For artists, one of the primary goals is to be recognized for their skill by their artistic peers. I would venture to say that art is something quite different for the artist than it is for nonartists. — Merkwurdichliebe
Regarding varying genres and styles, there are universal design principles that can be found as a common thread in all great works of art (regardless of genre or style), so we do indeed have a criterion upon which we can judge genres against each other. — Merkwurdichliebe
No, happens all the time. Like dumb people who looked at Picasso and thought a child could do it. — Jackson
Unless something is screwy, an artist's primary audience is not other artists. — T Clark
If you need some sort of special education to appreciate a work of art, it's useless. — T Clark
We've probably taken this as far as we're going to. — T Clark
Without getting too woo, when a person is truly inspired to create art, they will do it regardless of their environment, with or without training. Why this is the case I certainly don't know. — Noble Dust
It is something conditioned and developed through practice, in contrast to talent, which is the raw/natural ability to apply particular techniques that don't involve any intentional craftmanship. — Merkwurdichliebe
Intention is directly related to skill level in my opinion. — Merkwurdichliebe
when it comes to judging an artist's skill, the opinion of nonartist matters little to none. — Merkwurdichliebe
You do not need a special education to appreciate art, but you do need one to truly appreciate the skill it takes to produce a high quality artwork. — Merkwurdichliebe
One problem here is that realism does in fact require the existence of "mistakes", whereas cubism (and countless other art forms across mediums) do not. Again, this ties in to my concept of intention; there are no rules in art, except, arguably in realism. So this posits a problem for realism inherently. Intention is not tied to anything in particular except within realism. That's its weakness. Questions of what does or does not require more skill as you're implicitly defining it here don't even factor in within my provisional concept as outlined. Hope I'm making sense and not being a dick. — Noble Dust
Some are focal points, rhythm, readability, proportion and balance. — Noble Dust
And what are concrete examples of how these principles are found in all great works of art?
I do not have an adequate music vocabulary, but absolutely. — Merkwurdichliebe
I do, and I don't see it. Didn't mean it as a "gotcha", but was wondering.
Are you an artist? — Merkwurdichliebe
I’m not sure. Can’t one’s intention be to seem unskilled? Something like intentionally playing out of rhythm, or all dissonant notes/chords? — Pinprick
I am. Having a hard time understanding the purpose of the thread. Everything requires skill. What is the point? — Jackson
The problem is that nonartists are ignorant of what artistic skills actually are, and think anything can be art. — Merkwurdichliebe
The problem is that nonartists are ignorant of what artistic skills actually are, and think anything can be art. I might concede...maybe it can be art, but definitely not good or skilled art. — Merkwurdichliebe
I'm a writer. — T Clark
Have you ever watched a realtime artist demo on youtube, or taken a figure drawing or design class to get a direct window into the training of an artist? — Merkwurdichliebe
Example of a specious argument:
1) You need to be an artist to understand art.
2) I disagree.
3) Well, but you're not an artist so you wouldn't understand. — T Clark
Intention probably is a better word to use. I would perhaps say skill is the ability to communicate one’s intentions? And perhaps meaning is found when that is done successfully — Pinprick
I’m not sure if you could say that you can even properly interpret a work of art without first understanding it…I don’t know. — Pinprick
To start with, if art is truly an act of self-expression, then it really is a need the person feels. — Pinprick
True, there are no rules in art. As the master vilppu said there are no rules, only tools. — Merkwurdichliebe
That is not what he said.
— Jackson
Thank you
:pray: — Merkwurdichliebe
Mistakes are an interesting thing in art. Very advanced artists are capable of breaking rules of the tools while still pulling off amazing shit. Whereas when a less skilled artist trangresses the rules of the tools, it is an error and almost always looks like shit. Experts can bend and manipulate the rules of perspective to create amazing effects. — Merkwurdichliebe
I always thought there were fundamental music principles, many which were popularized in classical and jazz. — Merkwurdichliebe
Anything can be art. Now try to sell it or get a gallery to show your work. Same with basketball. Are you good enough to play in the NBA? Compete. — Jackson
Its the same with art I suppose. Some of it is skilled, most of it garbage. — Merkwurdichliebe
Im not understanding the difference, or how you could determine the difference, between skill and talent. For example, could you explain the difference between a talented guitarist with little skill, and a skilled guitarist with little talent? It seems circular somehow. You can’t know if you have the talent to perform a particular guitar technique (tremolo picking, for example), until you’ve learned what that technique is and know how to do it. — Pinprick
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