Originally Posted by
stlukesguild
"Boring" speaks more of the viewer than of the art work... and we all know that your bias in art is toward the literary narrative, the theatricality, and the complex. But visual art is first and foremost VISUAL. It is about the "stupid" visual elements of color, line, texture, value, etc... and how these are organized before anything else.
Learn to draw a landscape like Da Vinci put behind his Mona Lisa. Or draw the freaking body in motion instead of your models locked in frozen poses."Well Rembrandt did it that way." "You ain't Rembrandt."
Yes... all art must be about the narrative... people running about or acting out some grandiose drama. The simple still-life can't be great art...
But then you are confronted with Rembrandt's or Vermeer's or Raphael's static portraits and all you can come up with is "Well you ain't Rembrandt"... because you really don't know what makes Rembrandt work... because it involves a sensitivity to the visual elements... the artist's touch... the colors and textures... and not to something that can be easily put into words... something narrative.
Besides Rembrandt would throw all kinds of detail and individual character into people's clothing, skin, and hair. They were always in costumes with cool plays of light and shading. He was theatrical. Titian's Man with the Blue Sleeve works like it does because of the expressive nature of his subject, the handsome costume, and the intricate detail of said costume. It's not because people love single toned blank walls.
And do you honestly believe that Rembrandt's or Vermeer's paintings are so admired because of the details... the cool costumes... the staged lighting? No other artists of the era were doing the same thing just as well? And do you honestly imagine that complexity is inherently an attribute... that simplicity cannot result in a great work of art?
The artists I'm criticizing should try something more like what Ghirlandaio did with his An Old Man and His Grandson or what Piero della Francesca achieved with his Portraits of Federico da Montefeltro and His Wife Battista Sforza. That way if your model is uninteresting you might catch the attention of a viewer by some other detail.
In a way, if you are dealing with an attractive model... or an overly "unique" model, there is a danger in the art becoming secondary to the subject. In other words... the viewer is seduced/intrigued by the subject... but not necessarily by what the artist has done with the subject.