Thinking about teaching?

You might be an excellent painter, but make sure you understand your own process thoroughly. 

Me,teaching at Acadia National Park
I started writing Monday Morning Art School back in October. This was in response to my studentsā€™ need for continuing education while I was elsewhere. It was also a way to put my scattershot ā€œhow toā€ posts in some kind of framework.
It takes longer than the posts I write the rest of the week, and itā€™s more complicated. It does funny things to my readership stats as well: Monday Morning Art School gets fewer hits than any other day of the week, but I get more mail about it than about anything else.
The difficult thing about writing a ā€œhow toā€ is slicing and dicing your process. Thatā€™s true of teaching in general. Itā€™s one thing to know how to do something, and another to be able to stand outside your work and explain it step-by-step to a beginner. In a classroom, you read your studentsā€™ reactions and adjust your method accordingly. Writing (or video) is a one-way street.
Painting by student Catherine Bullinger in a one-day workshop last summer.
A friend took drawing classes at a prestigious art school. Iā€™ve wondered how a person with her mind could manage to not learn to draw in such a setting, but she did. Sheā€™s a brilliant woman. Drawing should have been a snap for her.
As I was writing about measuring curves as a series of straight line segments, I asked her if sheā€™d ever been taught this simple skill. ā€œThe teacher was a wonderful botanical illustrator herself, but really in retrospect her teaching method was: ā€˜look at it and sketch it,ā€™ā€ she told me.
Iā€™ve taken a few classes and workshops with great artists who couldnā€™t teach. At times the instructor thought that watching him paint was enough. No questions were allowed during the demo. Thatā€™s a real misunderstanding of the teacherā€™s role. His focus should be on describing and examining his process, not protecting it.
Students painting at Owls Head.
Anyway, if I wanted to watch someone paint, Iā€™d have just bought the video.
Almost all artists get the idea somewhere along the way that they can teach, especially after their accountants tut-tut over their books. Many artists teach wonderfully, of course, and the world needs more people like them.
Others may be excellent painters, but havenā€™t analyzed their process thoroughly. Or, worse, they donā€™t have the communication skills to interact with strangers.
Yes, I demo, but there’s a lot more to teaching than that.
Before you decide to run that class, run a check on yourself as you start and finish a painting. Can you clearly describe all aspects of your process, or is some of it automatic and mysterious even to you? If the latter, do yourself and your students a favor and hold off on teaching until youā€™ve got it straight in your mind.
This, by the way, is a lesson I learned the hard way.

Soon-to-be famous woman artist

Indiana Statehouse, by Karen Pence.

Indiana Statehouse, by Karen Pence.
Yesterday, a reader sent me this piece from the Washington Post, asking what the Trump administration means for the arts. Iā€™ve written about the cringeworthy portrait of him by Ralph Wolfe Cowan that hangs in his home in Mar-a-Lago. However, his taste in art hardly matters. Politics doesnā€™t affect the arts directly; it makes or breaks us in how it runs the economy.
WaPo mentioned that incoming VP Mike Pence and his wife Karen have a strong history of supporting the arts. She has an undergraduate minor in art, she has taught art, worked as an artist, and championed art therapy.
That undergraduate minor was an afterthought. Her college, Butler University, required a declared minor. ā€œI thought gosh, ā€˜Iā€™d like to learn more about art,ā€ she told the Indianapolis Star on the eve of Penceā€™s inauguration as governor of Indiana. ā€œI pulled it out of the air.ā€
Mrs. Pence grew up outside of Indianapolis in a town called Broad Ripple. Iā€™ve painted in Indiana, and I agree with her assessment that ā€œIndiana is just a very special place. There are no other people like Hoosiers.ā€
When the Pences had children, Karen decided to take an art class. She chose watercolor because it dries fast. ā€œI told Mike I need a night when youā€™re in charge and I just go have fun,ā€ she said. ā€œThen what happened was, I realized I can paint.ā€
Unlike Mrs. Pence, Iā€™ve always painted, but work and kids got in the way. I picked up my brushes again when my youngest child was born, from the same need to escape the incessant demands of motherhood. Iā€™d wager that isnā€™t uncommon.
Indiana First Lady Karen Pence takes in the 91st Annual Hoosier Salon Exhibition at the Indiana Historical Society, August 2015 (courtesy of http://www.in.gov/).

Indiana First Lady Karen Pence takes in the 91st Annual Hoosier Salon Exhibition at the Indiana Historical Society, August 2015. (Courtesy of http://www.in.gov/)
What followed for Karen Pence was a series of house portrait commissions: well-executed and deeply traditional. As a politicianā€™s wife, sheā€™s had the opportunity to champion art to a broader audience. In 2008, she became the honorary chair of the Art Therapy Committee at the Riley Hospital for Children. The Indiana First Ladyā€™s Charitable Foundation, has, during her tenure, focused on children, families and the arts.
Karen Pence also ran an Etsy shop, selling something she called ā€œtowel charms.ā€ It was suspended during the election, but not before it was broadly ridiculed.
Indiana First Lady Karen Pence working with students from Southside Elementary School on an art exchange program with Japanese students (courtesy of http://www.in.gov/).

Indiana First Lady Karen Pence working with students from Southside Elementary School on an art exchange program with Japanese students. (Courtesy of http://www.in.gov/)
Those who lampooned her towel charms as ā€˜uselessā€™ have apparently spent no time at all on Etsy, where whimsy is the by-word that has created an $85.3 million a year business. While I certainly wouldnā€™t defend her towel charms as ā€˜art,ā€™ I would note that art is intended to be useless. In fact, lack of purpose is the primary distinction between fine art and fine craft.
Do I think Karen Pence is a great artist? No, but I hardly see how that matters. Teacher, wife, mother, artist, operator of an Etsy shop: itā€™s the resume of many working artists.
As we ponder how to close the gender gap in the art world (here and here), I suggest that we quit apologizing for being women. Itā€™s not like male artists donā€™t work other jobs at points in their careers (including child care). The bottom line is, no matter what lip service they give to feminism, many intellectuals donā€™t really like the things women actually do.