#SORRY I'M ROLLING THROUGH HERE LIKE PLATO AT THE SYMPOSIUM
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chipped-chimera · 1 year ago
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Ok sorry but hold on a sec while I get real neuroscience/social psychology-ey about this.
So I have been a good 'drawer' since I was very young, but I also have a keen interest in psychology for mental health (and honestly autism) reasons. I think one of the most formative things I've ever done in my young life with regards to my perspectives with art, was read Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain by Betty Edwards. At like, 13 (see what I mean about the autism? lol).
Did I need this book considering I'd gotten into my high-school with a literal art scholarship with my demonstrated skill? No. But I was interested in the neuroscience perspective of art + if there was anything I could draw from it that would help my own art improve.
I don't remember the specifics, but my main takeaways were this:
Absolutely no one pops out of the womb with innate art skill. Like language and reading, it is a developed skill, not born out of biological necessity. Natural talent doesn't exist.
Because skill in art tends to be devalued in western society across the board ('starving artist' mentality, how shittily VFX artists have been treated for years, OpenAI already knowing how to ask for permission to make an AI ethical because they were scared of the music industry but threw that out the window crawling for training data for stable-diffusion, how art is constantly stolen and reposted with 'credit to the artist!' without actually linking or crediting said artist - LITERALLY TAKE YOUR PICK) being artistic is not encouraged. As children we all draw (to make art is human, I sincerely believe this), but there will be a point where it goes from being an encouraged part of child development to 'this is a childish waste of time' and actively discouraged as a poor career choice. If you wondered why most people's artistic skill level is 'frozen' and can only draw like an 8 year old - this is why.
The reason people remain stuck in this frozen state is lack of education, because our societal structure doesn't emphasize the use of art. It's considered 'optional' or a 'hobby'. It's not a critical part of the curriculum like math or english. Reading and mathematics are not innate skills either, they have to be trained. The difference here is you straight up just did not get any education to make progress.
As an adult, we tend to get discouraged when we can't draw well at all for all the aforementioned reasons and give up (or if you're extra scummy, make AI art and claim artists are 'gatekeeping' as your excuse) but the only difference between you and someone who can draw, like me, is I grew up in an environment where drawing was encouraged, not torn down as a 'childish activity'. So I've literally spent most of my childhood practicing, that's the only reason I draw better. I just have more years of practice under my belt.
There's no such thing as talent in art. You might be able to pick colours well instinctively, heck you might be a tetrachromat (like I suspect I am) giving you an advantage that is innate and biological. But beyond that I honestly believe the only talent you can have is being stubborn and doggedly aiming for and perusing your goals, even when you feel discouraged. You will always see what is wrong in your own art, no matter if you started drawing seriously yesterday or 30 years ago. It's what I call 'the curse of the artist's eye' - but it is a good thing, because it means you still have room for improvement! You still have things to learn! If you think something about your art is shit, use that as motivation. Learn from the experience. Go find drawing books about the thing you're weak at drawing. Come at it from a different angle, utilize references. Keenly observe what you're looking at.
Also lastly, the most important one: the biggest barrier to improvement for most people is having to wind back years of ingrained symbology and actually start seeing. What do I mean by this? When you draw a portrait of yourself, ears, eyes, nose, etc. you aren't drawing your face at all - you're drawing a collection of learned symbols, the representation of an eye, a nose, a mouth, that you may have learned at 8 years old - then never progressed further. To break out of this you have to stop seeing 'eyes' and 'noses' you have to start seeing shapes and lines. One of the activities to demonstrate this in the book was to take a picture of a still life scene or something and do your best to draw it. Then take that picture, flip it upside-down and draw it again but upside-down. Generally comparing the two pictures, the upside-down version always had a drastic improvement - because you basically forced your brain out of using recognized, ingrained symbols and had to rely on shapes and structure instead.
Also as a side note: Having ingrained symbols isn't a bad thing - it's the backbone of artist style. But this is why most professional artists, even with highly stylized style recommend learning anatomy and doing life drawing first - because they have spent time learning to understand how things actually look and improving their skill, before basically developing a symbolic shorthand. I can usually tell my symbolic associations are getting too strong or I've 'forgotten' how to draw things when I start getting a lot of 'same face syndrome' in my art. That's usually a sign I need to go hit the books, practice drawing from life again so I can remember that. I don't just practice drawing eyes once and never do it again - I probably do a refresher, at minimum, once a year. And each year it gets a bit better.
So that's it. Talent doesn't exist, everyone can draw - all you gotta do is be stubborn enough to keep learning. Go forth and draw shit!
No really, this is literally it - in my lifetime I've infected at least three people with the drawing bug telling people this, girl in my italian class went from going 'I wish I could draw' to sitting next to me in fine arts in my final year of school. Just practice dude - and be stubborn about it.
truly the best thing to say to someone who self-deprecatingly tells you they "can't draw" is "why?"
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