Alphonse (Czech: "Alfons") Mucha [24 July 1860 – 14 July 1939] was a Czech artist, famous for many works including his lithographic creations for Moët & Chandon, JOB Cigarette Papers and travel posters as well as magazine cover designs and decorative panels. He lived in Paris during the art nouveau period.
You might be surprised to hear I am a fan of the art nouveau movement (approximately 1890-1905), as it is highly decorative, and my personal artistic aesthetic is much more minimalist.
However, it is one of the founding concepts of the movement that I find inspiring—that of flowing, natural forms resembling the stems and blossoms of plants and other such things found in nature, all brought together in unity with satisfying geometric balance and form.
Here is the link to the original poster from which I took the inspiration to imitate the original lithographic illustration and make my own version of it, just for an exercise in creativity.
I strongly encourage creativity as a form of self care. One way to foster your creativity as an artist is to imitate famous works, or those that you admire (strictly for your own learning purposes only—NEVER copy someone else's art and claim it as your own!) because you will find that no matter how hard you try, you will always end up with your own original spin on it, and thus, discovering your own style.
You also learn to break down the artwork into layers, shapes, forms and colours, seeing it from a new perspective than what you might have before.
Image source
Self-portrait of Mucha at work (1907)