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<title>Judy Batterson&#039;s Artspan Blog</title> 
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	<updated>2012-02-10T10:54:53-05:00</updated> 
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 <entry> 
 <id>tag:blogs.artspan.com,2012-02-10:31782</id>
 <title>How to Know You Are an Artist</title> 
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 <updated>2012-02-10T10:54:53-05:00</updated> 
 <summary type="text"> I am often asked, &quot;How did you know that you wanted to be an artist?&quot; &amp;nbsp;My mom always says that she knew when I was two years old and painted a &quot;mural&quot; with fingerpaints on her newly painted ...</summary> 
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General 
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  I am often asked, "How did you know that you wanted to be an artist?" &nbsp;My mom always says that she knew when I was two years old and painted a "mural" with fingerpaints on her newly painted wall! &nbsp;And she tells of when my kindergarten teacher told her that she must frame my tempera paint work of art. When I was ten, my parents bought a huge amount of gently used art supplies from an artist who was moving. &nbsp;I thought each day was Christmas from then on! &nbsp;Every school project where I could figure out a way to draw it or paint it, I would turn into a work of art. &nbsp;My physics and biology teachers finally suggested that maybe I should be a medical illustrator. &nbsp;With that in mind, at first I double majored in art and biology in college. &nbsp;But the Fine Arts degree called my name! &nbsp;I soaked in the creativity, took every fine arts studio class and relished art history. To share this passion, I added art education classes so I could teach art. &nbsp;I had found my joyful calling in life as an artist! 
 With the personal experience of being "born to create", I have observed similar traits in children who are "born this way". &nbsp;A child who looks out the window in a classroom so he can study the way the sun and shadows shape the world, might be drawn toward art. &nbsp;If a child notices funny lines in a cracked sidewalk and wants to draw them later, she may be intuitive to the fundamentals of art. I watched my young nephew carry around his tiny sketchbook during family gatherings so he could draw what was going on. &nbsp;When the desire to create is there, a child will find a way to do it, even if it's origami paper folding with a napkin from McDonalds! &nbsp;I truly believe that artists are born with a different way of seeing the world. &nbsp;To encourage this in a child is to open up the world for him. 
 So, if you doodle on paper all the time or have a child who would rather do a "project" than write a paper, you could be seeing potential creativity bottled up inside just waiting to come out. &nbsp;Let it flow! &nbsp;If you find great joy in creating, then you could be an artist, too!  
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