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Employment of teachers today has much to do with fashion. Pressure to keep up with the times means, in practical terms, a respect for what is thriving in the market. An art school rarely manages to employ the real "fashionable darling of the day", though such a personage might come in as a visiting tutor; instead the schools make do with those who may have touched the hem of a darling's garments. Within a few years of the commercial explosion of the YBA generation, most of whom were taught together at Goldsmiths, many of our top art schools had employed as their heads former members of the Goldsmiths staff to restructure and administer their courses. Hence the remarkable similarity of our art schools.

Fashionable teachers will naturally select fashionable students for their schools. Despite the proclaimed diversity, and despite all the testing of boundaries through laboratory research, the consequence must be the contraction, those "narrow habits" of which Reynolds warned. But this contraction is now intentional. Typical of our times, there is an emphasis on "your chosen career" and what the schools try to avoid calling self-promotion. One school advertises that it will "prepare you for professional life after graduation". Another, that it will "help you learn vital professional skills as you develop a better understanding for the context of your work". This may be conveniently vague, but surely it means an education in how to be fashionable. This is what the teachers have to offer; it is after all what they were employed for, for they had witnessed the ways of the market and were now wise.

It is all very confused. It is hard to be both instinctive and scientific, primitive and market-savvy, to aspire at once to the therapeutic and the academic. It is hard to extol the virtues of rebellion and deplore all history when you benefit by occupying a position in a historically established institution. It must be hardest of all to call yourself a teacher of art when your contempt for so much of art is what got you the job. To defend so contradictory a position, you have to be ruthless before the sceptics. This is another reason why the teachers are so keen to admit only younger versions of themselves, and why I had to lie at interview. The result is that art schools, behind their closed doors, resemble social clubs more than places of learning. It is "us against them": this is the mentality that that introductory welcome meeting and the talk about specialness were contrived to develop. Within these clubs teachers have their pets; all students know that to move up the ranks to a position of favourite, they need only try to make something more similar to what a chosen teacher might deem "really sort of interesting". "Accomplished", "precise", "complex", "subtle", "astute", "apt", even "beautiful" — all these are denied as qualities of art, the only positive comment left to the teachers is "interesting"; this is pretty well the only word ever heard.

The students generally admire the institutions and their masters; there is comfort in belonging. But at the same time they are aware of the suspect agendas present. Once I overheard a revealing conversation between two students of the oldest and most venerable institution of all. Both were the recipients of an annual award given privately to young figurative painters to allow for their study of the Old Masters in the Museo del Prado at Madrid. One asked the other: "Have you told our teachers that you went to copy old paintings? Would you?" To them, it was a natural assumption that such an admission would not go down well. I suspect they even felt guilty for having betrayed the dominant ethos at their academy. Despite having sat through hours of so-called art history lectures, they knew that it was naughty for them to be looking at art. But this did not really irk them; I am sure they never raised an objection, and their greater concern was to remain part of the club.

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Jakis
July 31st, 2016
11:07 AM
Jacob Willer you then have never met my son....an artist

Anonymous
February 16th, 2016
1:02 AM
So none of this applies to Ateliers (see ARC Renewal Center) so you still can learn art the same way the old masters did and there are three BFA programs in the the U.S. that teach that way and many more around the world. Most of the Ateliers are not degree granting, however.

Tim
May 30th, 2015
9:05 AM
You get out of it what you put in. Ask anyone, who taught you to make art - it's more who inspired them on their path to be creative. The myth is that you can't be taught to be creative, you have to do this on your own and the art school provides a structure and foundation to experiment, play around like minded people as you work out your skills for yourself. A good art school has everything available for you to try, all different aspects of art and design, it enables you to explore your ideas and creativity. It doesn't give you a map, it plonks you in the centre of it with directions.

drew
September 6th, 2013
3:09 AM
Well written... i gotta say i chuckled outloud when i read "violated canvas" that was good. And its very sad that there is art in all mediums... painting performance sculpting writing designing digital layouts what have you, all deserve respect but none are being pushed to the background as much as painting, and as a painter it is disheartening and inspiring all at the same. When you mentions painting to someone theyre response 9 times out of ten retreats to history and some figure of importance as if paintings are some lost relics of the creative space. If its not morphing shape and color on a screen with music being played by horns made of old corn cobs being played by motion sensors attatched to timing triggers its not anything. And as a person who loves original artworks you cant knock the player you gotta knock the direction the games being manipulated into view by i dont know... whoever haha. But nowadays anyones got a plagform to have theyre artwork see if they want. And hopefully chna sooner rather than later will have full access to the whole of it.

Russ Coleman
March 29th, 2013
1:03 AM
I couldn't agree more. This mirrors my experience in the early nineties. The institution I applied to was an art department of a Further Education College that had changed to a Polytechnic in my fist year and was a University by the time I gained a degree. The old guard who believed in media and technique were retired out and replaced by tutors who didn't know one end of a screwdriver from the other and would proudly proclaim such, (they were supposed to be teaching me sculpture) When standing my ground and stating that I was a sculptor using plastic mediums to explore a visual language in an attempt to communicate what I was not able to communicate verbally. I was accused of being reactionary, over skilled, and an inverted snob. I was given a years grace when in my second year I was chosen as a "New Contemporary" a big deal at the time. My third year was executed at a distance from the inner circle of favourites. Whats the opposite of positive reinforcement? In the 20 years since I left art school the course has shut down but others have sprung up with tutors who are the progeny of those who taught in the early nineties who are at one more step removed from making and doing. Stack em deep took over and expensive workshops and technicians are a thing of the past, health and safety became a cover all excuse for a lot of cut backs and under funding. I still hit rock draw on paper and cast bronze though. Thanks for a great article and a reaffirmation of what I observed as well.

Anonymous
March 7th, 2013
8:03 AM
art schools only like ugly, stupid and sometimes, bad, art. Beautiful painting? Nope. You'll be laughed out of town. Go back to the masters, that's my advice.

Steve McQueen
October 6th, 2012
2:10 PM
Interesting article. This debate around what is taught has been running for a long time. I was at art school in the mid 80's and none of my tutors in Fine Art had empathy with non-painting. That is one thing, but my concern as someone now responsible for encouraging young people to apply for art school is the lack of practical disciplines and structured context to practice and ideas. In this I think Mr. Willer is on the money, best summed up in his paragraph on the 'anatomy lesson'. Art School produces a lot of arrogant and half-informed ideas and in a jaded world accurately reflects society, which is the point, many would argue. I would disagree. Just as most of my tutors were self-absorbed and unsympathetic in the 1980's, the problem persists. It seems that the (art)culture encourages laissez-faire. Still, while I wasnt taught much, it was a great experience and environment for some of the right and some of the wrong reasons.So long as you can hack it.

Bob Clyatt
October 6th, 2012
1:10 PM
Wonderful analysis and wonderfully written. What is intriguing to me is where this sludge meets the marketplace, and how it is 'sold' to a sophisticated, wealthy collecting public. Or not. Intriguingly there is a new class of gallery and collector emerging (in the US at least) looking for the "re-skilling" of art, for art that somehow bridges classical training and yet still speaks with a contemporary voice. No one should be interested in merely re-creating past masters' work except as a learning step, but taking that foundation and somehow mashing or meshing it together with Now is opening up some exciting new possibilities. Don't doubt yourself and don't give up!

Cliff
October 5th, 2012
12:10 PM
Check out "Art School Confidential" by Daniel Clowes (the comic is better than the movie): http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_School_Confidential_film

granitesentry.com
October 2nd, 2012
3:10 AM
Another citadel stormed and taken by the vindictive mediocrities of the Left. Sad, sad, sad.

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