>>1461573
>Can a [...] become a Junko drawfag?
The answer is always yes. As long as you put in the hours into directed studies and practice, you'll eventually be able to create something even you yourself can be satisfied with. Note that depending on your current skill level as of this moment, that can take at least months. It's neither fast nor a sure path, so it's imperative that you eventually find joy or at least relaxation or peace of mind in the act of drawing and painting in and of itself. Sure, you won't be this generation's Michelangelo or Vincent van Gogh, but eventually you'll be able to satisfy at least yourself.
If you're willing to start your journey, there are a lot of tutorials on youtube already. But I personally would tell you to work on these progressively:
<draftsmanship (how you draw- how you hold your pen/paintbrush and how you move your arm with your pen/paintbrush) - get used to drawing
<perspective
<anatomy (or at least construction- know that whatever you want to draw, there'll be some underlying structure for you to help yourself put things together with)
After that you can branch out into more specific subjects. If you want to draw anime girls, then refine your human anatomy knowledge. If you want to draw machines, then go study machines. If you want to draw megastructures and eye-catching landscapes, then study buildings and nature. Of course this isn't linear- you'll keep learning even as you're already making finished pieces; and what you learn may not be set in stone either- you may find a better way suited for you to draw the things you want to draw. Even your artstyle may change down the line.
But as long as you're willing to put in the hours and energy, then art is something even a person "with zero artistic talent" can pursue.