Guest writer Lorrie Whittington

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

by Lorrie Whittington

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. Jan Blencowe on Roots and Influ­ences The large box of Cray­olas with the sharp­ener in the back and my farm set were my two favorite child­hood pos­ses­sions. Draw­ing, paint­ing and creating…
  2. 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…
  3. Jane Camp­bell on roots and influ­ences My work is full of color, fun, it’s folky but with a modern/contemporary edge. 90% of the time I sit down to a blank canvas,…
  4. Christy DeKon­ing on vision, sales and advice Never stop learn­ing, and never miss an oppor­tu­nity. If an oppor­tu­nity is pre­sented to you, take it, learn from it, and use it to grow.…
  5. 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…

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Illusio Creative Blog | Lorrie writes for The Artist Center
January 29, 2010 at 4:02 am
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January 30, 2010 at 6:09 am

{ 2 comments }

1 TomasNo Gravatar February 5, 2010 at 6:57 am

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.

2 TomasNo Gravatar February 5, 2010 at 12:57 pm

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.

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