Guest writer Lorrie Whittington

Art is for all…or rather, all can draw, or rather…all SHOULD draw.

by Lorrie Whittington

Share

As a grad­u­ate stu­dent in design I was able to see how my much younger class­mates were able to see the world with much more clar­ity than tra­di­tional lib­eral arts stu­dents. The more I observed this phe­nom­e­non the more I believed that a design/visual arts edu­ca­tion was far bet­ter at equip­ping young peo­ple for life than the lin­ear­ity of lib­eral arts.

Most of us can remem­ber our ini­tial attempts at draw­ing and I will always remem­ber the impact of con­tour draw­ing on my abil­ity to see. If you have ever taught the “upside down draw­ing exer­cise” from Draw­ing on the Right Side of The Brain you’ll know the thrill of hear­ing the col­lec­tive ooohs and aaahs as stu­dents turn their draw­ings right side up. From that point on they never see their world in the same way and they will never think of them­selves as not being able to draw.

You know, over the years…

I have lost count of the peo­ple who have said to me, when hav­ing told them I am an artist, or  that I had stud­ied art at Uni­ver­sity, how much they loved art at and paint­ing at school. How much they loved draw­ing or paint­ing as chil­dren. I would then ask if they still drew or painted, and invari­ably their response would be the same, “naaa, gave all that up when I left school”. ‘Why though?’ I always ask. If they loved it so much, why stop? They usu­ally then tell me that they were not very good, but that they enjoyed it a lot (this whole issue of what can be classed artis­ti­cally as ‘good’ could and should be cov­ered in some depth another time I think).

It’s all about per­cep­tion isn’t it? Draw­ing and paint­ing is still seen as the purview of the seri­ous (or even ama­teur) artist, or chil­dren. Rarely do peo­ple con­tinue to paint once hav­ing left school for the sim­ple plea­sure of it alone. Most get sucked into the pro­saic though nec­es­sary busi­ness of mak­ing a liv­ing, and those that do have some leisure time left to them, usu­ally hit the gym, watch tele­vi­sion, go up the pub, knit, etc. Fair enough, noth­ing wrong with all those things.

How­ever, it has been proven again and again that the act of draw­ing, paint­ing, mak­ing the mark is men­tally ben­e­fi­cial, and indeed as we know is used as ther­apy for those with men­tal health ill­nesses, chil­dren and teenagers with spe­cial needs, in young offend­ers insti­tu­tions etc, etc. It is relax­ing, ther­a­peu­tic, cathar­tic, and fills a basic and fun­da­men­tal need in us all to express our­selves through colour and form. An exer­cise which we as human beings have under­taken since man became sentient.

So, to cut to the chase, if you are stuck for a gift for a friend or loved one, buy them a small sketch book that can be fit­ted into a pocket or a bag and some pens and abjure them to get doodling.

About the Author

Lor­rie Whit­ting­ton is a pro­lific and multi-talented visual artist liv­ing on the south coast of the UK. She is one of those unique peo­ple who have man­aged to unite both right and left sides of her brain pro­duc­ing a vision and skill set few hold. She is not only flu­ent in paint­ing, print mak­ing, draw­ing, graphic design and pho­tog­ra­phy she also speaks flu­ent Geek. Her flu­ency in Geek dialects include PHP, HTML,  CSS  and JavaScript as well as know­ing her way around Pho­to­shop and Dreamweaver.

Find Lor­rie here:

Web site | blog | shop | face­book | twit­ter | flickr | deviantart


 

Related posts:

  1. Lor­rie talks about busi­ness and art My mar­ket­ing jour­ney has not been as well planned as I would have hoped or advo­cate. How­ever, I did write down some SMART goals of…
  2. Lor­rie talks about the impor­tance of shar­ing wis­dom Each of the artists fea­tured here has made efforts to develop emerg­ing artists through what­ever ways work best, whether through teach­ing, lend­ing a hand with…

  • Each your word rang like the alarm-clock in me. Your article awakened the precious memoirs and thus comforted me greatly. Thank you. You put down everything so truly that I can add just one: Yes, Yes and Yes!
    Thank you for the wonderful definition of art therapy. By expressing themselves through color and form people start to hear the light and thus recognize themselves in others.
    Thus a brush stroke is not only the artistic tool but the magic healer too.
blog comments powered by Disqus

Previous post:

Next post: