"The art of drawing which is of more real importance to the human race than that of writing... should be taught to every child just as writing is..." Ruskin
"Because you don't fully understand it," I replied.
But when we look at a person, a pot or a pear, exactly what is it that we don't understand?
The kind of seeing we habitually engage in is a kind of glib exercise in orientation. It's our way of reassuring ourselves that everything is just the way it normally is. Our over-loaded brains reduce everyday visual stimuli to a series of symbols that we are all too quick to discard. Like a sight-seer on a tour bus, we click the shutter and move on.
But this facile way of using the gift of sight is nothing new:
"Let two persons go out for a walk; the one a good sketcher, the other having no taste of the kind. Let them go down a green lane. There will be a great difference in the scene as perceived by the two individuals. The one will see a lane and trees... and that's all! But what will the sketcher see? His eye is accustomed to search into the causes of beauty, and penetrate the minutest loveliness... Is not this worth seeing? Yet if you are not a sketcher you will pass along the green lane, and when you come home again, have nothing to say or to think about it, but that you went down such and such a lane." Ruskin
The full quote is on my post for 26 November 2009.
The purpose of drawing, then, is not to make a pretty picture but to become more intimate with your subject than mere looking allows. Drawing requires that you slow the pace of your life to a more manageable speed. It requires that you contemplate and think about the world around you. It also requires that you think about what you want.
"Unlike painting and sculpture [drawing] is the process by which the artist makes clear to himself, and not to the spectator, what he is doing." Ayrton
And dictionary definitions of the word 'draw' are manifold. It appears that when you draw, you might also be pulling out or dragging forth.
Like it or not, when you sit down in front of that person, pot or pear, you could also be on the point of revealing yourself to yourself.
"It is often said that Leonardo drew so well because he knew about things; it is truer to say that he knew about things because he drew so well." Clark
I'll leave you to draw your own conclusions.
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