2013-11-19, 23:51 | Link #1 |
Lumine Passio
Author
Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: Hanoi, Vietnam
Age: 18
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What aspect of your art that you prided over?
(For the people who write, draw, sing, composer,... regularly as a Hobby or Professional)
Just like the title says: What is your strong point, your talent in creating artistic works? |
2013-11-20, 02:41 | Link #4 | |
Lumine Passio
Author
Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: Hanoi, Vietnam
Age: 18
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Quote:
That doesn't count! |
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2013-11-20, 02:45 | Link #5 | |
Banned
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Quote:
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2013-11-20, 03:40 | Link #6 |
Goat Herder
Author
Join Date: Jun 2008
Age: 36
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Oh I wouldn't say that. Being able to accurately recreate something at just a glance is a fairly useful talent. Not so much for recreational art, sure, but there's plenty of other applications it can be viable for.
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2013-11-20, 03:52 | Link #8 |
ゴリゴリ!
Graphic Designer
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Vancouver, British Columbia
Age: 32
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I agree with this. We learn by recreating, so the ability to do so is useful, nay, detrimental to advancing one's artistic skill. If we look at the history of art, there's plenty of this in play (eg: Futurism being an era basically combining Fauvism and Cubism).
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2013-11-20, 04:40 | Link #10 |
Goat Herder
Author
Join Date: Jun 2008
Age: 36
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I don't have a visual example as I have no way of scanning, but the one time I performed the trick, it was for an art project in college. I was freehanding lineart of Mega Man ZX (Vent in his classic sword pose) from the game's booklet onto a much larger canvas so I could paint it. Both the teacher and the other students were rather surprised at the accuracy of the lineart, especially since I was drawing it much larger than it was in the booklet.
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Last edited by Rising Dragon; 2013-11-20 at 19:50. |
2013-11-20, 09:09 | Link #12 |
Socially Inept
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Retracing my steps.....
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Not really sure from my own perspective,but, I was once told by my college Prof. that when writing prose mine possesses a distinct voice. He told me that was hard to do so I always took it as a nice little compliment to hang my hat on.
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2013-11-20, 21:00 | Link #13 |
Member
Join Date: Aug 2013
Location: Kazamatsuri City
Age: 28
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I write, but I don't pride over it, since I really have no flair with coming up with either strong characters or detailed plots.
I play the piano, and I try to transcribe anime songs. Um...I can transmit my sound rather nicely (I can play loud bass chords, but more than not people have complained about it). One thing that I would be proud of is that I play with conviction. I play pieces thinking of stories and feeling emotions, so at least I feel that my music has life. |
2013-11-20, 21:07 | Link #14 |
Truth Martyr
Author
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Doing Anzu's paperwork.
Age: 38
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I can sing, and sing well. Perhaps not good enough to do it professionally (at least, not without a decade and half of training and practice - that boat's sailed a long time ago), but I'm at the level of a talented amateur, and I have a good voice for speech and elocution. Which is why a fanfic project I'm working on is a podfic for another author's fanfic.
And then of course there's my writing - I don't have as much output as I'd like, but I'd like to think that I've improved a fair bit from all the halting steps I took over a decade ago...
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2013-11-20, 21:16 | Link #15 |
Lumine Passio
Author
Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: Hanoi, Vietnam
Age: 18
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@Escape: Well, that's good. Art must have soul in the foremost, right?
@Wild Goose: I thought that you're a Lawyer-in-training - that is what my twin told me. So could make the words dance? Sew them into an unpenetrable web? |
2013-11-20, 21:17 | Link #16 |
Senior Member
Author
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: USA
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I only make things when I feel the utmost passion to, a consequence of which has been I make a very limited number of art, and only the kind I want. I wouldn't do it for the money, but if money is a side benefit of it, I wouldn't turn it down.
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2013-11-20, 23:09 | Link #17 |
Member
Join Date: Aug 2013
Location: Kazamatsuri City
Age: 28
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@Fireminer
Haha. That's what I would hope, but one cannot overlook the importance of technique. Hitting a wrong note just ruins the mood horribly, and takes a lot out of the enjoyment of playing. When I listen to pieces on YouTube, I just take technical perfection as a given, and it's jarring when I hear my own playing littered with errors. I feel sometimes that the audience cannot feel my passion as much as I would like them to feel, since I sometimes do not have the means to communicate that feeling effectively into sound. @WildGoose Have you ever used writing in your music, or vice versa? When I write fanfiction, I feel like a completely different writer when I have my earphones plugged in. Music's very potent in bringing you into a certain moment. @Alchemist Completely agree. Never take an art for the sole purposes of being the best or becoming rich and famous. Although many times my human nature has compelled me to practice for reasons other than the love for the art, but during those times I often feel that my playing is weak. I also don't think that anything besides the love for the instrument could sustain one for long periods of time. I'm nervous at recitals because I set expectations for myself and I dread failure. And by doing so I lose sight of the music. Sometimes I try to play artificially fast to please the crowd, and end up slopping up the score. And hence piano has become an ordeal for me, a chore. I'm liking it a lot better after I stopped worrying about competitions and started playing pieces I genuinely wanted to play; it reflects in the playing as well. |
2013-11-20, 23:23 | Link #18 | |
Otaku Apprentice
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Quote:
Anyway as for me, it's only making blueprints of ideas, but realizing them is impossible for me...
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Tags |
art, discussion |
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