Hallo!
Right, I need some advice. So, fun fact, I am indeed going to art school to pursue the career I have always wanted. I'm accepted, enrolled, and housing is paid. The only thing left is for me to do is to submit a portfolio + resume for more scholarship $$$. My resume is clean, polished, and waiting in my advisors inbox. The last item on the list is to resubmit that darn portfolio...
Honestly, it's a bad portfolio (I think, I really don't have a frame of reference other than the god-tier stuff of people who knew they wanted to be artists by the time high school rolled around). There's no two ways about it. As a hobbyist, I just haven't spent all that much time doing life drawings. I have messy, sketchy style and idk, just a lot of self doubt. I had some alright drawings from photographs, but it's obvious they're from photographs and I totally get why you don't want to see that in a student's portfolio. So, I'm in a bit of a bind. On one hand, I'm in, I already have some scholarship money and my resume should bump it up. On the other hand, I feel almost... fraudulent having secured entrance without a quality portfolio (To SCAD, if you were wondering). I know that trying to rush a portfolio in a, let's say several weeks, time is probably a horrible mistake, but it's kind of become a point of shame for me.
I know I don't have to be the next Picasso--that's why I'm going to art school after all--but... y'know now that it's more professional development then the college experience, I just feel bad presenting what is not really my best work (a lot of which has been lost through repeated hardware failures, multiple computers, and the tendency of my younger self to just rip stuff up and throw it out when I was done with it.) I don't know what to do. It's not make or break, but I'd like to have some pride in my work.
Any ideas or strategies?* I live in a visually nice area. Although it's a bit of a void in terms of open model sessions or any kind of artistic workshops? I'd like to finish maybe 5-10 additional pieces to give my portfolio some meat and feel comfortable about rounding it out with the stuff I've been working on as a hobby.
*I'm in for sequential arts (and may transfer over to animation, we'll see), so I was thinking about mostly getting some bonafide finished still life drawings to provide the core of the portfolio while I support it with some comic pages, little animations, and possibly a screenplay.