JasonE said:
Vision and intuition are extraordinary things, but it is the arduous and harrowing application of fundamental techniques that gets things done.
Not for everyone my friend. For people like me vision and intuition get the job done and then some. Often over-training a "right brained" person with "techniques" can actually damage their "gift." Again no absolutes apply. What works for one won't necessarily work for another. We are all uniquely gifted.
Fact-Some of the greatest artists and musicians that ever lived were self taught and never had any formal training whatsoever. Chet Baker, arguably the greatest trumpet player of all time couldn't read a note of music. My hero Stevie Ray Vaughan never studied music and could never even tell you what key he was playing in. He also never played a solo the same way twice. I doubt there are many guitar players that could touch him.
I spent much of my young life as a part of the household of John Cassavetes, (the Godfather of independent film, a totally self taught film maker and a "father figure" to me) and his wife Gena Rowlands. We had artists of all kinds in the house daily; Horowitz, DeNiro, Hoffman, Depardieu, Penn, Zappa (he lived right next door.) Many were/are amazingly disciplined artists with oodles of training and technique. Just as many were natural born artists who just had something extra they were born with and nurtured in their own unique way. None was prized above the other. I will say though that the trained artists were often in envy of the naturally gifted because many times no matter how they tried they couldn't touch the natural artists in terms of transcendence.
I do agree that proper guidance and training can indeed improve upon the skills of a gifted artist. Michelangelo and da Vinci lived in a city where the artist was revered and apprenticeships with Masters were plentiful. The Medici family saw to that.
They were also not mandatory, regulated or run by bureaucracies.
I'm with Zoe in that I see body work as an art form. I've been doing this for a long time and have learned much just by "doing it" and being present in my work and seeing where it would take me. I also had some great teachers who knew just how to guide me. Truth be told though I probably couldn't even pass the National Boards (and have zero interest in pursuing it.) I'm so "right brained" I'm practically handicapped. But I am confident enough in my work to put it up there against anybody's and I can appreciate another's good work regardless of how they got to where they are.
But I do know magic when I feel it. That is something you just can't teach. In fact when I have been lucky enough to have a student that has it I often stay out of their way and sit back and admire it. It's such a beautiful thing to behold and seems to be kind of rare. I will always fight on behalf of those who have "it" so that they don't get overlooked in an increasingly over-regulated, didactic and pedantic society, one which is in dire need of people who possess gifts we don't need to over explain.