Why Artists Notice or Ignore
Why Artists Notice Things Other People Ignore Artists often stop for strange reasons. Not for famous landmarks. Not for dramatic events. Not for obvious beauty. Sometimes an artist stops because light touches a plastic chair in a particular way. Or because rainwater reflects a broken sign. Or because a tired fruit seller’s shadow briefly resembles a torn piece of rainbow across wet asphalt. To many people, these moments appear insignificant. But artists frequently notice things other people ignore. And the reason has less to do with talent than with attention itself. Violinist watercolor by Ouchul Hwang Artists Train Themselves to Observe Slowly Modern life encourages rapid attention. People move quickly through cities while filtering out enormous amounts of visual information: streets weather small objects shadows faces textures Most of this information disappears immediately. Artists, however, often train themselves to slow down observation...