh- yes, thank you.
andreas- the word honest is certainly giving the internet too much credit. I'm thrilled to hear that my post brought about a conversation between you and your friends.
mclean- not detractor proof, and not recession proof, I guess! Thanks for posting. I hope that you are well.
francis-Thank you for getting my back. I am looking forward to catching up this summer, as well. I hope that you are well!
David- I was thrilled to appear on your site, and all that I am taking away from the experience is the positive. I always take the negatives in my life and turn them into challenges. I started a new sketchbook for just hands!

Gringo said...

I found about you through the Illustration Art post. That article and the subsequent comments got me thinking about the good & bad of the world... but thankfully mr sterling, your work is all about the good! Keep up with your good work and inspiration. I'll be looking forward, to someday, meet you, and hopefully learn something (i'm a bad learner). Greetings from Ecuador!