Let me ask you a question.
Speaker AWho told you that you weren't an artist?
Speaker AYou know, maybe they said it directly, maybe they laughed, maybe they just didn't take you seriously and at some point you believed them because you stopped creating, but because you stopped calling yourself an artist.
Speaker AIn this episode, we're talking about how that happens, why it sticks for so long, and how to quietly take the word artist back because no one gets to decide that for you.
Speaker ASo let's talk about it.
Speaker AForeign.
Speaker AThis is Timothy Keem o', Brien, your head instigator for Create Art podcast, where I use my over 30 years of experience in the arts and education world to help you tame your inner critic and create more than you consume.
Speaker ASo I started a new series here in 2026, started starting in March of 2026, and the new series is called Create.
Speaker AAnyway, and this episode is asking simple question.
Speaker AWho told you you weren't an artist?
Speaker ANow, at some point in your life, someone decided something about you.
Speaker AMaybe they said, maybe they said it out loud and maybe they laughed and maybe they just didn't take you seriously and somehow that moment stuck.
Speaker ASo let me ask you this question.
Speaker AWho told you you weren't an artist?
Speaker AAll right, so in our first section here, we're going to talk about the moment that the word artist was taken away from you.
Speaker AAnd that could come from anybody, from a parent, a colleague, a friend, a somebody that you trust, a professor, something along those lines.
Speaker ABut the simple comment, and this is what I find so interesting, is that a simple comment can totally trash your idea that you are an artist.
Speaker AAnd I'm going to tell you right now that if you're creating stuff, don't have to sell it.
Speaker AI've had this conversation with a good, close personal friend of mine and he said, well, you're not an artist until you sell your first thing.
Speaker AAnd I said, well, that's a professional artist, not a, for lack of a better term, amateur artist.
Speaker ASo just battling that, battling the whole, well, I haven't sold anything, so I'm not really an artist.
Speaker ASometimes you're telling yourself that or that's something that you learned from, from somebody.
Speaker ABut then I look at kids painting and as I'm recording this, it's over Valentine's Day weekend and President's Day here in the United States.
Speaker ASo that would be in February of 2026.
Speaker ABut I saw my kids creating art, calling themselves artists, and they haven't sold a damn thing.
Speaker AAnd, well, mom doesn't want their information out there, and so they're not going to sell anything for quite some time until they're ready and a little bit more mature.
Speaker ABut I call them artists.
Speaker AThey're artists.
Speaker AI have their art hanging up in my wall in my man cave.
Speaker AWhile I'm recording this to you, I'm looking at some of the artwork that they have created.
Speaker ASo they're artists in every iteration of the word.
Speaker AIn my mind, they're artists.
Speaker AYou're an artist.
Speaker ABut somebody took that away from us.
Speaker AAnd however they did, and maybe it was yourself, but however they did, it didn't take much.
Speaker AIt didn't take much effort to take that title away from you.
Speaker AAnd I want to make sure that you have it back and that you know that you're an artist.
Speaker AA lot of people think they're an artist because a lot of people know who they are.
Speaker AAnd you're going to find in your life that there's a lot of silence.
Speaker AThere's a lot of silence.
Speaker AI call it hearing the crickets.
Speaker AAnd it happens.
Speaker AIt happens to every artist.
Speaker AHappens to every artist.
Speaker AWanted to stress that for you.
Speaker AAnd you're gonna have those times when, you know, nobody's reaching back to you, nobody's emailing you, you're putting yourself up in a gallery, or you put your music out there and nobody comments on it.
Speaker AAnd guess what?
Speaker AThat's okay.
Speaker AThat's.
Speaker AIt's maybe not for them, and that's fine.
Speaker AYou're not gonna find stuff that is for everybody.
Speaker AYou just need to create the stuff that works for you, that you connect with.
Speaker AYou'll find somebody else that connects with it.
Speaker AAt least one other person is going to connect with it.
Speaker AThere's what, 7 billion people on the planet?
Speaker AYou're going to find one.
Speaker AYou are.
Speaker AChances are you're going to find somebody that really enjoys your stuff.
Speaker ASo let that silence happen, but keep on creating in that silence.
Speaker ASo let's talk about those stories that we carry into adulthood.
Speaker ABecause when we're kids, we're artists and we don't really think about stuff.
Speaker AWe just go and do it.
Speaker ATrust me, I've got twins.
Speaker AThey're of a certain age.
Speaker AThey just go out and do it, and it's artistic and they don't care if it sells or not.
Speaker AIt be great if it did, but they just go out there and do it.
Speaker ANow, at some point in our life, whether right before we become an adult or we are an adult, and we're told very early on in our.
Speaker AIn our journey and our artistic journey, that, hey, you're not an artist.
Speaker AAnd we believe them and we're told, well, artists struggle and they're poor and they're this and they're that and they're the other thing.
Speaker AAn artist is whatever you are, it's whatever you make it.
Speaker ASo a lot of times when we're adults, it's easier to go, well, yeah, you know what?
Speaker AI'm not an artist.
Speaker AAnd then just not do anything.
Speaker AThat's the easy path.
Speaker ACongratulations, you've made it on the easy path.
Speaker ABut why choose the easy path when you can choose a harder path?
Speaker AWe were just talking in my house the other day about Robert Frost's poem, the one where met a path in the woods.
Speaker AOne was well trod, one wasn't.
Speaker AAnd I chose the one that wasn't.
Speaker AAnd that made all the difference.
Speaker AThere's a lot of different interpretations in how you can take that poem.
Speaker ABut for me, I take it as it's more interesting going down the less trodden path because then you have more freedom.
Speaker AYou can go here or there, the other place versus being stuck to, hey, we're going to go this path because it is so well tried, we don't even have to think about it.
Speaker AAnd that's not a path I want my kids to go down.
Speaker AI want them to be challenged at every time.
Speaker AAnd sometimes as an adult, we don't want those challenges.
Speaker AWe don't want to have to think.
Speaker AWe just want it handed to us because everything else has been handed to us with modern technology.
Speaker ASo these things happen usually at very crucial points where people tell you you're not an artist.
Speaker AAnd what we need to do is retell that story.
Speaker AI'm, instead of saying, no, I'm not an artist, say I'm an artist.
Speaker AI just haven't sold anything yet.
Speaker AThat's okay.
Speaker AThat is perfectly fine.
Speaker AYou may never sell anything and that's okay.
Speaker AThat's not an issue.
Speaker AI've got some paintings that I just recently put out to friends and family and colleagues and I've already got people saying, hey, I want to buy that from you.
Speaker AWhat?
Speaker AAnd it's nice.
Speaker AArtwork makes me feel good, but now people want to actually put money to it.
Speaker ASo did I have to wait 50 some odd years to become an artist?
Speaker ANo.
Speaker AI've always been an artist and I will always be an artist.
Speaker AAnd you can have that same mindset as well.
Speaker ASo in this next section we're going to talk about talent myths and creative gatekeeping.
Speaker AAnd that happens to us all over the place, whether you're doing artwork in academic setting or if you're just doing it without any sense of direction, the belief that artists are born, not made.
Speaker AYou're either an artist or you're not.
Speaker AOkay, well, let's just blow that one out of the water.
Speaker AYou're an artist.
Speaker AUntil you prove me wrong, you're an artist.
Speaker AOkay?
Speaker ANow, you can get better at your art through practice, through instruction, through mentorship, and through all these other things.
Speaker ABut I would say claim the title of artist.
Speaker AJust go ahead and claim it.
Speaker AYou're not going to have the artist police come after you.
Speaker AIf they do, let me know, but I haven't seen them.
Speaker ABut you need to claim that title for yourself because you are an artist.
Speaker AIf you're listening to this podcast, you're listening to a podcast called Create Art Podcast.
Speaker ASo that tells me that you have got a little something kicking in the back of your head.
Speaker AAt the very least, you're an artist.
Speaker AOkay?
Speaker AIt's just.
Speaker AIt's there.
Speaker AAll right?
Speaker ANow, if you haven't practiced your art in a while, that's okay.
Speaker AThen you go and practice it.
Speaker AAnd sometimes that art is going to be stuff that you really don't like, but you have to practice it in order to get better with it.
Speaker AWhen we're comparing ourselves to others and go, well, that person's an artist, or I'm going to compare myself to you, Tim, and you're an artist, and you got people that are interested in buying your works.
Speaker ADon't do that, because my path is different from your path.
Speaker AThere's a lot of similarities in there, but our paths are different in our destinations are different in what we're going to accomplish before we die.
Speaker ASo comparing yourself to others, doing the.
Speaker AThis whole label thing of you're labeling yourself so you're controlling where you're going and what you're doing, that can really limit you as an artist.
Speaker ASo maybe we don't do the labels too quickly.
Speaker AMaybe we wait till later on so that way we can use labels to better describe the kind of art that we do.
Speaker ABut let's do that later on.
Speaker AAnd when you're practicing things like I'm practicing painting with acrylics, that is a skill that I am developing.
Speaker AEvery painting that I do gets a little bit better here, a little bit better there.
Speaker AI learned a little something about myself and my technique that doesn't prove my worth.
Speaker AThat doesn't mean that I shouldn't put a price tag on my artwork for a thousand dollars.
Speaker AI'm developing that skill.
Speaker AAnd maybe at some point, maybe after I'm dead.
Speaker AThe.
Speaker AThe artwork will be selling for $10 million.
Speaker AWho knows, who knows what it's going to be worth?
Speaker AAnd more than likely I'm not going to see most of that because I'll be dead.
Speaker ASo let's not poo poo our skill development.
Speaker ALet's keep on improving and keep on getting better at our craft.
Speaker ANow we're going to talk about our identity versus our output because that can make us think that we're not artists.
Speaker ASo when I first started writing poetry, performance poetry, way back in the day, way back in the, in the 90s, I used to crank out three or four poems a day.
Speaker AAnd now it takes me a while.
Speaker AIt takes me a while because I am at a different skill level.
Speaker AI'm exploring different things with my poetry.
Speaker AAnd that's per.
Speaker APerfectly fine.
Speaker AThat doesn't mean that I'm not a poet because I'm not writing a poem right here, right now in front of you.
Speaker AAll that means is that the output is different.
Speaker AAnd it could be that you're improving the quality of your output versus just tossing stuff out there and shotgunning stuff and seeing what sticks and what doesn't stick.
Speaker ASo don't think that, hey, I haven't turned out something in a year.
Speaker AMaybe you need that quiet time.
Speaker AMaybe you need that time for reflection.
Speaker AMaybe.
Speaker AMaybe you need that time to gather information or develop your skills.
Speaker AIf we're waiting for other people to call us artists, we're going to be waiting a long time because they're dealing with things in their life.
Speaker AMaybe they were told, well, an artist looks like this and sounds like this and only does this kind of stuff.
Speaker AEverybody else is just a poser.
Speaker AWell, if you're waiting for that person to validate you, it's not going to happen.
Speaker ANot going to happen.
Speaker AAnd after we claim that title for ourselves as a artist, then it's not going to magically bestow upon you a million dollars or anything like that, because people would be doing that all the time.
Speaker AIt's the work that goes behind it.
Speaker AIt's the skill development that goes behind it.
Speaker AIt's the marketing.
Speaker AIt's everything that goes behind it that takes time to develop.
Speaker AIt's not going to be an overnight thing.
Speaker AThere's no overnight successes.
Speaker AAnd even the overnight successes that we see up, that we see out there took years.
Speaker AThat's what a lot of people don't tell you.
Speaker AIt took years for stuff to happen.
Speaker ASo if we keep the long term mindset, hey, this is a journey and it's a journey that I don't have a map for necessarily.
Speaker AI may have bits and pieces of the map.
Speaker AI don't have the map in its entirety.
Speaker AIt can be a lot of fun.
Speaker AIt can be really scary, too.
Speaker ABut at least realize that on that journey, you're going to pick up some things.
Speaker AYou're going to pick up some knowledge, some skills, some inspiration, some subject matter.
Speaker AAnd don't worry if you don't write something every single day.
Speaker AYou may not be in the mood to.
Speaker AThat's fine.
Speaker AYou may have stuff going on in your life that prevents you from doing.
Speaker AThat's okay.
Speaker AIt doesn't mean you're not an artist.
Speaker AIt means that you're doing some quiet observation.
Speaker AYou're doing some skill development.
Speaker AIt may not be for public consumption.
Speaker AYou know what you're developing, but you're doing all that.
Speaker ASo that way, when you do produce a work that you do put out in public, it's going to be that much better versus just putting everything out there and seeing what sticks and never learning from it.
Speaker AAll right, now we're going to talk about that quiet reclamation, quietly claiming your artist title.
Speaker AThere's not going to be floats, there's not going to be parades or balloons or all that kind of jazz.
Speaker AJust do it.
Speaker AI mean, if you need to run out in the world and go, hey, I'm an artist.
Speaker AOkay, cool.
Speaker AGo ahead and do that.
Speaker ARealize a lot of people are going to be like, are you crazy?
Speaker AArtist?
Speaker ABut you don't have to make a big announcement about it.
Speaker AYou just do the work.
Speaker ADo it.
Speaker AAnd that's the strongest thing I think you can do, in my opinion.
Speaker AYou may have a different opinion on it, but I don't think we need to announce it to the world because the world really doesn't care.
Speaker AThey don't.
Speaker ANot all, you know, 7 billion people care if you're an artist or not.
Speaker ANow, the ones that do care, that's your target audience.
Speaker AThat's who you're going for.
Speaker ADo yourself a solid here.
Speaker AYou don't need to announce it because the criticism will come.
Speaker AIt'll come.
Speaker AAnd criticism is a good thing.
Speaker AIt means that people have decided to comment on your work, whether it be good or bad in their eyes.
Speaker ABut sometimes we need to build up that thick skin and have a body of work behind us.
Speaker AThen we can announce it to the world.
Speaker AAnd, you know, when people pop up and say, oh, no, you're not an artist, don't argue with them.
Speaker AIn their opinion, you're not cool.
Speaker ADoesn't matter.
Speaker AThey're not on your journey.
Speaker AThey're not in your path.
Speaker AYou are.
Speaker AYou got to go on your journey.
Speaker AYou got to wake up with yourself every day and go to bed with yourself every night.
Speaker AThey don't so quietly reclaim the title artist.
Speaker ADo that for yourself.
Speaker ADo yourself a favor.
Speaker ADon't need to go ahead and announce it to the world just yet.
Speaker ABuild up your strength, build up your confidence, build up your skills.
Speaker ASo that way, when you do pop out there and go, I'm an artist, and they go, yeah, no, you're not.
Speaker AYou're not doing this and.
Speaker AOr the other thing.
Speaker AYou can go, no, but I'm doing this, this, this, and it's my journey, not yours.
Speaker ABuild yourself up a little bit before you go out into the world like that.
Speaker AIt's like going out for in wintertime here in the United States.
Speaker ABundle up.
Speaker AWear a couple of layers before you go out there and catch pneumonia, okay?
Speaker ADon't let the.
Speaker AThe.
Speaker AThe virus of people trying to be a gatekeeper and tell you you're not an artist.
Speaker ADon't let that virus infect you.
Speaker AProtect yourself.
Speaker AAll right?
Speaker AThat's all I got for you on this episode.
Speaker AI hope you do reclaim that title of artist for yourself.
Speaker AYou don't need to tell me about it, but if you want to, you definitely can.
Speaker AHere's the thing.
Speaker AYou don't need permission to create.
Speaker AIf you want permission, fine.
Speaker ABoom.
Speaker AI give you permission.
Speaker AGo create.
Speaker AHave fun.
Speaker AYou don't need my permission.
Speaker AYou don't need anyone else's permission to create.
Speaker AJust go create.
Speaker AAnd you don't need approval to be who you really are.
Speaker AYou need your own approval to be who you really are.
Speaker ABut that's it.
Speaker AYou don't need anyone's approval to be who you are to be the type of artist that you are.
Speaker AMaybe today isn't about making your art.
Speaker AMaybe today is get gathering information, developing those skills, doing the icky work behind the canvas to get to the canvas.
Speaker AMaybe that's what today is for you.
Speaker AMaybe it's about taking the word artist back.
Speaker AMaybe that's what you need.
Speaker ADo it quietly.
Speaker ADo it honestly with yourself.
Speaker AYou have to believe it.
Speaker AI can't believe it for you.
Speaker AYou've got to believe it.
Speaker ACreate anyways.
Speaker AThat's the whole thing behind the series.
Speaker ACreate anyway.
Speaker AYou're allowed to do that.
Speaker AAll right, well, I want to thank you so much for joining me here today.
Speaker AIf you'd like to reach out to me, you can do that.
Speaker ATimothyreateartpodcast.com is my email address Feel free to shoot me your ideas, your critique of the show, what you'd like to see.
Speaker AHeck, if you want to be on the show, you can definitely do that too.
Speaker AYou can share this with a friend in whatever podcast app that you're using or if you're on YouTube, you can share it with a friend that may need to hear this.
Speaker AThey may maybe they lost their way and maybe they believed one of the gatekeepers saying that they're not an artist.
Speaker AGive it to them.
Speaker ASpeaking about sharing the show, I run another show called Find a Podcast about and you can find that at Find Find a Podcast about xyz.
Speaker AAnd that's where I help those listeners find their next binge worthy podcasts and outsmart the algorithm.
Speaker ACheck it out.
Speaker AYou may hear a podcast down there that's going to be your favorite.
Speaker AI also run my own business.
Speaker AIt's called TKB Podcast Studio.
Speaker AYou can find it@tkb podcast studio.com that's where I help my clients lead through the noise with quiet professionalism.
Speaker AI hope people make their podcasts just like I'm doing this podcast here.
Speaker AMaybe you have something that the world needs to hear.
Speaker ALet's talk about it.
Speaker AFind me@tkb podcast studio.com that's all I got for you this time, this episode.
Speaker ASo go out there.
Speaker ATame that inner critic.
Speaker ACreate more than you consume.
Speaker AMake a little badge that says Artist.
Speaker AWear that on your chest.
Speaker AMake some art for somebody you love.
Speaker AYourself.
Speaker AI'll talk with you next time.
Speaker ASam.