Skills Disguised as Talent
Betty Edwards, in "Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain," shatters the myth that artistic ability is a magical gift possessed by only a select few. Her students' before-and-after self-portraits reveal astonishing transformations after just five days of instruction.
The secret?
Edwards explains that drawing isn't about hand skills but "seeing skills" - the ability to perceive edges, spaces, relationships, lights and shadows, and the whole. These components are entirely learnable, not innate talents. Some people naturally pick up these perceptual skills throughout life, while others must consciously develop them.
What appears to be artistic genius is often just a different way of seeing the world - a skill anyone can master with the right guidance.