maybe the reason so many computer scientists struggle with art --
computer science is a field that inherently requires intensive abstraction
you can't survive as a programmer without a propensity to abstract
data structures don't actually exist; they're human-level abstractions of code, which is itself an abstraction of circuitry. ultimately programming is just the art of flipping electrical current on and off in precisely the right sequences, electrical current which has been engineered to implement digital logic from analog electrical voltage. but then again, the digital realm itself is an abstraction; it does not exist in reality.
there is nothing that is truly digital; there is simply varying voltage that falls within specified ranges that we as humans have determined to convert to 1s and 0s for the purpose of simplicity --
abstraction.
so yeah -- abstraction is all over the computer science world.
but art requires the exact opposite of that. you have to detach yourself from all abstraction, and focus solely on observation. and if you're not drawing something in front of you, imagination.
the moment you start thinking "I am drawing a face" instead of just looking at it, or picturing it, is the moment your brain has started abstracting, and you will start drawing what you think a face looks like instead of what's actually there.
Comments
Post a Comment