Create art podcast, commentary, bare necessities.
Speaker:Hello friend.
Speaker:This is Timothy Kiem O'Brien, your head instigator for create art podcast,
Speaker:where I bring my over 30 years of experience in the arts and education
Speaker:world to help you tame your inner critic and create more than you consume.
Speaker:So I'm continuing on with the make.
Speaker:Fun A Habit series.
Speaker:And it's a 30 day workbook and it's put on by Michael Brennan.
Speaker:And the book is called Make Fun A Habit.
Speaker:And what it does is it gives you different things each day
Speaker:that you can utilize to put fun.
Speaker:Back into your life and make fun a habit for yourself.
Speaker:Now I heard about it from his podcast, creative chats.
Speaker:And again, links to the book into the podcast will be in the show notes for you.
Speaker:I was reading through the book and I really enjoyed everything
Speaker:that he was trying to do.
Speaker:And so I thought, well, Why don't I just do an episode for each day?
Speaker:So that'll give me 30 episodes for this.
Speaker:And we're just about halfway through the book here.
Speaker:So if you've missed the other episodes, definitely check them out.
Speaker:And learn from Mike and myself and how you can put fun back into your life.
Speaker:So today we're talking about the bare necessities.
Speaker:Now I'm not talking about, you know, the the song in the jungle book, you know,
Speaker:the bare necessities, although I'm a big bear and I love that love that show.
Speaker:But we're, what we're talking about is what are the bare
Speaker:necessities for you to do your art.
Speaker:Whatever that art is, whether it be composing music, writing.
Speaker:Sculpture, painting, whatever you're interested in.
Speaker:What are the bare necessities that you need?
Speaker:And that's going to be different with each and every artistic discipline.
Speaker:Now, a lot of times we think, man, this is going to be really expensive.
Speaker:You know, it's going to be really expensive to to start a painting or,
Speaker:you know, to get my book published, but there's ways around that.
Speaker:You can use the materials around your house that you currently have right
Speaker:now to paint a wonderful picture.
Speaker:You don't have to go to the art stores, which Hey, you know, I love
Speaker:going to the art stores as well.
Speaker:We have a Michael's locally here and I love to take my
Speaker:wife and my kids to the store.
Speaker:And then when we you know, check out, it's just like, Oh, ouch, that hurts.
Speaker:And a lot of times we can get.
Speaker:Stopped by how much it's going to cost us.
Speaker:But you can always like for paintings, you can always reuse canvases.
Speaker:You can always, you know, there's, I'm sure there's junk around your house, quote
Speaker:unquote junk, and you can put it together and make a sculpture out of it, or like
Speaker:me, I'd like collecting comic books.
Speaker:I made a collage a couple of years ago, just by cutting out some comic book
Speaker:things It was a book that was promoting comic books coming out in the new year.
Speaker:So I took out some of those pictures, cut out some of those
Speaker:pictures and slapped it together and made a made a collage out of it.
Speaker:So I'm sure you have something like that in your house.
Speaker:A couple of years back, I did a sculpture of a door and deadbolt.
Speaker:I tore it apart and then I put it together in a different way
Speaker:and I made a sculpture out of it.
Speaker:Why not?
Speaker:You know, you're only limited by your imagination.
Speaker:So your artwork does not have to the materials for your artwork
Speaker:don't have to be that expensive.
Speaker:When we're talking about music creation, you can go, let's say
Speaker:you want to you know do a guitar song, you know, a song on guitar.
Speaker:You can go to your local Salvation Army or or thrift store or
Speaker:something, something like that.
Speaker:And go get an old guitar and start strumming on it.
Speaker:And then once you get better, you get better strings.
Speaker:Maybe you go to a guitar store and get a better guitar, get a beginner, you
Speaker:know, get a brand new beginner guitar.
Speaker:Once you start making money from your art, doesn't matter.
Speaker:We all have to start from somewhere.
Speaker:With podcasting, we all start with zero audience.
Speaker:I know when I started my podcast journey back in 2006, I
Speaker:started off with zero audience.
Speaker:Now I have people in Singapore listening to this podcast.
Speaker:I have people in Romania, a ton of different countries.
Speaker:Canada is a huge country for me, France, Germany, the UK.
Speaker:People are listening to this podcast from all over the world, and I want to thank
Speaker:you all for doing that, but it all started with me Using what I had available.
Speaker:I used a media host called blog talk radio and My cordless phone and I
Speaker:did it that way and I put out You know, about 60 episodes that way.
Speaker:Now, when I got better at it and when I became more serious about podcasting
Speaker:and about 2016, that's when I started to add microphones and different
Speaker:software and started investing in it.
Speaker:So I took my hobby.
Speaker:Which was podcasting, and I got serious about it, and that's when I started
Speaker:spending a little bit of money here and there and to have the setup that I
Speaker:have right now, but you can start with.
Speaker:Let's say you want to do drawing.
Speaker:You can start with the pencil that may be in the junk drawer and a piece of
Speaker:paper and just start sketching every day.
Speaker:You know, you can set up your own still life.
Speaker:Every day.
Speaker:One of the things that I did back in in college, we had a intro to
Speaker:drawing class and our instructor there loved techno music.
Speaker:He was from the UK, loved techno music.
Speaker:So he would have that blaring.
Speaker:throughout the whole class.
Speaker:And his first assignment was in your book bags, pull everything out, put it in front
Speaker:of you, draw it, just draw how it looks.
Speaker:You know, I had a pack of cigarettes.
Speaker:I had a lighter.
Speaker:I had my keys.
Speaker:I had my wallets and that's all I had.
Speaker:But it was stuff that I already had, so I didn't spend a dime on it.
Speaker:Now, did I spend money for the class?
Speaker:Yeah, absolutely.
Speaker:I did, you know, and I'm still paying for it these days.
Speaker:I'm still paying, you know, college tuition for it these days, but.
Speaker:The objects that I had right then and there are what I
Speaker:first started to learn with.
Speaker:And you don't have to, you know, go to Michael's or go to Blick's and,
Speaker:and, and buy stuff left and right.
Speaker:You can use what you have right there in front of you.
Speaker:So I definitely, you know, challenge you to take a look around your house.
Speaker:You know, you have an idea of what you would like, you know, in a perfect world,
Speaker:I could wave my magic wand and I could give you all the supplies that you needed.
Speaker:But really what would you learn from that?
Speaker:You would learn to rely on me to wave my magic wand, which I'm not going to do.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:I'm not going to wave my magic wand.
Speaker:I need it for myself that I mentioned.
Speaker:I have wife and kids that like to go to Michael's.
Speaker:So I need that magic wand for myself.
Speaker:Maybe one day it'll pay for our Michael's trips, but just look around your house.
Speaker:If, if you want to do sketching or painting or even photography, You
Speaker:probably have a phone right now.
Speaker:You probably have a smartphone right now that has a fantastic camera on it.
Speaker:We've talked to professional photographers on this show that have said your camera
Speaker:on your phone is better than most of the cameras that are out there.
Speaker:So you already have something that you can use in your hands right now.
Speaker:Go ahead and utilize it.
Speaker:And Make art with it.
Speaker:You know again, your music, you want to be a musician, you want to play
Speaker:guitar, go to the thrift store, grab an old guitar, or you can go on to
Speaker:like Facebook marketplace or next door and somebody will have something
Speaker:that they're trying to get rid of.
Speaker:Utilize that for yourself because that's the bare necessity.
Speaker:You just need something.
Speaker:It doesn't have to be perfect.
Speaker:It doesn't have to be beautiful.
Speaker:It doesn't have to be, you know, finished.
Speaker:It just has to be something.
Speaker:And that's where you start.
Speaker:And then you get better at drawing that.
Speaker:And then you move on to new things and better things.
Speaker:And that's where you go with that.
Speaker:So getting back to making fun, I have it.
Speaker:Mike gives us questions, action items, and tips.
Speaker:So let's go ahead and jump into the questions.
Speaker:First question is what ordinary objects already around you can
Speaker:you repurpose in your process.
Speaker:So I'm into a lot of different arts.
Speaker:You know, I love to draw, I love to paint I love to write I love to make music.
Speaker:So what do I have right here?
Speaker:Well, I do have a bass guitar that needs to be restrung so I could use that.
Speaker:I have a couple of keyboards here that I can use to make music.
Speaker:I have a.
Speaker:Uh, music making program called magics that the intro music that
Speaker:you heard used it with that.
Speaker:Now that cost me 50, 30, I'm sorry, 20 a month to do that, but they have free
Speaker:versions of that kind of stuff too.
Speaker:So find out what is free, do a little bit of research on that.
Speaker:And I'm sure you're going to be able to find objects in your house that
Speaker:you can use to start a project with.
Speaker:Next question is, are there other systems or structures that can
Speaker:be adapted into a new process?
Speaker:So, 1 thing that I really have wanted to work on in the past year is my
Speaker:drawing and I recently went out to Michael's and I got some some specialized
Speaker:markers because I had an idea of something that I had saw on Tik TOK.
Speaker:And I thought, well, let me go ahead and give this a shot.
Speaker:You know, let me, let me try to do this.
Speaker:At first I tried it with colored pencils and looked okay.
Speaker:But then I got these specialized markers, which cost a little bit of money.
Speaker:The first thing I did as I tried it with what I had it in
Speaker:hand, which was colored pencils.
Speaker:And then I moved up from there and to create something that, You know, I was
Speaker:pretty happy with my first time out.
Speaker:It was a watercolor markers and they didn't cost that much.
Speaker:And, you know, there was, you know, you could get, you know 12, 18, 32, 64.
Speaker:I went with the 32 because I wanted to have a lot, a lot of choices and colors.
Speaker:And they were double ended.
Speaker:So one was a fine point tip and one was more of a brush tip.
Speaker:And I found that that worked great for me.
Speaker:So I use that in the process, made a piece of art that I really enjoyed,
Speaker:made a little sketch that I really enjoyed and really got me excited.
Speaker:And I showed it to the online groups that I'm with and they really liked it
Speaker:too, they were very supportive of it.
Speaker:So think about.
Speaker:You know, the final goal or the, you know, the final project may be huge,
Speaker:maybe outside of your reach monetarily.
Speaker:Well, what can you do that's similar to that, that can be
Speaker:done a little bit cheaper?
Speaker:Next question is what objects draw your attention and why?
Speaker:And how can you use them in your current projects or processes?
Speaker:What objects draw my attention?
Speaker:Everything draws my attention.
Speaker:I'm looking at everything.
Speaker:So right now I'm looking at a lot of geometric patterns and different
Speaker:ways to do that kind of stuff.
Speaker:So that's what's, what really draws my eye and what I did to kind of, make
Speaker:those pop is to get these watercolor markers and give them, give them
Speaker:a try just to give them a shot.
Speaker:And it actually worked out really well for me.
Speaker:So I challenge you to go ahead and figure out what objects are drawing your
Speaker:attention and then use them, use those objects or those processes to go ahead
Speaker:and update your, update your process.
Speaker:Because we're always, Learning, growing, and evolving.
Speaker:At least we should be.
Speaker:So action items.
Speaker:First one, make a birdhouse out of milk cartons.
Speaker:Now, back in my day, you know, the milk cartons are made out of cardboard,
Speaker:but now they're made out of plastic.
Speaker:I've seen people cut them in half and turn them into candles, you know,
Speaker:or to turn them into luminaries, but why not make a birdhouse out of it?
Speaker:That would be great.
Speaker:You know, bring birds to your house.
Speaker:Maybe you cut off the top of and just leave the bottom and
Speaker:fill it up with bird seed.
Speaker:Boom.
Speaker:There's a birdhouse or you cut it in half and put some sticks in there.
Speaker:So that way they can have some cover at the top and the birds
Speaker:can go in there and get the food.
Speaker:That's an idea.
Speaker:There you go.
Speaker:Steal it, take it.
Speaker:And then you paint the outside a different colors.
Speaker:Go for it.
Speaker:You know, if you're drinking milk, I don't drink milk, but if you're
Speaker:drinking milk, what better way to use it or laundry detergent.
Speaker:I would say even, you know, take those laundry detergent and plastic bottles
Speaker:that, you know, we throw in the recycling and, and, you know, are so difficult
Speaker:to get rid of and do something with them, you know, cut them up in different
Speaker:ways and make something out of it.
Speaker:Another thing is turning an old t shirt into a tote bag.
Speaker:Now I'm guilty about tote bags.
Speaker:I just recently went on Canva, made a design for my podcast and threw
Speaker:it on a tote bag and brought it with me to a podcast conference.
Speaker:But, you know, you can take an old t shirt.
Speaker:I'm not wearing an old t shirt right now, but I have plenty of t shirts.
Speaker:Why not turn that into a tote bag?
Speaker:You know, especially if it's got a little rip or something like
Speaker:in it that, you know, you don't want to use the t shirt anymore.
Speaker:You don't want to wear it out anymore, or it's really faded.
Speaker:Boom, tote bag.
Speaker:You can take that to the grocery store to pick up the milk and.
Speaker:The laundry detergent that you're going to, as soon as you use up, you're going
Speaker:to turn it into something else, create a sculpture out of recycled materials.
Speaker:I actually did that with a door and a deadbolt set.
Speaker:You know, you just tear it apart and grab a screwdriver and tear that
Speaker:bad boy apart and put it together differently with some super glue.
Speaker:And there you go.
Speaker:Why not?
Speaker:Who else is doing that?
Speaker:Not a lot of people.
Speaker:You can write a poem about an ordinary object.
Speaker:I do that all the time.
Speaker:I, I'm usually when I'm out and I'm feeling in the mood,
Speaker:I want to write a poem.
Speaker:I'll just take a look at something or I'll notice something happening.
Speaker:Maybe it's, you know, I'm writing a poem about the coffee cup that I have, or
Speaker:maybe it's about the couple that's you know, just sitting a few tables down
Speaker:from me, or maybe it's the table that I'm sitting at and it has different things
Speaker:underneath the glass on top of the table.
Speaker:You can write a poem about that.
Speaker:Jumping off of that tangent, compose a song about an ordinary object.
Speaker:You know, write a song about the time you went down to the coffee shop, write
Speaker:a song about the time you went down to the library or to the fast food
Speaker:place, you know, what happened there?
Speaker:Was there a reason that you went there?
Speaker:Were you hungry?
Speaker:How, you know, how was your stomach rumbling?
Speaker:Compose a song about that.
Speaker:If you're into movement and dance, do movement and dance about that.
Speaker:So, Mike's tips.
Speaker:There's four tips here.
Speaker:Use everyday objects as inspiration.
Speaker:Going back to my drawing class, my intro to drawing class, what
Speaker:was in my book mag at that time?
Speaker:Cigarettes, lighter, keys, wallet, pens, and pencils.
Speaker:Erasers, use that and then draw that.
Speaker:So, you know, look at your nightstand, you know what's on your nightstand.
Speaker:Is it just a clock?
Speaker:Do you have a picture on your nightstand?
Speaker:Snap a picture of it and then draw it.
Speaker:And that way you can, you know, have that picture right in front of you.
Speaker:And you can copy from that drawing and then add to it.
Speaker:Maybe you want something else at that nightstand.
Speaker:Maybe you want a vase of flowers.
Speaker:You know, so make that drawing into something that you
Speaker:wish was on your nightstand.
Speaker:Experiment with different materials.
Speaker:Again, who makes a sculpture of doorknobs and a deadbolt?
Speaker:This guy right here does.
Speaker:So, you know, try different materials that you have.
Speaker:Right now I am in the process of making some clocks and what I'm going
Speaker:to do is I'm going to take do, do it with a laser cutter to, to cut out.
Speaker:The body of the clock and you know, make it so it's kind of finger jointed in there
Speaker:and that's the first time I've done it.
Speaker:Why not?
Speaker:I need a clock in my room anyways.
Speaker:So one that actually works.
Speaker:I have one here that has a map of the world like an old timey map
Speaker:of the world clock doesn't work.
Speaker:So it's constantly at 2 10.
Speaker:So it's always 2 10 here in my office.
Speaker:Try different materials with that.
Speaker:I've made clocks out of books.
Speaker:Give that a shot for yourself.
Speaker:Next tip is to be creative with your use of colors.
Speaker:And I did that with one of my latest drawings.
Speaker:I was.
Speaker:Using different colors that I don't normally use.
Speaker:I don't normally gravitate to, and it really added some spice to this drawing.
Speaker:Really made it pop.
Speaker:So definitely use the different colors that you have available for you.
Speaker:The last and certainly not least.
Speaker:I have kids.
Speaker:Don't afraid to get messy.
Speaker:When I was gluing together the deadbolt and the and the doorknob, I ripped the
Speaker:skin off my hand a couple of times, but you know, don't be afraid to get messy.
Speaker:Who's going to, nobody's going to see the messy part unless that's,
Speaker:you know, unless you're taking the picture of you getting messy,
Speaker:nobody's going to see that messy part.
Speaker:They're going to see.
Speaker:the final object.
Speaker:You know, when I'm doing paintings, I get paint all over my hands.
Speaker:People don't see that.
Speaker:They see what I put on the canvas.
Speaker:So we don't need to worry about that.
Speaker:Basically what, what, what I'm trying to tell you here
Speaker:is don't worry about the cost.
Speaker:Don't worry about the messiness.
Speaker:Don't worry about the mistakes.
Speaker:Just get out there and go ahead and do it for yourself.
Speaker:And you're going to feel wonderful.
Speaker:Heck, you're They're great gifts to give for holidays, for birthdays.
Speaker:You don't have to go to the big box stores and get somebody a 45 inch screen TV.
Speaker:It would be nice.
Speaker:You could do that for me.
Speaker:I already have one, but.
Speaker:By all means, do that for yourself and do it for your loved ones.
Speaker:And you can give those gifts or you can, you know, create something online where,
Speaker:you know, with Etsy or with eBay or Redbubble, what have you, and create that
Speaker:art so that way you can sell that art.
Speaker:To your audience.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Well, we've reached that time of the show where I'm going to let you
Speaker:go ahead and get on with your day.
Speaker:I'm going to go ahead and get on with my day.
Speaker:But first and foremost, I want to thank you for listening
Speaker:and definitely appreciate it.
Speaker:No matter where you are in the world.
Speaker:Definitely appreciate the time that you've taken here with me to go ahead
Speaker:and listen to my ramblings about art.
Speaker:Really appreciate that.
Speaker:I've been doing this since 2006 and you know, every time I take a look at
Speaker:my numbers, I always see people from different countries people from all
Speaker:around the United States taking a listen.
Speaker:So that says a lot about you, that you took time out of your day to listen
Speaker:to me talk, and I appreciate that.
Speaker:I want to let you know that.
Speaker:You can reach out to me.
Speaker:My email is Timothy at createartpodcast.
Speaker:com and I'm definitely wanting to hear about your journey,
Speaker:about what you're working on.
Speaker:So feel free to email me.
Speaker:You can use that email to give me ideas about topics that
Speaker:you would like me to discuss.
Speaker:Maybe you would like to be a guest on the show.
Speaker:Definitely email me and let me know what what kind of stuff you want to talk
Speaker:about and we'll get you on the show.
Speaker:It's not a problem.
Speaker:I promise I don't bite too much.
Speaker:And then if you have critique of the show that you'd like to give me, shoot
Speaker:me an email, let me know about it.
Speaker:You can, you know, rate and review this on your podcast app of choice.
Speaker:That's perfectly fine.
Speaker:But if If you, you know, have some critique, I'd have to go ahead and email
Speaker:me, let me know, basically, I want to turn this into a five star podcast for you.
Speaker:And I can't do that.
Speaker:If you don't let me know what I'm doing right or what I'm doing wrong.
Speaker:And as specific as you can get, would be very helpful to me.
Speaker:So I do appreciate that in advance of you doing that.
Speaker:I want to also let you know that I do have a newsletter that I do
Speaker:about once a month and that is on Substack and you can get to it.
Speaker:Timothy Bryan, Bryan is spelled B R I E N.
Speaker:substack.
Speaker:com and in that newsletter comes out once a month.
Speaker:I give you some ideas for what you could do for that month.
Speaker:I also let you know the episodes that I've done for that month.
Speaker:So definitely check it out for yourself.
Speaker:Only comes out once a month.
Speaker:You can always unsubscribe if you're getting too many emails, but it's a way
Speaker:that I can, you know, between episodes, reach out to you and say, Hey, here's some
Speaker:ideas and give you some ideas for things that you can do in your creative process.
Speaker:Also, I run another podcast.
Speaker:It's called find a podcast about, you can find it at find
Speaker:a podcast about dot X, Y, Z.
Speaker:And there I go ahead and review podcasts that I find very binge worthy and
Speaker:help you outsmart the algorithm and find your next binge worthy podcast.
Speaker:So definitely give that podcast to check and to see if I have some podcasts in
Speaker:there that you've never heard about before and why I think it's They are
Speaker:worth your time because we all have a limited amount of time in this world.
Speaker:And when we're creating our stuff, it's nice to have a
Speaker:podcast on in the background.
Speaker:So I'll let you know which podcasts that I have in the
Speaker:background happening all the time.
Speaker:So check me out over there.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:It's that time.
Speaker:So again, thank you for listening and thank you for being a part of this
Speaker:because you definitely are a part of this and you are the reason why I do this.
Speaker:I hope you got something out of it.
Speaker:Now go out there and tame your inner critic, create more than you consume.
Speaker:Go around your house, find some stuff to repurpose into art and go and make
Speaker:some art for somebody you love yourself.
Speaker:I'll talk to you next time.