Okay, real talk. You’ve been painting, sketching, or just messing around with colors for fun, and now you’re thinking… could this actually be more than a hobby? The short answer: yes. The long answer: yes, but it’s messy, confusing, and sometimes totally overwhelming. It’s not about luck, or waiting for “the right moment,” it’s about deciding you’re done playing small and actually putting yourself out there. Here’s the thing, turning your art into a career doesn’t automatically feel glamorous. There are no silver trophies handed out just because you finally post…
In this Women in Arts Network interview, Roxa Smith shares her path from Venezuela to New York, her method of layering gouache and acrylic, and how she knows when a painting is coming together. She talks about treating her practice with the focus of a full-time job, the challenges of balancing life with art, and why handmade work matters in an increasingly digital world.
let’s talk about something nobody really wants to admit: pricing your own art is weirdly stressful. Like, you’ve poured hours, sweat, and maybe a few tears into a piece, and now you have to slap a number on it? Suddenly, it’s not just your art, it’s money, math, and all the anxiety that comes with being a human who needs to eat. And the guilt. Oh, the guilt is real. You want to charge enough to feel like your work matters, but not so much that people think you’re greedy. And…
“Yes” has a way of sneaking into an artist’s life and never leaving. Every email, every invitation, every comment feels like a chance to grab something, to prove something, to be seen. But here’s the deal: saying yes to everything doesn’t make you unstoppable. It makes you stretched, tired, and wondering where your spark went. When you keep saying yes, the projects start to pile up. Deadlines collide, ideas blur together, and the work that actually excites you ends up on the back burner. That big, juicy, soul-feeding project? It’s the…
Have you ever had a day that seemed ordinary, only to realize later it changed everything about how you make art? Those moments sneak up quietly, maybe a critique stings, maybe a tiny success surprises you, maybe an experiment completely flops. At the time, they feel like nothing. But in hindsight, they’re milestones. Why care? Because understanding these moments is how you start learning from them instead of repeating the same struggles. Each “aha” or “ouch” contains a lesson if you’re paying attention. Knowing what to look for makes your growth…
In this Women in Arts Network interview, painter Renee Pupetz shares her path from Halifax’s art scene to rediscovering painting during one of the most challenging times of her life. She opens up about her love for nature-inspired work, the role of intuition in her process, and how painting became a daily anchor.
We are beyond thrilled to share that our newest international virtual exhibition, The Years We Were Little, by Women in Arts Network centered on the theme Childhood Nostalgia, is now live! This exhibition is more than just a collection of artworks it’s a journey back to the tender, fleeting moments of childhood that stay with us forever. Hosted by the Women in Arts Network, it celebrates the voices of women-identifying and non-binary artists from across the globe, bringing together memories, imagination, and the universal experiences that shape who we are. Every…
Inspiration doesn’t wait until the laundry’s folded or your inbox is clear. It tends to crash into you while you’re in the middle of reheating leftovers or racing to meet a deadline you swore you’d tackle earlier. And honestly, that timing can feel cruel. You want to grab the idea, sketch it out, let it breathe, but the rest of life is standing there with its arms crossed, reminding you it comes first. That’s the real struggle of being an artist in everyday life. You’re not living in some cabin in…
You know that moment when you’re staring at your sketchbook or canvas and thinking, “Am I the only one doing this alone?” It’s a lonely kind of silence, the kind that doesn’t just sit in your studio but sneaks into your chest too. And if you’re a woman artist, that loneliness can feel sharper. It’s not just about having no one to talk to, it’s the extra layers , the invisible expectations, the tiny dismissals, the constant question of whether your work is being taken as seriously as you are. Here’s…
You didn’t pick up a paintbrush, pen, or camera because life was picture-perfect. You picked it up because something inside you needed out. Maybe it was frustration, perhaps heartbreak, maybe that low hum of anxiety that never seems to shut up. Whatever it was, you knew keeping it bottled in wasn’t an option. So you made. And that act of making, messy as it was, started to stitch you back together in ways you didn’t expect. Here’s the funny thing: you probably weren’t trying to heal at first. You were just…
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