A Reader Sees the World with a New Perspective

I recently received an email from a reader who lives in Germany, which I am happy to share here. 

Message:

Dear Dr. Edwards,

At the end of 2016 when my baby son was one year old I started to draw. Luckily, I found your book and leaned according to your instructions and philosophy. It really helped me to see and to draw.

With full respect and high appreciation I wrote about you and your book in my Blog: Hui Portrait. I will also translate it into German and I really hope that everyone finds out about you and your books. You didn’t only teach me to draw but also gave me the chance to see the world with a totally new perspective!

Thank you! I really hope to meet you in person one day. In the meantime, I hope I can at least spread your philosophy!

Your Student, Hui W-S

The Benefits of Art Therapy for Cancer Patients

"Therapy can be an important way to talk about how it feels to have cancer, to express negative emotions, and to learn comping strategies. Art therapy is particularly useful for expressing emotions that are tough to verbalize. The creative process can be a healing process, especially when led by a trained and professional art therapist." ... Read more.

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The Resilience of Art and Artists

This is an inspiring story from the Los Angeles Times, of an artist who lost most of his life’s work in the recent California fires:  Artist John Wullbrandt, Carpinteria.  Here is a link to his own website: http://www.wullbrandt.com/

The artist at work in 2010.

After so much loss, he told the reporter: "Gone, all of this gone," he says, sweeping his hand across the landscape depicted in the painting.

But with loss comes new life.

"It really will be like the Phoenix rising out of the ashes, the rebirth," Wullbrandt says. "It will be so much more beautiful once it starts to rejuvenate. We're gonna see wildflowers we haven't seen in 100 years."  Then Wullbrandt gazes up at a mountain ridge in the distance, now a thin, ash-gray paint stroke on the horizon.

"The spring — just wait. As an artist, I can't wait to paint it."

We wish him all the best as he starts anew to paint what he sees.

Why Can't Drawing Skills Be Part of a Medical Education?

As the article below describes, there is a new trend at leading university medical schools, including Harvard, Yale, Penn State, Columbia, and the University of Texas at Austin.  They are incorporating art classes into medical education.  Since skill in perception—seeing what is ailing in patients—is universally recognized as important in medical analysis and treatment, this is a welcome development. 

Students from Dr. Michael Flanagan's class "Impressionism and the Art of Communication" at Penn State College of Medicine.

What is curious about the trend is that the rock-bottom, basic entry skill in perceptual training—that is, drawing—is completely ignored and excluded.  Instead, medical students gather in museums to observe and analyze paintings, try reproducing famous paintings from only a verbal description, develop verbal hypotheses about an artist’s intent in a given painting, and learn how to do comics to develop storytelling skills.

If the goal is as stated—that doctors need to develop observational skills as well as bias awareness and empathy—then why not just teach them how to draw?  Years ago, I gave a presentation to a national group of plastic surgeons, hoping to convince them that drawing portraits of their patients before and after surgery would have positive effects on their craft.  Alas, for the most part I failed to convince them, and to this day, at least to my knowledge, plastic surgeons are not required to learn perceptual skills through drawing.  What a shame!

~  Betty Edwards

The following article is from The Artsy Podcast No. 47, August 21, 2017:  Medical Schools & Art Classes

Seeing the World Through a Different Lens

This month, my son, Brian Bomeisler, taught a 5-day intensive drawing workshop in La Jolla. Michael K. MacNeill and Caroline MacNeill Hall, participated, and later posted about it on their blog,  Life Reinspired.  

Brian reported: "Not only was the view spectacular from the top floor of the hotel overlooking La Jolla Shores beach, but the group did spectacularly well in the drawing workshop.  Often my groups personally bond through the experience of learning to draw, but that was even more true with this group."

You can read about their experience in Michael's charming post: Seeing the World Through a Different Lens.  Thank you, Michael and Caroline, for contributing to another great 5-Day DRSB Workshop!  We are so glad you gained so much from the experience.

~ Betty Edwards

How to Find the Best Drawing Pencil

For those of our readers who may find art supply stores baffling in their complex offerings, a British reader of our blog, Olivier Jennes, has generously allowed us to publish the link to his detailed and valuable research on pencils.  This blog article by Jennes provides succinct descriptions and evaluations of a variety of pencil brands and manufacturers.  This information can save you endless time and lots of money in seeking the brand of pencil that is right for you, and, conversely avoiding buying the wrong brand.

Olivier's review of pencils is based on feedback from artists around the world, and I personally agree with his descriptions of the pencils with which I am familiar.

~ Betty Edwards

P.S.  If you need drawing supplies, click HERE to see what we have to offer in our DRSB Store.  Pencils and more!