-- Rabindranath Tagore
Most people realize by now that a quick, rough sketch...
Frazetta |
... can be better art than a careful, detailed oil painting.
Frazetta |
...and that an "unfinished" painting can nevertheless be quite complete.
Lautrec |
Last week the participants in this blog had a robust debate about the kind of detail necessary to create a "well executed" picture. In attacking the loose drawings of H. J. Mowat, one commenter claimed,
[Mowat] simply couldn't draw well. His struggles with basic anatomy, even basic drawing, are written all over his pictures.... This has to do with distinguishing between informed anatomy and bluffed anatomy.... [R]ough indication, like all suggestions, can be informed or uninformed. One type of uninformed suggestion results simply in vagueness. Another signifies bluffing/pretension.The debate soon came to focus on the quality of Mowat's hands, as a test:
[M]ost illustrators I know could easily knock out a good hand, in line, from the model, in a minute's time... And there isn't a single well executed hand in the lot.When I offered several examples of drawings by Degas with a similar treatment of hands, the commenters responded that the Degas drawings, like Mowat's, are "shitty."
Are they? Or are they just a different type of artistic solution, equally valid, with their own standards of quality?
One commenter wrote,
I feel similar regarding hands which Kev criticized many times. [In the following image] her palm on the floor looks childishly crude, a complete mess, while the other one on her lap seems kind of acceptable to me, the area between the wrist and knuckles has an indication of a solid shape... but the fingers sadly end up quite weak. There is no artistic purpose for these anatomical conditions, they were not Mowat's thoughtful decisions, so I think if somebody fixed these things in front of him he would be pleased.
Mowat (detail) |
I disagree with these assessments, and as I indicated last time, I thought the only way to have a constructive discussion was with real live examples of quality art in front of us.
Few people would argue that Toulouse Lautrec did not understand the anatomy of a hand:
Lautrec |
Yet, look at how he chose to treat the hand in one of his most famous finished pictures:
Kinda makes Mowat look like Vesalius.
Bernie Fuchs is another example of an artist who clearly understands the anatomy of the hand:
Fuchs |
Fuchs |
Fuchs |
Nobody disputes Rodin's mastery of human anatomy...
Rodin |
Rodin |
Finally, here's one more example from our old friend Degas. In this early work, the hand is rendered with precision...
Degas |
Degas |
The examples above can't all be "incomplete" drawings or work that was intended for the artist's trash can. And even if some commenters insist that they are, I can pull out a hundred additional examples of work by excellent artists who decided that the anatomical truth of phalanges was subordinate to the expressive truth of the picture. These artists are not, in the words of last week's commenters, "fudging" their drawings of hands. And it is my view that we cannot properly evaluate their work by saying, "the size of the area between the wrist and knuckles is too small, and fingers are too short," even if that is factually correct.
For me, this is like looking at a crescent moon and waiting for it to become a perfect full moon. I think that each of the works above has its own perfections.
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