Should all art students learn to paint and draw?

In a new paper, What Happened to the Art Schools?, the painter and art critic Jacob Willer claims that today’s fine art degrees do not offer the necessary teaching to produce exceptional artists. Painting and drawing have come to be seen as “no more than art’s old ceremonial vestments”, he writes.Willer, who visited art schools around the country, says that while the odd talented student stood out for him, the general standard was “depressingly low”. “I would encourage you to look back through the UCL collections to see the quality of paintings that students at the Slade were routinely making in the first half of the last century and you will see for yourself how things have changed,” he says.Willer goes on to suggest that in order to restore standards, higher art education ought to focus once again on craft and life drawing. But, he says, since current teachers would mostly not be capable of teaching painting and drawing – “because most of them know nothing about it” – the best way for students to develop would be to spend time appreciating old masters such as Titian and Rembrandt. “If you look at the best artists everyone has always looked at and wondered why they’ve always looked at them, eventually you’ll discover a standard for yourself. I think that’s the best we can do now.”

Spotlight

Other News

Dom Nicastro | April 03, 2020

Read More

Dom Nicastro | April 03, 2020

Read More

Dom Nicastro | April 03, 2020

Read More

Dom Nicastro | April 03, 2020

Read More