The Why Factor - Why do we Draw?
Why do we draw, how do we get good at it and what do we reveal through our drawings?
Are some people simply more visual than others? And what do we reveal through our drawings? Drawing is something we all do unselfconsciously as children before we learn to write. It is a form of expression that goes back 40,000 years and began on the walls of caves. But why do we draw? Is it to make our mark on the world, to decorate our surroundings, or is it a way of communicating with others when words fail us?
Lucy Ash talks to Stephen Wiltshire, world famous for his incredibly detailed pen and ink cityscapes and to Rebecca Chamberlain, a psychologist now at the University of Leuven in Belgium, who is studying art school students to try and understand how people get better at drawing. She speaks to David Hockney renowned for both his traditional draughtsmanship and his enthusiasm for new technology, and to Lizzie Ellis, who comes from a remote community in central Australia and draws with a stick, telling stories through her traditional form of Aboriginal women's art. And, at the London charity Kids Company, Arts manager Jebet Mengech encourages children to express themselves with pencils, crayons and felt tips using drawing to reveal problems in the children鈥檚 lives.
(Photo: A student in a life class at the Royal School of Drawing)
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- Wed 17 Jun 2015 16:20GMT麻豆社 World Service Online