Me too. We have so many student here at Loughborough University that
want to do more life drawing than is timetabled! Martyn
On 27 Nov 2009, at 11:18, Eduardo Corte Real wrote:
Dear Alan,
I raise my glass to your conclusion!
Cheers,
Eduardo Corte-Real
Alan McGowan escreveu:
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Dear All
>
> I have just finished teaching a short course in anatomy for artists
> at the Bristol School of Drawing, which went very well, and is the
> second time I've delivered this course down there.
>
> What I find interesting is that there is a great enthusiasm coming
> from students, both young and old, to learn about life drawing
> techniques and anatomy and that they neither consider these subjects
> to be "old fashioned" nor "academic" as has been the conventional
> wisdom of art schools over the past twenty years.
>
> What is noticeable is that students rather than tutors are driving
> forward an interest in these subjects and that they are not
> considered to be inimicable to other developments (such as video
> art, web art) in art practice; that is that young people are
> responding to a desire to access certain modes of understanding,
> observation and recording regardless of whether these modes are
> considered "traditional" or not (or /were/ by their predecessors).
>
> It re-affirms my belief that life drawing, close observational
> drawing, knowledge of line, tone and anatomy is a living, vital mode
> of encounter and not "owned" by any one group, academic, traditional
> or otherwise.
>
> Alan McGowan
>
> www.alanmcgowan.com <http://www.alanmcgowan.com>
> Visiting Lecturer; Bristol School of Drawing; Edinburgh College of Art
http://martynblundell.blogspot.com/
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