Originally posted by Elok
Not like a master you can't. Unless you're an absolute prodigy. I'm talking about someone who can make three casual-looking pulls off a mound, while talking to a group of students and sometimes not even looking at it, and produce a perfect vase consistently, in under thirty seconds. He made it look comically easy, and didn't seem to be showing off. It was just old hat. Which is not to say that perfect technique alone makes an artist. Some of the pieces he made for sale (typically to benefit the college) were gorgeous.
Not like a master you can't. Unless you're an absolute prodigy. I'm talking about someone who can make three casual-looking pulls off a mound, while talking to a group of students and sometimes not even looking at it, and produce a perfect vase consistently, in under thirty seconds. He made it look comically easy, and didn't seem to be showing off. It was just old hat. Which is not to say that perfect technique alone makes an artist. Some of the pieces he made for sale (typically to benefit the college) were gorgeous.
I remember a story he told us that seems relevant to this discussion. When he was graduating from school, his final work was a wide selection ofexamples from all the historical periods of the ceramic tradition. It showed his technical expertise - he could make, with perfection, anything that has every been made in the history of ceramics. He prepared it all for his cirtique and, when the instructor came in, he looked at it for a minute and said "it looks like there's the work of 30 different artists here" and walked back out. This of course devastated him, and he spent the next while sulking and just about gave up ceramics right there. But he came to realize what is instructor was saying - that in order to be a an artist, you have to first find yourself in the medium.
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