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Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art.
Matt Hodel presents: The Bastards of Art
69 episodes
9 months ago
Bastards of Art is a podcast to reach out to lowbrow artist. We are helping artist to come together with a message of positivity and ambition. It can feel very lonely spending hours in the studio. We are here to help erase self doubt and cultivate the artist inside you.
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All content for Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art. is the property of Matt Hodel presents: The Bastards of Art and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Bastards of Art is a podcast to reach out to lowbrow artist. We are helping artist to come together with a message of positivity and ambition. It can feel very lonely spending hours in the studio. We are here to help erase self doubt and cultivate the artist inside you.
Show more...
Visual Arts
Arts,
Business,
Design,
Careers
Episodes (20/69)
Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art.
Bastards of Art : Episode 70





















Episode 70






Gratitude List for the Artist






As 2020 comes to an end I am reflecting as an artist all that I have learned. I cannot throw the baby out with the bath water by complain about what went wrong this year. I think a lot of stuff still went right because of the situation 2020 put me in.
As an artist, we have a job to give perspective to others. If we mope and bitch all day, we are only letting the world win. Taking time to make a conscience effort to the the existential view of the world is our duty.
I hope everyone is safe an has the ability to gain a new perspective on life as we end 2020.







Bastardsart · BOA070














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Bastards of Art Host: Matt Hodel






Matt Hodel is the owner of Ragtime Tattoo and Lillian Press in St. Louis Missouri. Working as a self-employed artist since 1995, he left his fine arts degree for a path in the low brow art world. He apprenticed for tattooing in the 90's at Iron Age Studios. From there he has traveled the globe working as an artist.
Today Matt splits his time between St. Louis and the Ozark Mountains. He enjoys Risograph Printing, landscape painting, and digital painting. Matt brings these podcasts to you the listener in hopes to inspire and motivate.
For other projects vist: Matt Hodel Design






















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4 years ago
18 minutes 15 seconds

Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art.
Bastards of Art : Episode 69

























Episode 69






















Interview with EDM Artist Alex Bochel






Sometimes the only way to follow your dreams is to jump in with both feet. Alex Bochel is an EDM artist from Washington DC that left his computer science degree behind to pursue his passion in music. In Alex’s words , “There was no backup plan.”
It takes a different skill set to be the product. There are no guarantees so staying motivated and energetic requires a balance of time management, humility and confidence. In this episode of the Bastards of Art, Alex shares how he developed these traits but more importantly he shares with us how he is still learning.
I was extremely impressed with the vision and energy Alex has acquired. Listen to this episode and find out for yourself.
 






Find Alex Bochel at:
https://www.alexbochelmusic.com/
https://soundbetter.com/profiles/220033-alex-bochel
And every social media platform @alexbochelmusic
 







Bastardsart · BOA069














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Bastards of Art Host: Matt Hodel






Matt Hodel is the owner of Ragtime Tattoo and Lillian Press in St. Louis Missouri. Working as a self-employed artist since 1995, he left his fine arts degree for a path in the low brow art world. He apprenticed for tattooing in the 90's at Iron Age Studios. From there he has traveled the globe working as an artist.
Today Matt splits his time between St. Louis and the Ozark Mountains. He enjoys Risograph Printing, landscape painting, and digital painting. Matt brings these podcasts to you the listener in hopes to inspire and motivate.
For other projects vist: Matt Hodel Design
















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4 years ago
57 minutes 12 seconds

Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art.
Bastards of Art : Episode 68





















Episode 68






How to navigate a Toxic work Environment






I received a test message from a listener. He asked me to do an episode on the unhealthy work environment that tattoo shops can have. Here is his text:
“Here’s an idea for a topic:
How to navigate toxic work environment in a tattoo shop. Egos, drugs, booze, general bad attitudes in tatt shops”
There was a point in time where tattooing was a small niche tribe. The culture ran by its own rules and policed itself. I do not accept this as a legitimate excuse to allow an unhealthy environment to exsist. The edgy-ness of tattooing has dulled and with that the gruff attitudes have lost their purpose.
Tattooing is a very mainstream business. Artist are citing their professionalism as a selling points to clients Often they themselves do not reflect the healthy values needed in todays workplace. Working in a shop that is still fueled with machismo rather than creativity and professionalism often leads to toxic environments.
My answer to the text is simple. Become the best version of yourself. By doing this you will attract other like-minded people. You will never be able to change other people’s attitudes or temperaments, nut you have 100% control over yours.
Change always starts with you.
-Matt Hodel







Bastardsart · BOA68














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Bastards of Art Host: Matt Hodel






Matt Hodel is the owner of Ragtime Tattoo and Lillian Press in St. Louis Missouri. Working as a self-employed artist since 1995, he left his fine arts degree for a path in the low brow art world. He apprenticed for tattooing in the 90's at Iron Age Studios. From there he has traveled the globe working as an artist.
Today Matt splits his time between St. Louis and the Ozark Mountains. He enjoys Risograph Printing, landscape painting, and digital painting. Matt brings these podcasts to you the listener in hopes to inspire and motivate.
For other projects vist: Matt Hodel Design












Show more...
5 years ago
21 minutes 33 seconds

Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art.
Bastards of Art :Episode 67





















Episode 67






Steps to a Creative Workflow






There is nothing worse than being inspired to art but not being able to art. I can not count how many times I would see something on YouTube that would make me want to draw. I happed to often and it was so frustrating. I was so stoked to create something but after I set up my drawing table, nothing. Nothing happened. I just stared at my page.
I still do this.
The difference is, now when it happens, I have a plan of attack. I have a workflow that I can fall back on to help me get going and reach my art moment of ZEN. I chase the artist high. It is what I live for. My advice to those that get stumped is to set up a few steps to bring you into art mode.
Preparation
This is the part that will pay off in the long run but feels like work in the beginning. Take a minute to make a guide of what you are trying to say. Visually or literally. Make some small sketches, do not commit to anything and try to make a quick blueprint for your ideas to attach themselves to.
Incubation
We have our conscious and our sub-conscious minds that we live with. If you do the preparation phase, you are allowing your two worlds to collaborate on an idea. Therefore, the preparation phase is important. While you are in the incubation phase, ideas will loosely fly around your brain. You are slowly finding the chord that ties it all together.
Illumination
The “AH-HA” moment. You are now focused. You know how to get to your goals and the only thing left to do, is to do it. This step is when your artist high kicks in. Time slows down and you obtain tunnel vision. This is why we art.
Implementation
This is your reward for following a path. You are no longer lost. The words spill onto the page, your fingers move quickly on the piano and your brushes have a mind of their own. Congratulations you are making art.
Let your voice be heard.
Matt Hodel







Bastardsart · BOA67














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Bastards of Art Host: Matt Hodel






Matt Hodel is the owner of Ragtime Tattoo and Lillian Press in St. Louis Missouri. Working as a self-employed artist since 1995,
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5 years ago
10 minutes 1 second

Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art.
Bastards of Art : Episode 66





















Episode 66






Know your Client Churn






You have spent so much time and effort into getting clients. Now it is time to keep them. It takes more time energy and money to build a client base than it does to retain those clients that are already doing business with you.
Customer churn is one of the most important metrics for a growing business to evaluate. It is a number that can give your company the hard truth about its customer retention.
In this podcast I use the tattoo career as my model to discuss the churn of clientele. You can relate this concept to any business that involves people and that is almost all of them.
Customer churn is the percentage of customers that stopped using your company's product or service during a certain time frame. You can calculate churn rate by dividing the number of customers you lost during that time period -- say a quarter -- by the number of customers you had at the beginning of that time period.
There are a few things you want to avoid if you want to improve your client retention. This podcast will help you understand how to work smarter and more efficiently so you can spend more time doing art.
-Matt Hodel







Bastardsart · BOA66






Read More at NGDATA. Here is a great article from Molly Galetto.
What is Customer Churn?














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Bastards of Art Host: Matt Hodel






Matt Hodel is the owner of Ragtime Tattoo and Lillian Press in St. Louis Missouri. Working as a self-employed artist since 1995, he left his fine arts degree for a path in the low brow art world. He apprenticed for tattooing in the 90's at Iron Age Studios. From there he has traveled the globe working as an artist.
Today Matt splits his time between St. Louis and the Ozark Mountains. He enjoys Risograph Printing, landscape painting, and digital painting. Matt brings these podcasts to you the listener in hopes to inspire and motivate.
For other projects vist: Matt Hodel Design


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5 years ago
20 minutes 1 second

Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art.
Bastards of Art : Episode 65





















Episode 65






Tattoo Education






Most fields that require a license to operate also require some form of continuous education. The benefit to this is not only for the practitioner’s sake but it raises the industry standards as well.
In the tattoo industry, formal education is frowned upon. From time to time a tattoo school will open with the intent to take an artist from no previous experience to licensed tattooist but I am not concerned with these monkey factories. What I am referring to is the abyss that looms over an artist after his first years of practicing.
For the most part, it is up to the individual to be responsible for bettering themselves. The problem lies in not know what needing improvement and what resources are available to them. For those who entered tattooing by apprenticing in a street shop, the lines are blurred to what comes after the formative years of their career. If you are wanting to continue to specialize in your field there is not a lot of programs for continuous education.
Matt Hodel







Bastardsart · BOA65














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Bastards of Art Host: Matt Hodel






Matt Hodel is the owner of Ragtime Tattoo and Lillian Press in St. Louis Missouri. Working as a self-employed artist since 1995, he left his fine arts degree for a path in the low brow art world. He apprenticed for tattooing in the 90's at Iron Age Studios. From there he has traveled the globe working as an artist.
Today Matt splits his time between St. Louis and the Ozark Mountains. He enjoys Risograph Printing, landscape painting, and digital painting. Matt brings these podcasts to you the listener in hopes to inspire and motivate.
For other projects vist: Matt Hodel Design






















Show more...
5 years ago
22 minutes 51 seconds

Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art.
Bastards of Art : Episode 64





















Episode 64






I Quit.






I Quit Drinking and my Art got Better
A decade ago I made the change to quit drinking. The act of drinking had become a way of life for so long that I do not remember too many things that didn’t involve having beers. When I was 35, I woke up and quit.
A lot of stuff got better. The craziest part was how focused my mind got. I was no longer a ball of nerves. I had lost that feeling of being on edge. It wasn’t over night, but I had a glimpse in those early days of what I was capable of. That lead me out of the drinking stage in my life to the art stage of my life.
I had always done art. I had always done art and felt like a big phony. The first months and even years I still felt very vulnerable. I want to say that with time things got better. That is not the case. With experience things got better. That is a much more accurate statement. The more action I put into place, the better everything got.
Today I am much more productive. Today I am much more focused. I can say that I accomplished more in one year being sober than 10 years drinking. My art feels right. I can learn new ideas and techniques. I am not afraid to explore outside my comfort zone.
I felt like I needed to put this in a podcast. I am shy talking about it because I do not want others to feel uncomfortable. I do not care what others do to get their inspiration. I just know that what worked for them, did not work for me.







Bastardsart · BOA64














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Bastards of Art Host: Matt Hodel






Matt Hodel is the owner of Ragtime Tattoo and Lillian Press in St. Louis Missouri. Working as a self-employed artist since 1995, he left his fine arts degree for a path in the low brow art world. He apprenticed for tattooing in the 90's at Iron Age Studios. From there he has traveled the globe working as an artist.
Today Matt splits his time between St. Louis and the Ozark Mountains. He enjoys Risograph Printing, landscape painting, and digital painting. Matt brings these podcasts to you the listener in hopes to inspire and motivate.
For other projects vist: Show more...
5 years ago
16 minutes 46 seconds

Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art.
Bastards of Art : Episode 63





















Episode 63






There is a fine line between a foot in the door and a foot in the ass. Making the leap to self-employment has some hidden obstacles that will arise. Those who are not ready to grow will fail. The number one enemy people face when they go out on their own is themselves.
These five traits will never be mastered and are constantly evolving. You should be prepared to continuously work on yourself and understanding how the following applies to you and your life as an independent artist.






Five Traits You Will Need for Success






Time Management
This might be the most difficult skill to learn. Even if it is foreign to most artists, it can be achieved. This is a skill that is slowly learned and consistently improved. The great news is it starts by simply learning one word: NO. When you can streamline your workflow and cut the fat from your schedule, you will have your first victory in time management.
Understanding Internet Content
We all know Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest and whatever app came last week. These are tools of the internet. They are not THE internet. You should be learning how to create content and how to host that content. This could be a blog, online store, YouTube channel or podcast. Then you market your online content with the tools of the internet. The goal is to be free of third-party apps and be able to manage your own content. Then be able to drive traffic your webpage and online stores.
Financial Responsibility
I think the biggest take from this statement is to understand that when you are producing you are an entity. That entity makes money. You will need to fund this entity so it can keep making things to produce. It is only after the entity gets paid and is self-sufficient, that you get to take a draw or paycheck for yourself.
You need to nurture the entity that makes money and only take a draw of a part of that money.
The entity grosses money then it pays its expenses and builds a cash reserve. What the entity nets is what you get to take a draw from. Do not bleed your entity dry.
Patience
This is a big one. You already know not everything is going to go your way. The successful entrepreneur knows how to keep the moving parts moving. This is the biggest secret to managing a business. This is what holds people back. Your job is to make sure everyone has what they need to get their job done. Even if it is not your job, your job is to make sure everyone has what they need to get their job done.
Trust in Yourself
Imposter theory is real. Most artist have been plagued with feeling like a phony. This happens when your self-worth does not meet your current project. It could be hanging your art alongside of really talented artist, or it might happen when you are wanting to express your opinion but you are feeling like your not the person who should be offering advice.
You should fake it until you make it.
-Matt Hodel







Bastardsart · BOA63 Mixdown














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5 years ago
17 minutes 29 seconds

Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art.
Bastards of Art | Episode 62










Bastards of Art | Episode 62






Good Artist Borrow and Great Artist Steal.
How and when to use reference.
No one starts off their art career being the most original and profound artist on the planet. It just doesn't work that way.  While you are learning your craft it is crucial to observe how those who came before you problem solved.  In fact since we are always learning its even more crucial to become comfortable using reference to enhance your career.
Matt Hodel talks about the how, when and why of stealing from artist who came before you like a pro.
 

















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5 years ago
21 minutes 54 seconds

Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art.
Bastards of Art | Episode 61










Bastards of Art | Episode 61






Darwin Vs Einstein
The creative person is one of two different creative types:
Charles Darwin was a great experimental innovator, who spent decades accumulating evidence on evolution and its mechanisms, and made his greatest contributions late in his career.
Albert Einstein was a great conceptual innovator, who made discoveries through highly abstract reasoning, and made his greatest contributions early in his career.
In this episode of Bastards of Art, Matt Hodel discusses the creative side of ourselves and how to get in touch with it.

















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5 years ago
21 minutes 27 seconds

Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art.
Bastards of Art: Episode 60










Bastards of Art | Episode 60






I have five ideas to get you out of your comfort zone.  There is a whole world of art out there and you not need to stick to the safe areas.  So for a minute, ignore your Instagram and consider doing something different today.
1. Make a fake company.

* Create a motto and a start a design line
* Create shirts
* Make flyers
* Make logo

2. Start a new social network platform.

* Behance
* Deviant art
* Doodle addict
* Ello
* Pintrest
* art station
* Tumblr

3. Try to make you favorite art with different mediums.

* Break away from your comfort zone.
* Feel out new techniques
* Buy new stuff

4. Visit a print shop

* woodcut
* engraving
* etching
* litho
* screen printing
* mono type

5. Make a web page.

* Try WordPress
* Use your voice
* Let people know who you are.

 

















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My Name is Matt Hodel and I have been making art for a living since 1995. If you enjoyed my podcast, please visit my web page.







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5 years ago
21 minutes 48 seconds

Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art.
Bastards of Art | Episode 59










Bastards of Art | Episode 59






Three Personalities
As you become more of the product and bridge the gap between Art and Business, it is helpful to take on a new perspective. Reading book the E-Myth helped me to see myself as three personalities:
Entrepreneur
The ability to see the future.
Manager
The ability to work in the present time.
Technician
The ability to work now.
 
Together they form a great team as long as they all get along and respect one another.  When the are at odds then you suffer to achieve your goals. In this podcast I discuss what the roles of these personalities are and how they relate to Money, Time and Work.
You don't have to keep spinning your wheels wondering why your not getting the results you want.  You just need some help with perspective.
-Matt Hodel




















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5 years ago
23 minutes 52 seconds

Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art.
Bastards of Art : Episode 58
“Your greatest strength begets your greatest weakness.” William Shakespeare
 
As an artist we have projects we would like to complete. Sometimes is for pure joy and other time it’s for profit. Usually it is a mix of both.
It is said that our greatest strength is our greatest weakness. When maximize our artistic super powers instead of just optimizing them, our hyper focused abilities can run over the rest of the project.
Balance is the answer to 90% of our problems. Learning to understand how to see our blind spots and how to counter our strengths is very helpful.

* Strong yet able to show vulnerability


* Decisive yet willing to be flexible


* Competitive yet empathetic

 
This episode of the Bastards of Art podcast discusses how we can be more successful using personal reflection.

Itunes – Soundcloud – Contact – YouTube – Stitcher
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5 years ago
17 minutes 46 seconds

Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art.
Bastards of Art : 57
Hello I’m back! After a year of chasing dreams and smashing fears, I am back to recording.
I don’t record podcasts if it feels like I am just going through the motions. So from time to time, I take a break. I have gathered so much experience from the last year that I finally feel like I can podcast again!
I have a schedule to get these up every Monday.
Thank you,
Matt Hodel

Itunes – Soundcloud – Contact – YouTube – Stitcher
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5 years ago
19 minutes 25 seconds

Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art.
Bastards of Art : Episode 56
Itunes – Soundcloud – Contact – YouTube – Stitcher


Who you know!



Matt Hodel and Chris Boyle discuss in this podcast how who you know can help give you clout. Having a bit of clout does not hurt your worth.



Name dropping is not the answer, but getting your art in the right hand so other people name drop you is key.



Also there is a really long tangent about tattooing people that is worth an extra 8 minutes of your time.








Itunes – Soundcloud – Contact – YouTube – Stitcher
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5 years ago
32 minutes 13 seconds

Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art.
Bastards of Art : Episode 55
First Impression
In this episode we follow up on “What are you worth?”  This question has no direct answer but what to consider is a the elements that go into that question.  Episode 54 covers an overview of the subject but in this episode we discuss the impression you give to your future clients and customers.
Are you chronically late and in disarray? Do you look like a hobo? Is your instagram full of 3am selfies at the night club?
You will still obtain likeminded clients, those who also like to live fast and fun. The question is, can you charge accordingly? If you rent a dingy motel with sticky sheets, would you pay Four Seasons prices? Of course not!
This isn’t about how much you can make as much as what is your fare rate.  Take a listen and leave some feed back.
Thank you,
Matt Hodel and Chris Boyle
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7 years ago
32 minutes 37 seconds

Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art.
Bastards of Art : Episode 54
“How much should I charge for my work?”
The answers will vary and nobody can give you a clear cut answer.  There is a way to narrow down your current worth.  You must take into account a few variables:

* What impression do you leave?
* Who can vouch for you?
* What do you do thats different or unique?
* What achievements have you earned?

Episode 54 discuss this overview and how to think about your worth. The following episodes will zone in on each topic in depth so stop stiffing yourself because your undercharging.  Maximize your wins by understanding your worth.
 

Itunes – Soundcloud – Contact – YouTube – Stitcher
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7 years ago
27 minutes 5 seconds

Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art.
Bastards of Art : Episode 53
Burnout.
Their is a guilt that arises when doing something you love starts to feel like a grind.  If you are working in a creative art field, you are probably in a service industry.  The service industry is very repetitive and this causes burnout.
Chris Boyle and Matt Hodel discuss how they have dealt with their personal burnouts in the industry.
 
<iframe width=”100%” height=”166″ scrolling=”no” frameborder=”no” allow=”autoplay” src=”https://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=https%3A//api.soundcloud.com/tracks/481844469&color=%23ff5500&auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false&show_teaser=true”></iframe>
 
<a href=”https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/bastards-art-setting-goals/id1191382884″>Itunes</a> – <a href=”https://soundcloud.com/user-505459834″>Soundcloud</a> – <a href=”mailto:bastardsart@gmail.com”>Contact</a> – <a href=”https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1sGZf9axqZTKbToONnCV3Q?spfreload=10″>YouTube</a> – <a href=”http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/bastards-of-art”>Stitcher</a></p>
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7 years ago
26 minutes 40 seconds

Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art.
Bastards of Art : Episode 52
Helpful tips when Talking to a client for commissioned work:

Inform the new client on how you operate.
 Understand that your client has no idea what they want.
 Be detailed.  Get on the same page as your client.
 Don’t move forward until you have an agreement.
 Have an approvals process.


Itunes – Soundcloud – Contact – YouTube – Stitcher
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7 years ago
33 minutes 54 seconds

Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art.
Bastards of Art : Episode 51
Invention in Art.
Whether it is technique or style, stretching the boundaries of your art career will reach out while you find your voice.  Struggling to be original for the sake of just being different may not always equal success.
Our last two podcast (episode 49 and 50) discuss Imitation and Innovation. In this episode we discuss Invention. Are you stretching the truths just to stick out? There is a fine line between being unique and just looking cringe worthy.
Join Matt Hodel and Chris Boyle in the adventures of Art.

Itunes – Soundcloud – Contact – YouTube – Stitcher
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7 years ago
38 minutes 24 seconds

Bastards of Art: Too polished for folk art, too punk for fine art.
Bastards of Art is a podcast to reach out to lowbrow artist. We are helping artist to come together with a message of positivity and ambition. It can feel very lonely spending hours in the studio. We are here to help erase self doubt and cultivate the artist inside you.