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Anonymous dearieme said...

"Drawing classes have always been unpopular with art students, which may be why they are no longer required by art schools or university art departments, where the primary concern seems to be keeping up enrollments. " That's a dominant motive in many disciplines. If, let us say, civil engineering students don't want to bother with surveying, and if their future employers don't care, then the civil engineering departments would drop the subject. Note that what really matters is the view of the future employer. That, after all, is why so many undergraduates study easy, empty subjects - if employers are happy with any old BA, why bother with a demanding subject?

So presumably students of the fine arts must have decided that their future customers wouldn't care about skilful drawing.

January 11, 2012 at 4:16 AM

Blogger Donald Pittenger said...

dearieme -- In modernist and postmodernist circles, it's essentially expected that an artist creating an image of a real object should produce a distorted, crudely drawn version of that object. So not having to learn how to draw is a feature, not a defect, so far as art training is concerned.

(I notice that my old art school does have classes in drawing, and private art schools teaching rigorous drawing have been emerging in recent years. A ray of hope and sanity remains.)

January 11, 2012 at 10:49 AM

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