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50 Questions for the Artist
I received these questions from one of my professors last semester. I thought they might offer an opportunity for self-reflection and some good discussions here on SOG. This list is one of the most valuable lessons I've received in the university setting. The pearl of the semester! So, if one, or more, of these moves you to opine, I'm sure we'd all love to hear it! I would, anyway!
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Very interesting Kimber,
thanks for that! |
Don't you think number 23 should be - What are the drawbacks to learning in an academic setting?
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Right now, I'm in a 19th Century French Art and Culture class. I never knew many of the figures in French academic paintings are done after sculptures. This is why so many of them have similar poses. More importantly though, I never knew one could study the human body so intensively as to be able to paint it from memory, or to turn stone into flesh. There are so many possibilities being opened for me just from the introduction of this information into my knowledge bank. (Not that I ever expect to be able to create a realistic, naturalistic body from memory. I have a hard enough time when there's a body sitting right in front of me! But, you never know.) Many people might have discovered this information through their own studies, and I might have too, one day, but just learning HOW the old guys did it is really helping me to know it can be done. (Not that I've learned any of the nitty gritty get in there and do it stuff. I'm talking big picture.) Does that make sense? Here's something to make note of... in this class we are studying David, Gericault, Ingres, Delacroix, Bouguereau, etc., along with the Impressionists. Does that shock anyone? There was a time when Bouguereau's name would not have been uttered in modern academia. So, there is light at the end of the tunnel. Maybe in another 50 years they'll really teach artists how to make art in public school? Nah. I doubt it. Anyway, I rant all the time about not being taught HOW to do anything in my studio classes, but my art history classes make up for, at least, some of that. Another advantage of the academic setting, it has opened my mind a bit. Even if I don't like a lot of what I see, it does loosen up the thinking joints! Now, would I recommend anyone who wants to be an artist attend university? Heck no. |
Kimber, I agree. From my time at a university I found 2 courses regarding art or my choice for further studies, worthwhile, Art History and Composition. Naturally there were other courses that benefited me overall but I did not mean to include those.
My intention for my question was geared more towards all of the other art courses that I considered to be a teaching of copying styles and submitting assignments that only pleased the teacher's personal taste. They contributed nothing towards my goals except maybe how to work toward someone else's ideas (not that that was ever one of my goals). |
Funny thing happened during this conversation...
I noticed a lot of other people are having the same one! John, you might enjoy this...
Student Going Crazy |
Kimber, good link. It reminded me a bit of my introduction to drawing in a private art class that I started when I was around 13. It was summer and class was held for 3 hours every Wednesday. Since I had been drawing ever since I could remember, I felt like I new it all. For the first several weeks all we learned was how to hold the charcoal or pencil and draw circles, lines as fast as we could. Boy, was I confused.
Luckily for me I stuck to it. This turned out to become my foundation to this day. The circles and lines are a great excersize for eye - hand control. The part of the link that is familiar is tthe part about wasting paper. That was the same way my father felt (who paid for over 4 years of private study). At the day's end, we are all students struggling to improve. The four stages of life are infancy, childhood, adolescence, and obsolescence. ;) |
That link to the post over on ARC is from a student going to my old school in Toronto (OCAD). It sounds like it's a much worse place than it was when I went there.
It's a sorry state of affairs in accredited art colleges, and has been for thirty years. Imagine a college level music student being told that they are never to study the violin, the piano or music history and oh, by the way, if they learned scales when they were younger, they are to immediately forget them, they're evil and "limiting to a musician's creativity." |
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Engineers and scientists are creative beings. So what, must they reinvent the wheel every-time they want to discover a new fuel, or build a new type of car? When they walk into class are they told to forget the laws of nature as they are too limiting to their potential? I see a class full of freshmen cavemen trying to make fire... "Ug! Did the teacher explain how to make fire?" "No, Og. She said if she did, it would be her just telling us how to make fire. She said it would be best to figure it out for ourselves. Then it will be our fire." "Really?" Og says. "Oh, Ug! I have a spark!" "Yes, yes. I see! I heard you're supposed to blow on it" Og blows on his spark and it disappears. Ug says, "Yes, mine disappeared when I blew on it, too." "How much are we paying for this class?" Og says. "And when do we get to look into a microscope?" "Oh, no microscopes, Og. The professor says they'll hamper our creativity." |
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