PeyoteReligion
Well-Known Member
I never said anything about the level of difficulty determining the quality or not just that art programs on computers come with short cuts, putting it in a limbo state for my personal taste. Random example, you start with a blank white canvas but want it red. On the computer: choose the colour and click, your canvas is now red. Where is my magic one touch paintbrush or pen in reality? So it's not so much as being easier, than it is in skipping entire steps and/or getting rid of entire steps 100 percent each time, no Russian roulette in the digital space. Did you create all those pixels to turn red, well ya, with that one click that was programmed to fill in the rest of the pixels, you did. You didn't turn each pixel red individually, the AI program aided you. Digital art is confined to the pixel, no matter how fine the detail is. Even if you click each pixel to be red, you're still confined to the pixel, which is not physically natural, it's man made. Now for the digital artists who only use the 'classic' tools, like pencil and eraser and no 'short cuts', what happens if you want to make a dot on the screen that is half a pixel? The computer restricts the user and helps the user, always. So it's not so much the difficulty but the computer restrictions I'm talking about. And I agree it is in how you manipulate the tools, but when the tools restrict and sometimes define you, you know that's when you have to pluck your eyes from the monitor and throw it off a 44 storey building. This is just my philosophy towards digital art. If nothing is clear, just say.
Would you give an artist a hard time for using an eraser? Or a pencil for that matter, both of those are man made. Every artist is limited to his tools, not just digital ones. A painter is limited to a canvas and his paint brushes and the type of paint selected, and maybe a few other tools to helps manipulate your media. If you invalidate digital art because of so called "short cuts", then you need to do it to all art forms that use short cuts...which is pretty much all of them. Nobody is intentionally making it hard on themselves to create art, everyone looks to create short cuts. Your argument is a logical phallacy IMO.
You've created a problem with digital media that applies to all medias. You may not like it's style, but just as much or more skill goes into the many steps of creating GOOD digital art as any other form.
The long and the short is that EVERY artist is restricted and defined by their tools, not just the digital artist.