"There are no
heroes in the story of artschool, only various levels of shame."
-Me.
When I
applied for artschool, back in the summer of 2007, I had myself a few misconceptions.
I’d imagined
some kind of art academy where crack troops of artists drew perfect circles
while bench-pressing lithograph stones, and spent sixteen hour stretches down in the lab,
creating shades of blue so pale they would make a blind man weep.
As it turns
out this is not the case.
As far as I
can tell, getting into artschool requires either; art ability and a keen mind,
OR the desire to hang out at artschool. While
I lacked the second, fortunately I had the first and was successfully admitted.
Perhaps I’m
not being fair, but it really bothers my brain that there could be some people
who fail to get into artschool. If you
have within yourself the ability to apply paint to your face and face-but a
piece of paper, I’m fairly sure you have what it takes.
First year
was probably my most misguided. For some
reason I thought I could get ahead by working extremely hard and completing all
my work to a ridiculously high standard.
One of our assignments was to create a series of 9 small artworks the
size of trading cards. Most people found
a drawing they’d done years ago and cut it into nine pieces. I handed in twenty seven individual artworks;
a number whittled down from many more.
Here are a
couple of examples of my cards.
In the end,
I got a high mark, but not higher than most people. Nothing singled me out.
Artschool
runs a drawing prize each year. In first
year I entered with this drawing.
Which is something of an assault upon the eyes, but still an interesting sketch.
While it did
get hung, I suddenly realized that it was the only figurative drawing in the
entire exhibition. By which I mean it
was the only drawing of something. Every other drawing was about the act of
making marks on something. The prize
that year was won by a girl who’d glued a small pile of dried paint to the
wall.
I did not
enter the drawing prize again.
In fact it
was at about this point that I realised my own values, and the values of
artschool, were hopelessly misaligned. I
thought about dropping out, but I couldn’t think of anywhere that I’d be better
off. So I soldiered into second year.
The next
project I remember was an open-ended drawing project where we were supposed to
try something new and interesting. I
decided to hand-draw a tiny animation loop of a girl reading a book. If you like you can watch the film here https://vimeo.com/17718992
For
reference, this is one of the frames:
Most people
in the class didn’t go to quite that much effort. One girl stuck foil patty-pans to a sheet of
paper and dripped some white paint onto them.
And I think the guy who topped the class took a long-exposure photo of
himself riding around in circles with LEDs on his bike.
I got 69%
for that project.
Towards the
end of second year I was really suffering.
I just couldn’t make any sense of artschool, and I was concerned that
there was nothing about art that I still liked.
The only art that I really adored was the films of Hayao Miyazaki.
I decided to
throw down my own gauntlet and go all or nothing.
I told my
tutor that I would spend third year making an animation with paint. He looked at me and said “Why don’t you move
to a different course? I guess you’d still have the same problem, though.”
After
answering his own question he walked away.
Fortunately,
by this time, I had become quite adept at channelling my frustrations into a tumour.
I
immediately began work on a short film about a dystopia set to a track by Bach. By the end of semester one I had completed
all 260 drawings and had set them to the music, with only the painting to
go.
My tutor had
to give me a mark for the semester’s work.
I presented the film to which she had two comments. Two pearls of wisdom, which I may learn from
and grow.
She said, “I
don’t like the last frame.”
And, (my
favourite) “Why don’t you get rid of the music?”
For the
semester I received my lowest mark ever.
Not just at artschool, the lowest mark I’ve ever got for anything in my
life; 55%.
By this
stage I was getting better at pretending I wasn’t bothered by the old School of
A, so I powered ahead with painting the frames.
I had to work my job most weekdays so I painted on weekends, clocking
more than 11 hours on some days.
I finished
just in time, and presented the film to a panel of various heads of
schools.
They reached
a consensus; they loved it, and gave me 90%.
If you have
a hankering to check the film it is here https://vimeo.com/16489006
Perhaps
artschool made me strong, perhaps it taught me about the cold and erratic nature
of reality.
That’s too
easy.
Its job was
to foster passion for art and to provide sound (or at least mutually
consistent) direction.
It doesn’t
really matter. If you’re a drawer you
draw. Or alternately you’re a box-shaped container that fits into a piece of furniture
in such a way that it can be drawn out horizontally to access its contents.
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