Here's one of my most, most favorite quotes from the book. I'll include the entire paragraph, it's just too good.
"The belief that "real" art possesses some indefinable magic ingredient puts pressure on you to prove your work contains the same. Wrong, very wrong. Asking your work to prove anything ONLY INVITES DOOM! Besides, if artists share any common view of magic, it is probably the fatalistic suspicion that when their own art turns out well, it's a fluke - but when it turns out poorly, it's an omen. Buying into magic leaves you feeling less capable each time another artist's qualities are praised. So if a critic praises Nabokov's obsession with wordplay, you begin to worry that you can't even spell "obsession." If Christo's love of process is championed, you feel guilty that you've always hated cleaning your brushes. If some art historian comments that great art is the product of especially fertile times and places, you begin to think that maybe you need to move to New York.
Lol, the last line is the best. I suppose for filmmakers or actors, the same applies to Los Angeles.
Monday, November 24, 2008
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Art and Fear
I just finished reading Art and Fear by Ted Orland and David Bayles. It's a good, quick read and it's funny, in a painful sort of way. It constructively criticizes the bad, irritating and subconscious habits of every artist. It's like having a close friend point out all your bad points, to your face, in public. If the book had a shoulder I'd punch it and tell it to shut the hell up and yell, "You don't know me!!!".
Here are some of my favorite quotes:
"Most artists don't daydream about making great art, they daydream about having made great art."
"Making Art provides uncomfortably accurate feedback about the gap that inevitably exists between what you intended to do and what you, in fact, did."
"But wait a minute-your work doesn't feel inevitable (you think), and so you begin to wonder: maybe making art requires some special or even magical ingredient THAT YOU DON'T HAVE!" (LoL, don't I know it...)
"It's hard to claim victory when your competitors may be entirely unaware of your existence-after all, some may have already been dead for a century."
"But the undeniable fact is that your art is not some residue left behind when you subtract all the things you haven't done-it is the full payoff for things you have done."
"Idealism has a high casualty rate."
"Universities rarely have trouble attracting good artists. Art has the dubious distinction of being one profession in which you routinely earn more by teaching it than doing it."
"Making Art is dangerous and revealing. Making Art precipitates self doubt, stirring deep waters that lay between what you know you should be, and what you fear you might be."
"In a general way, fears about yourself prevent you from doing your best work, while fears about your reception prevent you from doing your own work."
"For you, the seed of your next artwork lies embedded in the imperfections of your last artwork."
"Catering to fears of being misunderstood leave you dependant upon your audience."
"In making art you court the unknown, and with it the paranoia of those who fear what change might bring."
"Learning is the natural reward of meetings with remarkable ideas and remarkable people."
"To the critic, art is a noun."
"Style is the natural consequence of habit."
"There is a moment for each artist in which a particular truth can be found, and if it is not found then, it will not ever be. No one else will ever be in a position to write Hamlet."
"The need to make art may not stem solely from the need to express who you are, but from a need to complete a relationship with something outside yourself. As a maker of art you are custodian to issues larger than yourself."
As helpful as these quotes are, reading the book has actually made me more apathetic. Now that I've only my own goals and inner vision to develop, there's no reason, rush, impetus or incentive to worry about making or not making art. I'm just gonna do things at my own pace, and eventually things will work out. Hopefully.
Here are some of my favorite quotes:
"Most artists don't daydream about making great art, they daydream about having made great art."
"Making Art provides uncomfortably accurate feedback about the gap that inevitably exists between what you intended to do and what you, in fact, did."
"But wait a minute-your work doesn't feel inevitable (you think), and so you begin to wonder: maybe making art requires some special or even magical ingredient THAT YOU DON'T HAVE!" (LoL, don't I know it...)
"It's hard to claim victory when your competitors may be entirely unaware of your existence-after all, some may have already been dead for a century."
"But the undeniable fact is that your art is not some residue left behind when you subtract all the things you haven't done-it is the full payoff for things you have done."
"Idealism has a high casualty rate."
"Universities rarely have trouble attracting good artists. Art has the dubious distinction of being one profession in which you routinely earn more by teaching it than doing it."
"Making Art is dangerous and revealing. Making Art precipitates self doubt, stirring deep waters that lay between what you know you should be, and what you fear you might be."
"In a general way, fears about yourself prevent you from doing your best work, while fears about your reception prevent you from doing your own work."
"For you, the seed of your next artwork lies embedded in the imperfections of your last artwork."
"Catering to fears of being misunderstood leave you dependant upon your audience."
"In making art you court the unknown, and with it the paranoia of those who fear what change might bring."
"Learning is the natural reward of meetings with remarkable ideas and remarkable people."
"To the critic, art is a noun."
"Style is the natural consequence of habit."
"There is a moment for each artist in which a particular truth can be found, and if it is not found then, it will not ever be. No one else will ever be in a position to write Hamlet."
"The need to make art may not stem solely from the need to express who you are, but from a need to complete a relationship with something outside yourself. As a maker of art you are custodian to issues larger than yourself."
As helpful as these quotes are, reading the book has actually made me more apathetic. Now that I've only my own goals and inner vision to develop, there's no reason, rush, impetus or incentive to worry about making or not making art. I'm just gonna do things at my own pace, and eventually things will work out. Hopefully.
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Monday, November 10, 2008
Sunday, November 09, 2008
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