So yesterday my dad finally installed my computer!! I also have a Wacom Intuos2 (4x6) tablet, which is amazing, and came with some awesome software. I still haven't quite figured out Painter but I'm loving what I can do with this upgraded version of Photoshop!! Using a tablet is sooo different to using a mouse, and it's kinda hard for someone like me who has never painted "in real life" but I'm sure I'll get the hang of it. I've just started my very first completely digital painting!! I'm sooo excited.
Okay, I should probably introduce myself. I'm 18 but totally not your average, I mean I know everyone my age says that, but I'm even more abnormal than normal (haha). I always read in IFX these wonderful painters talking about how they've been drawing since they were old enough to hold a crayon - well, that isn't me. My entire childhood (not that I remember it, I have to rely on what my parents tell me) was strictly academic-based. I never even considered drawing anything because I always assumed I would suck!! Then at the end of primary school I got a sim game called "Creatures" and that's where this amazing journey I'm on began.
Much like the popular "The Sims", in Creatures you control little fluffy animal things as they wander around mating with each other and playing with objects etc. At first I looooved it because it was basically a genetics lesson in game disguise for kids and I loved the breeding part (seeing what sort of new-looking creatures I could get based on their parents etc) so much that I decided to learn how to write my own genome files. Soon after that I wanted to make my own objects/toys for the creatures to play with and that introduced me to the amazing world of programming. Unfortunately, you can't have invisible toys (well, you can, but they're no fun), so I had to learn how to use MS Paint, and those little pixelly scribbles were probably the first things I ever drew. Eventually I wanted to start making my own breeds and I suppose that's where the "start" to my inventing creatures to draw came from.
Around about that time I had this totally wonderful teacher who encouraged creativity in all students regardless of "talent". I had no talent (and I still don't) but she encouraged me to try and when I was about 12 I drew my first picture using pencil and paper (naturally it was of a creature from Creatures) After that I got my first sketchpad so I could scribble down the endless ideas for breeds, species, plants, and objects to fill the Creatures worlds with.
Around about that age I also got very sick and had to leave school. Lying in a hospital bed all day every day gets very boring and I started my doodling again until I got a laptop because I couldn't get up and sit at the computer. Some of my pictures from then are so funny! They're basically photos with every filter in existence applied (with the mandatory lensflare, of course).
At around 15 I had a slight remission where I got to go to school two or three times a week. My bestest-best friend in the whole wide world ever introduced me to Elf Wood. This opened my eyes to a whole new world of drawing fantasy creatures and other stuff too and I realised that's what I wanted to do, so I opened an account there. I won't link to it because the pictures on it are AWFUL!!!! But each picture was another step in learning. At that stage I was still using pencil and then scanning it in, but like most people I migrated to lineart in pencil, scanning in and colouring in photoshop, and soon I learnt how to draw using the mouse.
During that time I also did a few courses (this was when I still had a brain lol) and got certificates in 3D animation, Web Design and Digital Design & Imaging. Thanks to the amount of credits I got for those (because they were tertiary-level certificates) I managed to pass through two years of school without ever attending!
Then the thing in my brain struck back with a vengeance and I literally forgot everything. But thanks to some revolutions in science and medicine I am now sitting back at a desktop computer and learning to start the journey all over again!
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About ChenYun
Okay it seems there is an entire page on my "User Page" where I can write all about me, so since I'm never going to get a coveted IFX interview I'll write all about myself here!!
Most of the famous artists you read about say they've been drawing since the moment they could hold a crayon, with me that is totally not true. In fact by the time I could hold a crayon my parents were really confused as to whether I was left-handed or right-handed (a problem that would haunt me throughout primary school until left-handedness was finally accepted by teachers). Anyway, my entire childhood was geared completely towards academic goals. I still had a few arts in there, I played various instruments and did various performing arts but it never occured to me to draw.
I suppose I was raised in an environment perfect for growing an aspiring fantasy artist but I used those creative surroundings more for making my own little worlds and stories than for drawing anything. I've been surrounded by fantasy since birth - from my father I learnt the myths and legends of China and great stories of heroes and dragons.
For my mother I have one of the most loving and nurturing people in existence. She wasn't one of those mums like the ones today who tell their kids to stop imagining or tell them fairies aren't real. My mum was the opposite and I believed in fairies, Santa Claus etc until much later than most people because of the way she loved to surround our childhood with magic. On Christmas eve she would run around the house throwing pebbles on the roof, gnaw at the carrots we left out for the reindeer (and even left "reindeer poo"!!) and the Christmas Tree would magically go from empty to overflowing with beautifully packaged gifts without us hearing a peep! The Tooth Fairy left us little cards with writing so small we needed magnifying glasses to read them, and there was always "magic dust" around our "fairy tree".
She got the "magic dust" from my grandmother, a rather insane old lady (I mean that in the nicest possible way) who thought she was a fairy (she called herself "Wandering Star" although "Wandering Mind" might have been more appropriate. Again, I mean that in the nicest possible way :P ) and worked for a place called "The Faerie Shop". Her entire basement was dedicated to her work for that place and she therefore had literally barrels of every colour and shape glitter or sequins you could imagine.
When my grandmother was growing up the only real job available for ladies back then was to be a wife and mother and that wasn't her thing so she aspired to be a great ballet dancer. But then the war happened and ladies were recruited to sew stuff. After that she became passionate about sewing - but especially for the fantastic. Her elaborate and lovingly crafted fancy-dress costumes got her a job at The Faerie Shop where even now, in her 80s, she still makes the loveliest fairy costumes and accessories you can imagine. They're so beautiful you don't want your toddler running around in the backyard wearing it, you just want to frame it on your wall because of how beautiful it is.
Anyway, part of her being a "faerie" were a lot of mystical crystals and other fantastical stuff around her house, so that (coupled with her eccentric taste in clothing) led me to believe she was an enchantress for most of my childhood. She passed on her secrets of costuming to her daughter (my mum), and when my older sister decided to become a ballerina, I was constantly surrounded by gorgeous tutus and princess dresses. My sister was really serious about dancing so I was dragged along to countless classes, recitals, competitions, and ballet productions throughout my childhood which not only filled my mind with fairytales but also visions of princesses and fairies, wizards and magic.
Suprisingly enough, with all this going on around me, I was more interested in school and math than in fantasy and it had still never occured to me to draw until the end of primary school when I got a sim game called "Creatures". My natural need to create and some weird talent for programming (probably the aspergers) led me to start creating objects, worlds, species and all sorts of other things for the game (It's a lot like The Sims, where you can make furniture and clothes for them). Of course you can't have invisible creatures in an invisible world playing with invisible toys, so I learnt to use Microsoft Paint. The images I constructed laboriously pixel-by-pixel in MS Paint were probably the first pictures I ever made (other than childhood fingerpainted scribbles, of course).
Around this time I also had the most fantastic teacher who encouraged creativity in all her students even the ones who thought they didn't have any talent (like me). I owe a lot to that teacher, because it was while I was in her class I drew my first pencil-and-paper picture and discovered that hey, I quite like making pictures. But my life was still very much aimed at the academic side of things, I was four years ahead in certain subjects and I was really devoted to learning.
But perhaps it was fate that sent me an illness right around this time - when I had just discovered art. The thing in my brain slowly eats up bits of information in there so soon I was no longer the genius child but just some bored kid stuck in hospital, frustrated by her inability to solve simple problems that once took an instant. So it was that while I was lying around being bored, I began to doodle my various ideas for new items/species/worlds/etc for my Creatures game. Making any of those things for the game required both programming knowledge and the ability to make graphics that other people would like.
It wasn't long before my sketchpad was filling with ideas for things other than Creatures, such as my very own worlds (which I later turned into morpgs) and I realised that game design was a really, really awesome thing. But I knew that I needed to know how to draw my concepts before any of my ideas could become reality, so my parents got me a laptop so I could do this stuff from my bed.
Fast Forward a few years to when I was about 15 and I had a wonderful period of a few months where I was in this remission stage and I was able to go to school a few times a week and for once be normal. I met my bestest-best friend in the whole wide world ever then, and she introduced me to Elf Wood. As soon as I went on that site a whole new world opened for me and my journey towards being a fantasy artist began!!
The pictures in my Elfwood gallery aren't very good but I didn't get a chance to update because when I was 16 my illness came back with a vengeance and started slowly wiping things out of my memory. I can't tell you what happened between then and now because I've completely lost all memory.
The first thing I can remember is being in hospital just after a huge brain operation. My mum had been looking for magazines for me but couldn't find the "right" one - tabloid magazines were just depressing and gaming magazines just made me wish I could afford those games. Then she saw a magazine that had this awesome picture on the cover called "Imagine FX", proclaiming at the top it was a magazine dedicated to Fantasy & Sci-Fi Digital Art. Could there be a more perfect magazine???
After reading that I was hooked and I've gotten every single one since. When I lost my genius brain I thought my life was over and that I'd never have a future but these magazines have shown me there is an alternative route - I don't have to be an engineer or a surgeon, there is actually an industry out there that employs people to design games!!
So that's my story up to now. I can't believe you read this far!! Right now I'm waiting for my illness to get sorted out and then I plan on doing a course and maybe even a diploma. Ultimately I want to end up on the design team for Final Fantasy XXVIII but who knows what fate has in store for me in the future? I may not be the best artist - in fact I have absolutely no talent whatsoever - but I'm doing my very best to learn and IFX has been a godsend. It reawoke a part of me that I thought had died of depression long ago, and it's helping me learn how to be a better artist so that even though I don't have any natural talent in that area I may one day be able to produce pictures that people like.
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