The Guardian - World News
| Title | My rookie era: I wasn’t immediately good at oil painting, but it taught me to find pleasure in struggle | Source | The Guardian - World News |
| Description |
One week I spent three miserable hours trying to paint a satin ribbon, and went home in a filthy mood As a five-year-old, I loved fairies, Spice Girls and Vincent van Gogh. It wasn’t the famous ear incident or the existential despair that I found fascinating, but a picture book. For the Love of Vincent, by Brenda V Northeast, told the story of Van Gogh’s life but with one minor change: Vincent was a teddy bear, not a depressed Dutchman. It was this book that lead me to the real Van Gogh and to his art, which was vibrant and alive and made complete sense to a small child who mainly painted with her fingers. I loved Vincent, man and bear; I even went as Vincent Van Bear to Book Week, and confused the hell out of everyone. I was a happy painter for years, until I reached high school and I started getting marked for it. When art went from something I simply did to something I could be judged for, that made it terrifying. And as I learned more about artists like Vincent (man, not bear), I began to suspect that an artist’s life was for other people, who seemed to experience life a lot more vibrantly than I did, good and bad. Taking solace in the fact that I would never have been exceptional made it easier to just stop. Continue reading... |
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| Link | https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2026/feb/23/my-rookie-era-i-wasnt-immediately-good-at-oil-painting-but-it-taught-me-to-find-pleasure-in-struggle | Published At | 2026-02-23 09:00:46 (1 week ago) |
| Created At | 2026-02-23 09:12:27 | Updated At | 2026-02-23 09:12:27 |