How Kim Jung Gi Mastered Drawing
Summary
TLDRThe video script celebrates Kim Jung Gi as an unparalleled artist, renowned for his imaginative drawings and mastery of the brush pen. It delves into his early start at age 6, his exceptional observational skills, and the thousands of hours he dedicated to honing his craft. The key to his greatness lies not only in his innate talent but in his relentless passion for drawing, which fuels his daily commitment to his art. The script challenges viewers to cultivate a similar love for their craft to achieve greatness.
Takeaways
- 🎨 Kim Jung Gi is renowned for his exceptional drawing skills from imagination and his use of a brush pen.
- 👶 He began drawing at a very young age, 6, and never stopped, which contributed to his extensive experience.
- 🔢 The video suggests that Kim Jung Gi has accumulated around 5,000 to 14,000 hours of drawing experience.
- 🧠 His early understanding of 3D perspective set him apart from his peers and was a result of keen observation skills.
- 👀 Observation is key to his success, as it involves accurately understanding and interpreting the world around him.
- 💪 The strength of Kim Jung Gi's observation skills comes from consistent practice from a young age, making it his default approach.
- 🎼 The script compares learning to playing music, emphasizing the importance of slow, focused practice over rushed, inaccurate practice.
- 🤯 The concept of 'deliberate practice' is highlighted, where the quality of practice is more important than the quantity.
- 🔑 The video argues that Kim Jung Gi's passion for drawing is the driving force behind his skill and success.
- 🌟 It suggests that anyone can achieve similar mastery with a genuine love for the craft and a dedication to focused practice.
- 🚀 The script encourages viewers to reflect on their own desires and motivations, suggesting that a pure love for drawing is essential for reaching high levels of skill.
Q & A
Who is Kim Jung Gi and what is he known for?
-Kim Jung Gi is renowned as one of the greatest artists, famous for his ability to draw from imagination and his mastery with a brush pen. He is also known for his ink exclusivity and his passion for drawing.
How did the speaker first discover Kim Jung Gi?
-The speaker first found out about Kim Jung Gi in 2018 through an interview conducted by Proko, which highlighted Kim's unique perspective and skills.
What is significant about Kim Jung Gi's approach to drawing?
-Kim Jung Gi's approach is significant because he started drawing at a very young age and never stopped, which has resulted in an extensive amount of practice and experience over the years.
How much experience does Kim Jung Gi have compared to someone who started drawing at age 19?
-Kim Jung Gi has approximately 13 years of extra experience compared to someone who started drawing at 19, which translates to nearly 5000 hours of practice if he drew for an hour a day on average.
What role does observation skill play in Kim Jung Gi's artistic development?
-Observation skill played a crucial role in Kim Jung Gi's development as it allowed him to understand the world around him in 3D from a young age, setting the foundation for his advanced drawing skills.
How does the speaker suggest bridging the gap between Kim Jung Gi's level of skill and that of an average person?
-The speaker suggests taking the smallest possible steps with the highest possible accuracy, focusing on slow and deliberate practice to train the brain to perform correctly and efficiently.
What is the importance of focus and deliberate practice according to the script?
-Focus and deliberate practice are important because they train the brain to perform tasks correctly and accurately, leading to more effective learning and skill development over time.
How does the speaker describe the difference between rushed practice and slow, focused practice?
-The speaker describes rushed practice as less effective because it trains the brain to perform tasks inaccurately, while slow, focused practice trains the brain to perfect movements and leads to better learning outcomes.
What is the key factor that the speaker believes separates Kim Jung Gi from other artists?
-The key factor that separates Kim Jung Gi from others is his undying love for drawing, which drives him to spend countless hours practicing and creating art.
What advice does the speaker give to those who aspire to achieve a level of skill similar to Kim Jung Gi?
-The speaker advises that to achieve a level of skill similar to Kim Jung Gi, one must cultivate a pure love for the craft and approach learning with a focus on accuracy and deliberate practice.
How does the speaker define 'talent' in the context of Kim Jung Gi's artistic abilities?
-In the context of Kim Jung Gi, 'talent' is defined as the result of early and consistent training of observation skills, which became his default approach due to the strength of that 'muscle' developed from years of practice.
Outlines
🎨 Kim Jung Gi's Artistic Genius and Early Mastery
This paragraph introduces Kim Jung Gi as an unparalleled artist, renowned for his exceptional ability to draw from imagination using a brush pen. The speaker discovered Kim's work in 2018 through an interview with Proko, highlighting his unique perspective, ink-only approach, and dedication to drawing. The paragraph delves into Kim's early start in drawing at the age of six and his continuous development, emphasizing the significant advantage in experience he has over others who began later. It also touches on the importance of observation skills and how Kim's early understanding of 3D drawing set him apart, attributing his success to a combination of talent, skill, and relentless practice.
🚀 Cultivating Expertise Through Focused Practice and Passion
The second paragraph discusses the concept of focused practice and its impact on learning and mastery, using Kim Jung Gi's journey as an example. It challenges the misconception that more hours of practice at a lower focus level equates to the same progress as fewer hours with full concentration. The speaker emphasizes the importance of slow, deliberate practice to ingrain correct techniques and habits. The paragraph also addresses the role of passion in Kim's success, noting that his love for drawing was a driving force behind his ability to work for extended periods and produce remarkable art. The summary concludes by encouraging the audience to reflect on their own motivations and love for their craft as a key to achieving excellence.
Mindmap
Keywords
💡Kim Jung Gi
💡Observation skill
💡Ink exclusivity
💡3D drawing
💡5000 hours
💡Ballpoint pen sketches
💡Learning approach
💡Undying love for drawing
💡Practice intensity
💡Default habits
💡Passion for craft
Highlights
Kim Jung Gi is renowned for his ability to draw anything from imagination.
He started drawing at age 6 and never stopped, dedicating his life to his craft.
Kim Jung Gi's observation skills were honed from a young age, allowing him to see and understand the world in a unique way.
By age 17, Kim Jung Gi had already accumulated thousands of hours of drawing experience.
Kim Jung Gi's approach to drawing involved accurately observing and understanding the world around him, rather than just making assumptions.
His 'muscle memory' for accurate observation was stronger because he focused on it from such a young age.
The key to bridging the gap in skill is to take the smallest possible steps with the highest possible accuracy.
Slowing down and focusing on perfecting each movement leads to faster and more accurate skill development.
Not all time spent learning is equal; focused, deliberate practice is more valuable than sheer hours.
Kim Jung Gi's true greatness lies not just in his skill, but in his undying love for drawing.
His passion allowed him to draw for 10+ hours a day, often livestreaming for 5 hours without breaks.
Kim Jung Gi filled massive canvases with drawings from his imagination as part of his work, showcasing his extraordinary talent.
Achieving greatness like Kim Jung Gi requires a genuine love for the craft, not just a desire to be the best.
This level of dedication can't be sustained by ego alone; it must come from true passion.
Mere mortals can achieve greatness too, but only if it aligns with what they truly want and love.
Transcripts
This is Kim Jung Gi
The greatest artist to EVER have lived
Known for his ability to draw anything from imagination
And that brush pen.
That god damn brush pen
I first found him in 2018 through that Proko Interview;
You know the one
His crazy perspective
His ink exclusivity
His undying love for drawing
And those *ballpoint pen* sketches....
He completely changed the way I viewed art:
So what is it that made him so great?
Can us mere mortals achieve it too?
*I* think so...
Buuuuuut, there's a catch:
The thing about Kim Jung Gi, is he's one of a kind for a reason.
He started drawing at 6, but unlike other 6 year olds, he never grew out of it.
Drawing was *his* thing from the moment he could grasp a pencil in his tiny little hands.
If you wanna play the numbers game for a minute;
Let's say you started drawing at age 19, like me!
That's 13 years of extra experience he's had.
If he drew for even 1 hour a day, on average, across those years, that's damn near
5000 hours of experience he'd already gotten in by the time *I'd* figured out that
housekeeping would be the death of me and I couldn't do this for the rest of my life
To help put this into perspective a little more;
I've tracked my hours into art from the very beginning of my journey,
and I'm only *just now* at that 5000 hours mark
Sure, this's 6 years compared to 13;
But that 1 hour a day estimate I gave him?
Let's be honest, I was playing it safe.
This's what he was drawing at ~17 years old~
Odds are, as a kid he drew a little less.
But as a teenager, he was rage drawing for hours, every single day;
bringing that average waaay up.
A more realistic number?
might be 14,000 hours!!
Hell, even that could be underselling it.
But numbers aren't everything, and there's something else he was doing that was WAY more
vital to his success:
Even at age 6, he was doing something different to the people around him.
He says he was "already more visually advanced in kindergarten" that those around him,
drawing objects in 3D while his peers were still drawing in 2D.
It's not that distinction though, of 2D to 3D, that's important.
It's what got him to that understanding in the first place, and the
compounding effect that had on his growth.
See, most 6 year olds are drawing like this:
So taking that leap of adding a third dimension?
It's a really simple, but ground breaking discovery for someone that young to make;
So how did he do it?
Simple answer?
It's Observation skill.
But you've *heard* that a thousand times before, so
let me elaborate because there's more to it.
So observation skill is being able to look at the world around you and understand what
you see.
To look at your TV and understand what it looks like from the front AND the back.
To think about it's relationship in perspective to the table it's sitting on, the lounge you're
watching from, so on.
When he was young, his understanding of this was really simple:
The objects closer to me are bigger, the ones further away get smaller.
But:
By putting his focus on really observing and understanding the world around him, he was
strengthening that muscle.
The ability to accurately observe and understand, rather than taking a quick glance and assuming
the rest.
Now obviously, this means his observation skill improved, that's great.
But here's the important bit:
The muscles that are strongest are the ones we default to.
Our mind always wants to take the path of least resistance and highest reward.
For most of us, that means taking a quick glance and assuming we know the rest;
It's easier and we're probably ~60% accurate anyway.
But for him?
The path of least resistance *was* accurately observing,
because that muscle had been trained from age 6, and was stronger than any other.
It's no wonder people call him talented and think it's some magical gift:
To stumble across that so young, and be training *those* skills from day 1 is life-changing!!
For your *default* habits and strongest muscles to be the ones most effective for learning?
But what about the rest of us then?
I didn't have 6-pack eyes at 6 years old, so how do we bridge that gap?
To bridge that gap, you only need to do one thing:
Take the smallest possible steps with the highest possible accuracy.
If you're a musician learning a new song,
you don't blitz your way through it on attempt number 1, playing as fast as possible.
Doing that, you're moving too fast to actually learn the piece, right?
But, if you keep doing that, over and over, you *are* learning something:
You're training yourself to play sloppy.
And I don't mean this metaphorically, or like I'm calling you lazy.
Literally, you are repeating the steps, over and over to learn to play incorrectly.
You're training your brain to play fast and inaccurately.
When you slow down to an excruciatingly slow pace, and focus on getting every single note
exactly correct,
what you're doing is training your brain to perfect the movement.
The more you do this, the faster you get at it;
And any of you with musical experience know that this's true:
10 hours of rushed practice is worth NOTHING compared to 1 hour of slow, focused and determined
practice.
I used to think that learning worked like this:
If I put 100 hours in at 100% focus, I might get 100XP.
Buuut that's exhausting and hard.
SO if I instead put 200 hours in at 50% focus, that'll take me longer, but I'll get to the
same spot in the end anyway.
THIS IS WRONG.
Not all time spent learning is equal;
What's important isn't the sheer number of hours, but the level of focus and where you're
targeting it.
It's really difficult at first to slow down and focus on getting each step as accurate
as you can.
But, you do this enough, and the correct actions become second nature.
This is how you bridge the gap, and this is how Kim Jung Gi got so good.
In his case, it wasn't intentional;
No 6 year old is thinking like this.
But whether it's deliberate or just coincidence,
taking the time to slowly cultivate this way of thinking will drastically change your progress
for the rest of your life.
There is though, one final thing he was doing that makes all the difference.
Getting to be **that** good isn't really about your approach to learning.
Don't get me wrong, it's an important factor or I wouldn't have brought it up.
But there's a lot of people that're good at learning.
What separates him from everyone else?
The thing that really makes Kim Jung Gi so special isn't his skill level.
It isn't how smart he is, it isn't how good he was at learning.
More than anything else, it was his undying love for drawing.
He frequently would draw for 10+ hours a day.
He would livestream on YouTube for 5 hours without a single break.
Part of his job was flying around the world,
filling these massive, multi-meter long canvases with drawings all from his imagination.
All of this for WORK, so not even mentioning the mountain of personal drawings he did outside
of the public eye.
That's not something you can do day in, day out, for *41 years*, unless you *really* have
an undying love for your craft.
That's what makes him different.
It's his unrivalled passion for art, *stacked on top* of his observation skill and approach
to learning.
So now you have to ask yourself:
What do *YOU* want?
If you want to be as good as him, that's something that only comes from a pure love for drawing.
And that *can* be cultivated with time!!
He didn't start out drawing for 10 hours a day at age 6!
But you *probably* can't get there if it's out of ego;
This desire to "become great, better than the best" and prove yourself.
Because that comes from a fundamentally different place.
Can us mere mortals achieve it too?
ABSOLUTELY.
BUT,, only if it's what *you* *truly* want.
Have fun drawing.
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