Thursday, December 19, 2013

Making Art is Hard Work

Semester is over and I had high hopes to complete the many art projects that I had collected during the semester during this December's break.  But, I've completed only one to any satisfaction.  If I can see clearly what I want it to look like, why can't I get there? Obviously, I'm not close to the required 10,000 hours yet or I don't have enough talent! Or...wait...
"Were talent a prerequisite, then the better the artwork, the easier it would have been to make.  But alas, the fates are rarely so generous.  For every artist who has developed a mature vision with grace and speed, countless others have laboriously nurtured their art through fertile periods and dry spells, through false starts and breakaway bursts, through successive and significant changes of direction, medium, and subject matter.  Talent may get someone off the starting blocks faster, but without a sense of direction or a goal to strive for, it won't count for much.  The world is filled with people who were given great natural gifts, sometimes conspicuously flashy gifts, yet never produce anything.  And when that happens, the world soon ceases to care whether they are talented.  

Even at best, talent remains a constant and those who rely on that gift alone, without developing further, peak quickly and soon fade to obscurity.  Examples of genius only accentuate that truth. Newspapers love to print stories about five-year-old musical prodigies giving solo recitals, but you rarely read about one going on to become a Mozart.  The point here is that whatever his initial gift, Mozart was also an artist who learned to work on his work, and thereby improved.  In that respect he shares common ground with the rest of us. Artists get better by sharpening skills or by acquiring new ones; they get better by learning to work, and by learning from their work.  They commit themselves to the work of their heart, and act upon that commitment.  So when you ask, "Then why doesn't it come easily for me?", the answer is probably, "because making art is hard!"  What you end up caring about is what you do, not whether the doing came hard or easy."
          David Bayles and Ted Orland
          Art & Fear: Observations on the Perils (and Rewards) of Artmaking


And with those wise words, I'll be at it again tomorrow.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Comments are always welcome! Afterall, we are all on a learning curve, but please keep them constructive.