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by Daub
1917 days ago
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To me this missive reads as a response to some specific questions. It would have been nice to know what those questions were. As an art teacher, I would not dream of writing something like this to a former student. It seems well-meant, but it also comes across as rather trite and not a little preachy. |
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I wondered the same thing. What is the context for this reply?
> It seems well-meant, but it also comes across as rather trite and not a little preachy.
How do you form that judgement without knowing the questioner, the responder, their relationship, the question, or the context for the question?
I understand that you "would not dream of writing something like this". That's you.
In this case, the teacher prefaces his remarks with "However, for me, it has little to do with why I make art. I believe that art is made to explore the world and the culture, to explore the chosen medium, to explore one's self."
He sounds authentic, and the view he shares is clearly personal.
His advice counsels against ego or commerce centric exhibitionism, in favour of authenticity and art for art's sake.
That doesn't strike me as trite. What he says sounds heartfelt.