The critique I brought was two pronged.innerstatejt wrote:It's silly to think that creativity can't be taught. I've had artists better than me point me in the right direction at times & that had an impact on my ability to translate my ideas much better. It certainly saved me much more time than going it alone, which I did for quite a while.
Creativity is almost always a passing of the torch. Nobody creates in a vacuum. Even Mozart had a teacher at one point. That said, everybody gets from point A to point B differently. The is no 1 way & there are no wrong ways. There are just ways that give you good results & those that don't.
If my suggestions aren't helpful, no worries. No one is being forced against their will. Let's not get all "YouTube" in here.
The main critique was the self congratulatory, look at me style in which you delivered very little actual content. Let's not act now like it was only about your tips.
If you want people to interview you, so you can devulge who you know, what emotional problems you have and how you overcame all this by going less to after parties and working harder, don't lead a post promising useful tips with a 1000 word essay on yourself, but actually produce something compelling enough that other people do the interview with you. Second: don't ever call yourself a giant. It's extremely tacky.
If you are indeed one, you can be sure that it will be recognized in time and then others will call you that.
To the actual content:
I don't disagree that some of what you discovered for yourself helped you to get where you wanted to be. (otherwise you wouldn't be so ridiculously overconfident I guess).
But your conclusion from that should not be that you discovered some secret law of nature that you should now go on to teach others, because that's just the sort of kind soul you are.
Because it's not.
Steven King that you chose as an example for your "hard work leads to great results" mentality, is not just only one author, but I would argue that the work hard mentality is not what makes him an artist, it's just the necessary process for him to actually produce his art. So even for him: Artist first - hard work second.
Many authors, many way more talented than him, had a completely different lifestyle and work ethic. Some for example only writing in bursts when they were drunk off their asses (Bukowsky, Henry Miller to an extend).
The conclusion from that would hardly be: You want to be a writer?! Become an alcoholic first!, wouldn't you agree?!
And to the meat of your point: No, no one can teach you to be an artist. Becoming an artist is a state of mind, it needs a certain, original perspective on your artform. If you rely on other teaching you that, you are not an artist, you are a copy cat.
That's not to say that you shouldn't get teachers to perfect things in your abilities to perform/make your art, far from it and I never stated such a thing.
But there is one thing that they will not be able to teach you, and that is being an artist.


