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There are two very opposite schools of thought on whether or not Art can be taught. This post will present both arguments:

Yes it can. Art is a discipline like any other. No one expects someone to sit down at a piano and start playing a complicated piece of music without instruction.  The student first learns how to read music, how to identify those little dots on a page with a specific key on the piano, and how to execute scales. Lots of scales. Scales limber up the fingers, scales force both hands to work together, scales get more intricate as you go along. It’s the same with Art. No one picks up a canvas and brushes and immediately creates a museum masterpiece. The student learns first how to HOLD a pencil (really!), then how to use it to make marks on paper, then how to draw cubes, spheres, cones. Then the student learns how to compose a page, how to create the illusion of volumetric forms, how to contrast light and shade, how to use color. A foundational art course of study is based on the ‘ateliers’ of the Renaissance. But what are the professors here at Montgomery College really teaching? How to see. How to interpret the visual world. How to render realistically. How to render abstractly. How to use the tools and techniques available to the artist in traditional and non-traditional ways. How to get so familiar with the materials that an artist can use them flawlessly when needed to create Art from an idea, a concept or an impression.

No it can’t. Art can’t be taught, a person is either born with talent or without.  Modern art schools only do two things: (1) take money from untalented students and convince them that they can become artists; and, (2) persuade these same students to get an advanced Art degree, give them a job teaching, and thus make them into non-artists. Art schools don’t make artists.  Mediocre images is accepted and displayed on school walls right alongside the truly good ones.  Everyone can now create Art.  All you need is a smartphone, and you’re a photographer! All you need is a couple pieces of metal and a soldering iron and you’re a sculptor! All you need is a can of spray paint and you’re a mural painter! So, forget about learning the fundamentals, they don’t apply anymore — just get out there and make Art. Anything goes!

In conclusion, as you probably realize, I believe that fundamental Art skills and techniques can definitely be taught!

That’s where the Montgomery College art programs at the Takoma Park/Silver Spring campus come in. This semester I’m taking Figure Drawing with Professor Hunter who really understands how important it is to start with simple line drawings of the contour of the figure, followed by structure and volumetric studies, and then add value and pay attention to negative space. They are the same lessons that were taught during the Renaissance. Each class builds upon earlier lessons. And the models are first class; they are true professionals who work as hard as the students do. To me, this class is the foundation of everything I do in Art.

Hi! My name is Arleen Cannata Seed and I’m studying Fine Arts here at Montgomery College in Takoma Park/Silver Spring. Originally from New York City, I studied Art as an undergraduate years ago, but chose to spend my career in a totally different field, working for the United Nations and traveling all over the world bringing technological solutions to global problems.

Once I retired, I had the time and mental space to practice Art again, but I knew I had forgotten the fundamentals. So, I enrolled in 100 level courses in drawing, painting, and sculpture at MC. This was just the catalyst I needed! The professors at MC, in both the Community Arts and the regular credit courses, provided a course of study and opened my eyes to the different ways in which Art is taught in the 21st Century.

This blog is about my journey, my transition from working adult to pursuing an earlier dream, and I’m hoping this story resonates with young people thinking about their career choices and older people yearning to rekindle pursuits which have always interested them.

This Post Has 7 Comments

  1. Hi Brady. Thanks for your comments. Yes, I do think that Art can be taught, and that MC is doing a good job of it. Learning the basic, fundamental skills are so important in every academic setting; there are no shortcuts to this kind of knowledge and experience. Arleen

  2. Good testimonial, Arleen! And thanks for the mention. Here’s a quote I copied recently which supports your Yes position, as well as my occasional comparison of fine art and drawing to other disciplines:
    Truman Capote said, “To me, the greatest pleasure of writing is not what it’s about, but the inner music that words make.” He also said: “Writing has laws of perspective, of light and shade just as painting does, or music. If you are born knowing them, fine. If not, learn them. Then rearrange the rules to suit yourself.”

    1. Thanks so much for your great comments, Professor Hunter. There are so many parallels amongst the various art forms, especially in music and writing. We can only hope that people approach fine art, in whatever form, with the time and attention it deserves.

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