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What does it mean to be an artist?

Coast Guard Inspection, oil on archival canvasboard, $435 framed includes shipping and handling in continental US.

Being an artist means you make art, period. It doesn’t mean you’re brilliant at it, or that you make money doing it. It simply means you make art repeatedly, in an iterative process, building from one finished project to the next.

Anyone can be an artist

I have never heard anyone told, ever, that they’re not good at the Three Rs (meaning reading, ’ritin’, and ’rithmatic) so they should just go do something else. We take it for granted that there are bumps in the road in every pursuit, and some aspects of these disciplines will be harder than others. Moreover, we recognize that whether we use our writing skills to analyze Tolstoy or make out a shopping list, they’re useful for everyone. So how did the question of who can be an artist become so narrow?

Beautiful Dream, oil on archival canvasboard, $1449 framed includes shipping and handling in continental US.

I’ve blamed the Cult of Genius for the spurious idea that the artist’s mind is unique. Until the 18th century, artists were craftsmen, and they trained in apprenticeships. After the Enlightenment, the arts were reclassified as an intellectual pursuit. None of my working artist friends are intellectuals in the real sense of that word. Yes, they’re smart, but they’re also pragmatic and hands-on.

Why are we all so specialized?

My daughter told me recently that my grandkids’ peers don’t just try one activity and then another. Sandlot baseball, as we knew it, is nonexistent. Instead, kids choose a discipline almost as soon as they’re up on their pins. They stick with that specialty through high school. The parents, my daughter tells me, are interested in sports scholarships.

Early specialization leaves no time for what making art is all about: experimentation and creativity. And since there aren’t art scholarships the way there are sports scholarships, nobody is pushing little Minnie to stick with her crayons.

We give lip service to the idea of developing creative kids who can “think outside the box.” (Not that I believe that’s what society really wants, but it’s what we say.) Art requires discipline, but it also encourages free-roaming thoughts.

American Eagle in Drydock, 12X16, $1159 unframed includes shipping and handling in continental US.

What’s required to be an artist?

  • The ability to think imaginatively, which requires leisure time for the mind to roam.
  • The capacity to express ideas.
  • Technical proficiency, built over time.
  • Passion, because there are easier ways to spend your time.
  • A unique worldview.
  • Resilience: If you aren’t persistent in the face of failure, criticism and rejection, you will quit.

What I didn’t list

Note that I never mentioned talent, innate ability, or intelligence. The most successful artists are the hardest-working, full stop.

I have a young friend who’s been a journeyman photographer under the tutelage of his father for several years. I have one of his books, and it’s nice but not inspired. Suddenly, this year, he’s on fire. He may look like an instant success or a ‘great talent’ but all that rests on the thousands of photos he’s taken to find his artistic voice.

Camden Harbor, Midsummer, oil on canvas, 24X36 $3188 includes shipping in continental US.

You don’t have to be an artist

Anyone can do it; that doesn’t mean everyone will. The steep learning curve weeds some people out; the exigencies of life limit others. And that’s okay, because art needs viewers. We’re glad you’re here!

But if you feel the call to make art, just do it; do not let someone else’s definition of talent limit what you dream for yourself.

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