Depends on my mood. I do woodcuts in the old Nipponese style, I paint (acrylic, watercolour and gouache) in various styles, I do pen-and-ink in Art Deco and Art Nouveaux styles, I sketch from life with graphite, charcoal, conte, and pastel (oil and chalk). Then there's collage and bricolage, and mixed media of all types. I find that making paper in and of itself is an art.
To answer one of your earlier questions, from bananas I make fine laid full-hard sheets, 4-deckle half-hard cream sheets for drawing, 4-deckle soft sheets for charcoal, and hard matting in natural-dye colours. From 50% mango pulp and mango waste and 50% cotton rag I make 4-deckle soft sheets. From oat chaff and straw and 50% banana I make soft matting and 4-deckle half-hard sheets. I also occasionally pull sheets of 25% recycled, 25% banana, and 50% quinua staple. It's all acid-free archival (except the Mango, which is naturally a bit acidic.)
I also sculpt, weld (constructivist steel abstracts), and throw pottery. In the more abstract art forms, I tailor and do other fun things with cloth and leather (garments, etc) and I cobble.
Here's one of my costume designs, on banana that I tinted with a bit of India ink. It's for Electra. Unfortunately, they took another designer for the project; they thought my work was going to be too complex to build (they were wrong, and ultimately the show when several thousand dollars over on the armour the other designer proposed.)
