May 7, 2014

Artists Who Teach

Is every professional or semi-professional artist a good teacher? No, of course not. Teaching art requires a different sort of talent from creating art. But here in San Miguel we have teaching artists who may or may not hold a BFA or an MFA and who may not have any solid teaching experience. It’s relatively simple for an unscrupulous artist to take advantage of a starry-eyed, gullible student whose guard has been lowered in advance by all the hype associated with San Miguel.

How does the serious art student who comes here on vacation with the hope of learning techniques figure out who is qualified to teach and who is not? These are murky waters. The fact is that it is much easier to fake or exaggerate credentials when your putative degree is from an art school outside Mexico. What should make the prospective student even more skeptical is the realization that many of the teaching artists here are driven to make money from the tourists who want to try their hand at painting in “magical” San Miguel – as if the place alone will confer a special gift upon them. You can put the talentless or mediocre student in Florence, Italy for a thousand years and Florence would not make them a great artist, although it might give them a better perspective and help them discern good art from bad (and perhaps help them shed their self-delusions).

I think this is an unfortunate situation for everyone concerned. Even under the best scrutiny it is difficult for the student to know if independent art teachers have any skill for it. If you’ve read the introduction to this blog then you know that I taught at the Lyme Academy College of Art in Connecticut, that I went to the Yale Art School by osmosis when I lived in New Haven, and that I was a college professor for 20 years. In addition, I have garnered other experiences that make me a fairly good judge of who is a good/qualified teacher of art and who isn’t. In other words, I’ve known real art teachers, seen them up close, the ones who had the gift of enlightening and inspiring their students. And, yes, they are rare beings, but not as rare as you might think. And certainly the artists who come to San Miguel wanting to elevate the standards of both art and the teaching of art in this city should be those who have received the calling. But instead we have artists who by hype and by skillful marketing are getting students willing to pay fairly high fees in order to be able to say they studied art in San Miguel. They are being hoodwinked by the hype. When I see an artist in San Miguel advertising a class without disclosing their credentials or giving their teaching experience my alarm bell goes off.

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