I think it depends on the nature of the art. If you like
to sculpt figures from logs using a chainsaw you MAY not
need drawing skills but you certainly need skill of some
sort. All art requires skill to translate the artist's ideas
into or onto their medium.
. . . <deletia> . . .
. . . I'm not sure I understood your point in this story. You talk
a lot about education and also being self-taught. Are you
sure you're not confusing "skill" with "education"? Either
one can exist without the other.
> And so I have mixed feelings when I read about skills and
> creativity. I think skills help us feel comfortable and confident and I
> think those things are important to being able to create. But maybe not.
Why "maybe not"? The most creative ideas in the world
will remain locked up in the head of the artist if he doesn't
have the skill to express them in his medium. I'm a beginner
painter and I have ideas of paintings I would love to do
but currently I haven't got the skills to make those paintings.
Many of the exercises I do are specifically designed to
address problems in those paintings I want to do, but I think
it will be a year or more before I attempt to paint them.
In the meantime I've done studies in pencil and charcoal
for those paintings because I have more skill in those
areas.
---peter
WON'T YOU BE MY NET BUD???
I do in bits and pieces. As a beginner I work on specific
problems I need to solve to execute the larger composition.
For instance, there's a painting I want to do based on an event
which happened to me recently that involved a trailer truck
jacknifing across a highway in a snowstorm at night. I
know I need to be able to paint the light from the headlights
of the cars on the highway which were blocked by the truck.
The truck is in silhouette and the lights shine into the sky
above it and through its windows and between the cab and
trailer and is diffused by the snow in the air. So that's
one problem I experiment with. Another is the way the
lights reflect off ice-glazed pavement so it looks like ice
and not water. There are several other problems in that
one painting.
---peter
> Skill and creativity are two diffrent things. Theres this guy I work
> with who can draw incredibly, but unless the designers at work tell him
> what to draw, he's lost. He has all the skill he needs but little
> creativity.
What is to be said two, is that despite the opinion of some here,
there is no great painter who does not master his skill : because as
soon as you try to really exploit your imagination, you just have to
work and work again, and than you learn.
What is to be said is that the craft that you learn is not always the
classical drawing. Maybe it's conceptual skill, maybe it's colour
skill, maybe it's the painter personal way of drawing.
What is sad is that to many people would like the other to master the
same skill as they do. But as they are tall and small people, not everybody
must fit in the same model that is the 19th century academic painting.
f.g.
--
FiLH photography. A taste of freedom in a conventional world.
New web site address http://www.i-france.com/filh
e-mail gou...@enserb.u-bordeaux.fr
FAQ frp : http://www.enserb.u-bordeaux.fr/~goudal/frp/faq.html
What happened was that I was caught in the middle of a
multi-car accident but wasn't hit, myself. However I had
crashed cars in front of me and in back of me and was stopped
in the breakdown lane and it was 10 PM and snowing. The
road was sheer ice and I had studded snow tires - in my trunk!
I wanted to get out of my car and mount them but there
were still cars on the highway sliding this way and that
and I was afraid one would slide into my car while I had it
on the jack and was changing tires. Suddenly a tractor
-trailer was coming down the road and tried to avoid a
car which had crashed in the middle of the highway, jacknifed,
and slid SIDEWAYS towards me, stopping just short of the
wreck behind me, with its cab on the median strip and its
rear wheels in the breakdown lane, plugging the highway like
cork in a bottle. Now it was safe to change my tires, in
the dark and cold and snow.
So I want to be realistic but I also want to capture something
of the emotion of the scene, which I think I can do with the
light. Luckily I was driving home from an art class (this
all happened on Rt 128 in Massachusetts on my way home
from the DeCordova museum) so despite the terror of the
situation at the time I was primed to see the colors and
design and as I was crouching there at the side of the road
with frozen nuts (lug nuts, that is) I was thinking, boy this
would make a great painting!
> Yes, I had a painting professor in college once who always
> told us to try to paint te air in between us and what we
>see or visualize. A bit of an abstract concept I admit but it
> helped me greatly in looking for defining factors that were
>otherwise hidden by the subject itself......good luck.
Thanks!
--peter
Listen, you have a gift and you are sabotaging your own creativity. Paint,
draw and sculpt. Period. It's time you stopped listening to what other people
tell you to do (me included :D).