Engineered to paint: When life provides a big canvas, use it all, tech-turned-artist says

May 29, 2020  |  Austin Barnes

Aaron Norris

Talent doesn’t always equal success in the art world — but that doesn’t mean creatives should lose hope, said Aaron Norris. 

“You have to be willing to grind. Day in and day out. Keep creating, keep sculpting, keep painting, keep sketching — and don’t stop until you accomplish the things you want to accomplish,” Norris, hobby artist and a senior engineering technical specialist at Honeywell, said of ways Kansas City artists should push forward when faced with setbacks.   

While the current state of the world could be an excuse to give up on creative passions, Norris — who’s become known for his large-scale paintings and passion for figures and landscapes — has found new inspiration amid growing chaos, he said in between work on his latest piece, which will capture the spirit of the Kansas City Chiefs’ Super Bowl win. 

Aaron Norris

“I think it’s made me appreciate the time I get to spend at home with my family and I seem to be much more focused and energetic in front of the easel,” Norris said of downtime brought on by a shift to remote work and lingering results of a months’ long quarantine. 

“It has allowed me the opportunity to be at home devoting an extraordinary amount of my time in the studio.”

Such perspective has given Norris pause as he ponders his future in a re-emerging world, challenged to embrace a new normal — where he’s already seen an increase of client commissions, though he’s uncertain if the pandemic has acted as a catalyst. 

“I can really only speak from the perspective of what I’ve experienced through all of this. I think that a lot of artists who are working other jobs might take this time to reconsider what exactly they really want to do for the rest of their careers,” he explained, citing a rising creative energy in Kansas City that could take its arts scenes from underrated to booming. 

“I have been working at a Fortune 100 company for almost 18 years now and creating art on the side. This pandemic has challenged me to examine how I want to continue to make a living and what might be possible if I just created art all day long.”

Click here to see more of Aaron Norris’ art.

Click here to follow the artist on Instagram.

While Norris has no plans to leave his current career in tech, his passion for creating has steadily become a reliable source of income, he said. 

‘I’ve been very fortunate that people seem to like my work enough for me to turn it into a business,” he said of the good fortune he’s found in the art world, where he’s been consistently creating since high school. 

“… Even if I was never able to monetize my talent, I would still create art every day.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2020 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Royals draft KC fashion designer: ‘You’ve got one chance; let’s knock it out of the park’

        By Tommy Felts | March 29, 2024

        Whitney Manney has been called up to the big leagues, the Kansas City fashion designer shared, and she’s swinging for the fences with a hometown team collaboration. On Thursday’s opening day at Kauffman Stadium, the owner of the KC-based WHITNEYMANNEY label debuted a three-look streetwear collection in partnership with the Kansas City Royals. The cut…

        ‘Startup Weekend changed my life’: 3-day competition returns with potential $150K investment prize

        By Tommy Felts | March 29, 2024

        COLUMBIA, Missouri — Organizers of Missouri Startup Weekend — a team-based competition that takes a glimmer of a startup idea to a fleshed-out business in three days — are upping the ante in an attempt to give Show-Me State entrepreneurs a platform to spark success. “Aspiring founders can find people who can help them build…

        It’s easy for small biz to get lost in the shuffle; How ECJC offers a lifeline to Main Street, startup entrepreneurs

        By Tommy Felts | March 29, 2024

        The Enterprise Center in Johnson County is on a mission to prove the Kansas City metro remains a place where small businesses can grow and thrive, shared CEO Jeff Shackelford. ECJC — which is home to the Women’s Business Center, the Mid-America Angels and the Women’s Capital Connection angel investment networks, as well as the…

        Advocate knocks mayor for Troost renaming delay; calls slave owner tie KC’s ‘dirty laundry, reeking from the basement’

        By Tommy Felts | March 28, 2024

        Kansas City can no longer whitewash its history to pretend Benoist Troost — an early KC doctor, slave owner and the namesake for Troost Avenue — was anything other than a monster, said Chris Goode, pointing blame at Mayor Quinton Lucas for a stalled effort to change the east side corridor’s controversial name.  “There’s no…