Swanyce,
Thanks a lot for those kind comments. Your website is great, a very elegant design. Though I haven't been able to download any music yet because of my Jurassic Era modem.
Also, I agree with your response to DG writing: "The other thing that I've been thinking about is the concept of inspiration. Whilst I may think that I have been inspired to come up with something good, others may deride my offerings as trite, banal, uninspired etc." This does happen, but usually if you are really inspired (which means nothing more than being excited about an idea) it WON'T be trite and banal. The best way to come up with things that are good, is to do things you can get excited about. I don't think DG or anyone shold worry about whether what they do "measures up" to some supposed standard. In a sense, the attitude of a child drawing pictures with crayons is the perfect way for an artist to behave: he is doing it not because he thinks he is an "Artist" but just because it is FUN. When that same child grows up he will stop doing pictures, because adults have taught him that he is not an"Artist." But why? There are some artists who had little technical skill, like Joseph Cornell, or Ives Tanguy, but who had a desperate urge to create. And so they found a style of their own, and changed the course of art history.
Thanks a lot for those kind comments. Your website is great, a very elegant design. Though I haven't been able to download any music yet because of my Jurassic Era modem.
Also, I agree with your response to DG writing: "The other thing that I've been thinking about is the concept of inspiration. Whilst I may think that I have been inspired to come up with something good, others may deride my offerings as trite, banal, uninspired etc." This does happen, but usually if you are really inspired (which means nothing more than being excited about an idea) it WON'T be trite and banal. The best way to come up with things that are good, is to do things you can get excited about. I don't think DG or anyone shold worry about whether what they do "measures up" to some supposed standard. In a sense, the attitude of a child drawing pictures with crayons is the perfect way for an artist to behave: he is doing it not because he thinks he is an "Artist" but just because it is FUN. When that same child grows up he will stop doing pictures, because adults have taught him that he is not an"Artist." But why? There are some artists who had little technical skill, like Joseph Cornell, or Ives Tanguy, but who had a desperate urge to create. And so they found a style of their own, and changed the course of art history.