“While I had at this point been drawing and painting for many years, and had lots of exhibitions, the revelation of seeing/drawing turned upside down all my views on art and of what it means to be an artist. Being an artist does not mean covering clean pieces of paper or canvas with ink or pigment. It does not mean solo exhibitions or prizes. It definitely does not mean labeling ourselves “an artist.” When I hear someone proclaim: “I am an artist,” someone in me whispers, “That so ?” But if they say : “I paint,” or ” I draw,” or “I play the piano,” I like to talk about painting, drawing, or playing the piano with them. Saying, “I paint” or ” I am a painter or pianist” may be a factual statement, but artist is an honorific. Proclaiming oneself to be an artist is all too pretentious. Art is neither a profession or a hobby.
Art is a Way of being.”
Frederick Frank
Zen Seeing, Zen Drawing. Meditation in Action.
From now on I will no longer say that I am an “artist”… but an art-maker.
Miti, hi. I must confess I haven’t come across Frederick Franck before now, and it’s clear to me that I’ve been missing out! The regular misuse and overworking of the word ‘art’ irks me terribly. ‘Art’ is surely what one sees in another’s work. So, I don’t see a distinction in you calling yourself an ‘artist’ or an ‘art-maker’. God rest Frank’s soul, but I wonder whether he’d be raising his now-heavenly eyebrows at this second expression. To me you’re an artist and, yes, an art-maker. To yourself, if you want to follow Frank’s thinking, you’re simply (but wonderfully) a ‘maker’. No?
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True… true {I’m humbled}
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And I feel like an ass… but I always enjoy our discourse x
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I like it! YES!
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