Jennifer likes to draw dragons. Fantasy monsters and people, elves, things out of fantasy books. Animals. (Her sketch of Batgirl was my smartphone wallpaper for weeks.)
"I get ideas in my head of something that would look cool of a scene or an animal, and I like sharing that idea," Jennifer says.
Like many artists who don't do it for a living, she usually doesn't need to hit deadlines that aren't self-imposed and doesn't need to draw stuff she doesn't care about. Much of her art is for her, her own heart, her own interest and the interest of friends and supporters (like the folks at her workplace who were encouraging and kicked off her adult art kick). Before, when she drew as a kid, she says she "didn't have the support system. It was getting in my own head a lot. Being very negative toward my own stuff."
"Becoming more involved with the internet ... has helped that too," she says, "because I'll throw my art out into the world and people will ... click 'Like' on it. And it won't be a lot of people, but it'll be a few people, and I'll [say,] 'Oh, I don't know that person, and they liked my art, so I ... made a random stranger happy by posting this.' That brings me joy."
Jennifer discusses the power of pre-work before art projects (when she doesn't, sometimes she notices "this one thing is off, and I could have changed that, but in order to change it ... I have to start over"), what making art feels like and how coworkers' and friends' support brought her back to art as an adult.
Note: After about 39 minutes, this podcast peters out a bit into Jennifer and I bandying back and forth, as we search for stuff on the internet to recommend (all below in "Want to know more?") and I mangle the spelling of her online handle.
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