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This anxiety has its practical manifestations too. I believe that it is, perhaps even more than the rebellious pose, responsible for the common disdain for painting. I have seen and heard of sinks — used for the washing of brushes and disposal of spirits — being systematically removed from art school studios, to discourage painters or drive them elsewhere. But most extraordinary was a new rule I heard had been recently implemented: no room was allowed to contain more than a certain small number of easels — as if the very sight of this painters' tool brought painful memories.

And then there are the brochures. One school outlandishly describes the activity it offers as "intensive studio and research laboratory practice". And this isn't an anomaly, because another school claims that it "...approaches the study and practice of art in an enquiring, investigative, experimental and research-minded way". Remember there are no hadron colliders here; probably just enlarged slogans, photographic clippings, toys, and maybe some planks piled against a wall. The appropriation of scientific language reveals more than pretentiousness, or childish fantasy, or arrogance, or desperation to be taken seriously. It is also an inadvertent admission that art is held in no esteem at all, and excuses must be made for it. Giotto, Raphael, Titian, Rubens, Rembrandt — they didn't need excuses, because their art spoke for them. And in their days, no one could have worried that art was stupid.

Curiously, though they play at intellectualism, the art schools proudly deplore all discipline. This is not just because craft, as we have seen, seems pitifully humble; the schools also subscribe to some romantic clichés which will no doubt be familiar (all of these clichés can be traced back to Marinetti, and in so many other following manifestos; but they must actually have been in currency long before because Reynolds had already thought to satirise them in his Ironical Discourse of 1791, in which he presciently imagined how art might come to be taught were the sillier Romantics to win out). They take it for granted that art is a matter of self-expression, that self-expression relies on instinct, and that instinct is not only the opposite of practice but is actively harmed by it. To them, virtuosity is vacuity. Both teachers and students must guard their ignorance, because it is the root of their special powers of expression. And they are quite sure of their specialness. My class was given an introductory talk, a welcome to the school, which invited us to think of ourselves as hypersensitive critics of society with the ability to flit across its borders. We weren't to be suckers, like all the rest trudging off to work, because we would be led by our extra artistic feelings to reveal how things really are. It was asserted that dyslexia, or even just normal academic underachievement, were good indicators of this hypersensitivity.

According to this line of thought, which assumes that an artist is born and not made, and that passing the interview for admission to art school is the mark of a born artist, there can be nothing particular to be taught. The schools' job is rather to guide the students on a course of self-discovery; it is essentially therapeutic. One school admits: "Our aim is to help you develop the necessary self-motivation and confidence in your work..." Another: "The individual nature of student's [sic] studies is at the heart of the course, with students negotiating with tutors how they wish to develop and manage their own learning." This might sound fair enough, but what do the students take from it? In all schools, this therapeutic programme is formally carried out in tutorials and "crits", whereby the students confess, to one teacher or a group of their teachers and peers, their inspirations and goals and the progress of their thoughts. Those I saw who enjoyed attention loved this ritual, and were forthcoming about their dreams, their disappointments, even perversions, many of these no doubt fantasised. All of this emphasis on the personal led inevitably to the stereotypical. Every Indian art student I came across ended up making piles of rice or spices, every Japanese drew huge-eyed cartoons, and every student who had genuinely suffered recently would splatter red paint for blood, or scream.

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Anonymous
June 23rd, 2012
2:06 PM
Very definitely true in it's assessment of the curriculum of most degree granting art schools. There are, however, many alternatives in the forms of atelier programs and schools which are run like trade schools (in America there is the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts for example) and there is always the chance for a determined student to gain an apprenticeship with a skilled painter or sculptor or print maker. The problem is in the desire to become certified rather than skilled. It's no use bucking a corrupt and decadent system while seeking to use it's reputation further down the line. The main question that any sensible person would ask is "...and you paid money for this?" Freedom exists. museum copying is still allowed and there are many masters of certain disciplines to seek out if one is determined to learn.

Anonymous
June 21st, 2012
4:06 PM
I graduated from one of top Art Schools in America in the late 1990's and find Mr. Willer's essay both redeeming and true as I also attended many other schools in route to my degree. I've struggled for a long time coming to grips with the disgusting assimilation of what is today considered "art", living like Raphael in some Borg alternate universe. Of course, this type of sublime solace is mocked by the elite transients who scorn eternities in the pursuit of some temporal Orwellian perfection of the mediocre. And yet the irony of their call for open mindedness is met by the narrow path they are herded upon. Rather than burn the past pursuit of beauty, we have been convinced it is other than it is and start New History at the point of New Tribal conception where individuals and merit are, once again, relegated to the mediocrity of the collective. Nothing new here, think I'll go play my bongos and chant a while.

AHLondon
June 20th, 2012
3:06 PM
There is a slew of brilliant Calvin and Hobbes strips on this topic. It isn't limited to art either. Directors like Christopher Nolan and Quentin Tarantino don't have film school degrees, which is perhaps why their movies stand out as diamonds in the coal heap of modern film.

Ruth Dudley Edwards
June 20th, 2012
12:06 PM
Brilliant article. I've just finished writing a satirical crime novel about the world of conceptual art. Jacob Willer shows me that art schools are even worse than I thought.

101
June 18th, 2012
12:06 PM
boo hoo!! ......

PacRim Jim
June 17th, 2012
6:06 PM
The good thing about contemporary art is that anyone can plunge right it without the tedious work it takes to master anything. Everything is art. The slightest effort. The skimpiest notion or statement. Indeed, you are a master, just like your mommy said.

heyua
June 1st, 2012
12:06 PM
maybe you just werent paying attention.

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