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10-06-2006, 07:48 AM
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#1
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Approved Member
Joined: Sep 2002
Posts: 1,730
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Actually Paul, I should have been clearer; all too often artists weigh down their art with pretentious meaning before they have achieved mastery, hoping to disguise their shortcomings with cleverness. You did not.
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10-06-2006, 08:11 AM
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#2
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Juried Member FT Professional
Joined: Dec 2005
Location: Bad Homburg, Germany
Posts: 707
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Sharon it seems your link is not working? I do agree, Sharon, on the pretentious. Its sad that many do not crave and strive for the delicacies of mastery.
Paul, I can honestly say thus, if you continue and not stop, you are going places.
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10-06-2006, 08:19 AM
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#3
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Approved Member
Joined: Sep 2002
Posts: 1,730
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Mischa,
You have to go the main Forum site.
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10-06-2006, 10:11 AM
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#4
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Juried Member
Joined: Feb 2006
Location: Epsom, United Kingdom
Posts: 76
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sharon
all too often artists weigh down their art with pretentious meaning before they have achieved mastery, hoping to disguise their shortcomings with cleverness.
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Ah, now THAT I agree with. I think the rarest commodity in the art world today, in general, is honesty.
Mischa, you can find Sharon's work here: http://www.portraitartist.com/knettell/knettell.htm
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mischa
if you continue and not stop, you are going places
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Thanks very much Mischa. I fully intend to do both.
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05-26-2007, 02:41 AM
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#5
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Juried Member FT Professional
Joined: Feb 2002
Location: Gaithersburg, Maryland
Posts: 698
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12 hours!
Boy, that is commitment! I am far too impatient to take that much time on a drawing. You did a nice job. Did you enjoy it? I would have quit or tired of it before putting that much time on it.
Part of the pleasure of drawing for me is that I can get it done in a shorter period of time. However, I rarely take that long on even an oil painting. Perhaps I would be a better artist if I was more patient. Perhaps that is what makes an artist unique - his level of patience. Sometimes the longer time spent on a drawing is worth it, and sometimes it isn't. And part of good charcoal drawing, or any drawing for that matter, is knowing when it is done - knowing when to quit.
There is a drawing on this forum that took three years! So this is a quickie by his standards.
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