I hear you, it sounds like you’re stuck in a tutorial trap. I know because I spent many, many, many years stuck in my own endless loop. It’s an insidious thing because it starts with thinking “I want to draw better, so I need to learn how”, but that morphs into endless learning for the sake of learning. At some point you have to just make the art you want to make. As I said to someone else on here, the purpose of exercising is not to make you an athlete at exercising. Exercises are supposed to help improve and strengthen your skills but they should not become the focus. These exercises are a great way to warm up and you should be spending at least some of your time practicing the fundamentals. But the true test of learning is whether or not you can apply what you’ve learned to your own work. In terms of what you should be drawing or what goals you should be pursuing, I’m sorry but I can’t help you with that. All I can tell you is that you need to decide for yourself what motivates and inspires you. What do YOU want to draw? What helped me get out of my rut was making my own meme comics for a YouTube gaming channel I watch. It seems silly now that I look back at it but the solution is to essentially stop practicing and just draw. You’re probably a lot better at this than you think. Worst case scenario, you draw something for yourself and you don’t like it. And that’s actually great, because then you can ask yourself “what don’t I like about it? What can I do to improve it?” That will give you a goal. That will give meaning and purpose to the exercises. | Artwod Feedback