A very sensitive art teacher should be able the tell the difference
between each child.
mando

On Oct 17, 2008, at 1:08 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

In a message dated 10/17/08 3:52:52 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


The most difficult thing to do in "art creating", is to keep the
personal
unique taste consistent in ones attempt.  Children do it best.

I like this observation a lot, Mando, though no doubt I'm thinking of it in ways different from yours. In writing, we often talk of an author's not having found his "voice" yet. And "voice" entails more than just verbal style. I didn't realize that children are consistent in this way. How different are the tastes of children? -- i.e. one tends to think of all of them as drawing identical stick figures. Bt I assume you're saying a good primary school art
teacher,
given a stack of new, unsigned drawings, could say, "This is by Judy, this by
Dan, this by Jessie, this by Paulie..."

As a writer who would "draw" a character, I'm constantly beguiled by how
perfectly "childlike" almost all little kids are.



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