Finding Your Purpose, Knowing When to Pivot, and the Future of AI-Generated Images
I did an interview with Bold Journey, an online magazine that profiles entrepreneurs. Among other things, I talked about knowing when to change course and the impact of AI on illustration. This is a condensed version. You can read the full interview here.![]()
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Mark, we’ve always been impressed with folks who have a very clear sense of purpose and so maybe we can jump right in and talk about how you found your purpose?
It’s embarrassing, but I found my purpose (being an illustrator who specializes in humor) mostly through dumb luck and by taking a leap of faith.![]()
I worked after school at a drugstore. Part of my job was decorating the store windows. I didn’t have much to work with, so I had to get creative. I loved doing it. I should have picked up on the hint I was a visual communicator, but alas, I didn’t.![]()
After college, I drifted into programming and systems analysis. I did magazine gag cartooning on the side. When the company I worked for decided to relocate, it presented a now-or-never opportunity. I decided to be brave and become a full-time freelancer.
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Before we dig deeper and ask you about the skills that matter and more, maybe you can tell our readers about yourself?![]()
I started out as a cartoonist, then moved into illustration. I did a lot of editorial work, illustrating stories for magazines and business journals. I also drew caricatures at Christmas parties, company picnics, business expos, you name it. I’ve worked as a political cartoonist and I also self-syndicated a weekly comic strip which ran for seven years.![]()

“Saintly Anthony” was a weekly strip that ran in Catholic diocesan papers. I wrote and drew 5 strips a month.![]()
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My editorial assignments dried up as print magazines folded, and I moved into creating visuals for marketing campaigns. I’ve done work for Coca-Cola, Chick-fil-A, and lots of smaller brands.![]()

For the Coca-Cola Company, for a post called “10 Things That Go Better With Coke, Fall Edition.”
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Looking back, what do you think were the three qualities, skills, or areas of knowledge that were most impactful in your journey?![]()
Sounds funny, but “not knowing any better” helped me succeed. I’ve never been to art school. I’m self-taught. That includes both drawing and using image-editing programs. I didn’t have a portfolio when I started out. I didn’t have a business plan, either. I just jumped in. Not smart, but I made it work because I didn’t know any better.![]()
Another important skill is knowing when to pivot. I couldn’t sell enough gag cartoons to make a living, so I moved into magazine illustration. When that dried up, I switched to marketing. I’ve learned visual communication doesn’t stand still. You have to be willing to reinvent yourself and ferret out new opportunities.![]()
My greatest skill is thinking up ideas. You’ve got to have a good idea before you start drawing. True for a gag cartoon, an illustration, or a marketing campaign. There are lots of people who can draw better than I can. Stock images are a dime a dozen. I try to sell myself as an idea person.![]()

“Idea Man,” for a post I wrote about champion idea man Leonardo da Vinci.
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What advice do you have for folks who want to be commercial artists or better visual communicators?![]()
Take art and design classes. Learn the rules; you can creatively break them later.![]()
Be computer savvy. Learn the various design and image-editing programs.![]()
Experiment. Discover your style, what makes you unique. Go to school on artists you admire, but don’t copy them.![]()
Have fun. If you don’t enjoy the work, you’ve made a wrong turn somewhere.![]()
Above all, figure out a way to be different and get noticed.![]()

“The Importance of Getting Noticed,” part of my entry for Vidyard’s annual Video In Business Awards.
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Is there a particular challenge you are currently facing?![]()
The #1 obstacle facing every artist today is artificial intelligence software, specifically AI image generators like DALL-E 3 and Midjourney. It’s hard to compete with programs that will spit out images in response to simple text prompts, especially when they only cost $10 or $20 a month.![]()
You meet this challenge in one of two ways. You become an AI artist yourself (in the sense of mastering the programs and using them to generate images), or you double down on human-generated art and try to make a case for it.![]()
I’ve chosen the second path. It’s going to be a tough slog for a while because people like the novelty and cheapness of AI images. My feeling, however, is that as AI images proliferate, they will start to look more and more alike. They’ll become a new kind of stock art. People scroll past stock images because they look like stock images, i.e., filler. I think people are already scrolling past a lot of AI-generated art.![]()
Visuals are supposed to get people’s attention. They’re supposed to get the person to do something: read the post, buy the book, watch the ad. To grab attention, a visual has to be different.![]()
Human art has always been about new ideas. I expect AI to win in the short term, but I’m betting some brands will still be willing to invest in human artists to help them stand out from the crowd.![]()
In the meantime, I’m working on a children’s book, and I’m doing more writing on platforms like Medium. I illustrate those posts. I’m trying to show I’m an idea person and that real (human-generated) illustration has an unmatched power to get attention.![]()

“Brands Need A Human Touch,” also part of my entry for Vidyard’s annual Video In Business Awards.
About Mark: I’m an illustrator specializing in humor, branding, social media, and content marketing. My images are different, like your brand needs to be.![]()
You can view my portfolio, and connect with me on X, Facebook, and LinkedIn.![]()
Questions? Send me an email.![]()




















































































































































































































Excellent advice, Mark! You’ve always been one of my favorite illustrators.
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Judy!!– always such a pleasure to see you, and thanks for that lovely comment! Hope you are well! May blessings abound for you and Bill (??) as The Great Turkey begins to circle for a landing!! 🦃🙏🙏🙏👍😊
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Glad to see you still ambitious, Mark! My ambition has slowed down over the years. And good to know you’re competing with AI. It’s not very intelligent, especially depicting human hands … horrible stuff. And it all looks so generic and artificial … it’s our new-age plastic art.
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Ambitious??– me?? I’m lying on a divan as I type this, eating bonbons… 😅
Ha! Hi, Steve! Always great to see you, hope you’re doing well. Yeah, AI is a strange monster. Can’t deny that it can create stunningly beautiful work, but as you say, it has a generic look– soulless, if I may wax poetic for a moment. And that’s its Achilles heel. Eventually its novelty will wear off, and I think it’s already started– which gives me hope!
Well, I see my box of bonbons is empty, time to get another– thanks as always for stopping by!! 🙏😊
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What a great interview!
I loved this! “I also self-syndicated a weekly comic strip which ran for seven years.” The example you shared was superb! Please put those strips into book format and sell them. I’m a customer!
I can’t wait to see your children’s book, too. You are the most talented person I know.
As for AI, I don’t do anything with it, but it appears to be a bit like the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. The Wild West. The tip of the iceberg. I’m thinking I should pick a company and invest in stock now.
Thanks for sharing your interview!! ❤️
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What a lovely comment!!– thanks so much, my dear Maddie!! So glad you enjoyed the Anthony strip. I would like to publish a Saintly Anthony “best of” collection someday. If I can manage to slog thru the self-publishing mire and get that children’s book published, I’ll get to work on Anthony!!
You’re right– this AI business definitely has a Wild West vibe, and it’ll be interesting to see how the whole thing plays out. Lotta money invested in it, that’s for sure. Why can’t they just give the money to us?? That would be a much wiser investment!! 😅
Always great to see you, and thanks again for your wonderful comment and all your kind support!! 🙏😊
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I like your take on the metric system. Though I am stuck with it (as a Canadian) I still don’t instinctively think in metric!
Good advice on AI. I’ve been thinking about the fact that AI generated anything is only a best guess by a system that does not know what is the truth or what is real. In your strip about metric, the children’s hairstyles are exaggerated and it is highly unlikely anyone could, or would, wear their hair like that. You know that. Your readers know that. But, if AI scanned all 420 of your strips into its databank, how would it know? If it was asked to draw a sketch of hairstyles from the time period your strip ran, how would it know that your strip’s hairstyle was not based on reality?
…or maybe it was and you hung out with a very different crowd than I did here in Canada…
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HAW!!– you really had me laughing about the hairstyles, Margy!! I’ve always been a rockabilly music fan, and I get a kick out of those big pompadours. Never had one myself, and that’s a pity!! 😅
Good points about AI. It only knows what it’s been fed, and it irks me no end that my work, and your work, and every other creative’s work, written or visual, gets vacuumed up and fed into the machine without any acknowledgment or compensation. Our work is being used against us, to build something that diminishes our job opportunities.
That said, as mentioned in the interview, AI is already showing pronounced signs of sameness, creating slick and beautiful images that all look the same. I think the novelty is wearing off, and people are scrolling past them, much as they scroll past stock images.
Always great to see you, and thanks so much for all your kind feedback and support!! 🙏😊
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