
Selecting a region changes the language and/or content on. But she’s worked with animation, both personally and professionally, and is currently in the process of producing two animated shorts. More recently, she’s been happy with her drawing tablet so she can create anywhere she happens to be. Early on, she liked to use mechanical pencils (nothing fancy), art markers, colored pencils, and brush pens for inking. Sketching allows her to place more emphasis on flow and expression than on anatomical precision, and it reduces stiffness in her final drawings.

Lois practices sketching and speed painting to continue improving her skills as a digital painter. When choosing brushes for a project, she usually picks one and sticks with it, since switching brushes takes her out of her flow. Lois likes to keep it simple and doesn’t add too many tools that could disrupt her progress. The system could be as simple as a single Python program, as long as it has rules and some aspect of randomness. She took some art classes along the way through elementary and high school, and a bit in college, but is mostly a self-taught artist who finds inspiration in artwork she finds while browsing the Internet, watching movies and animated films, and taking walks through nature. Generative art is the output of a system that makes its own decisions about the piece, rather than a human.

Lois van Baarle has been drawing since before she can remember. Creating your own game can lead to lots of laughs, but it can also help teach people how to bond, work together as a team and create some lasting memories, according to comedian Eric Cunningham.
