IS POETRY AN LEARNT ART OR A TALENT?
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Re: IS POETRY AN LEARNT ART OR A TALENT?
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You can easily see this illustrated by simply thinking about learning a musical instrument. Some people who have very little natural ability can learn to play a guitar, read music, follow along, and reproduce music, etc. But the ones with natural ability might be able to pick up a guitar and in a few days or a week be playing and reproducing music without any special training at all. Many classical musicians vary in their innate musical talent, but learned from an early age to play a violin or horn or some other instrument.
This is what makes humanity so beautiful and varied, that no two people have the same combination of natural innate talent and learned skill and ability. Let's look at four possibilities as an illustration of this variance.
1. 100% Innate + 0% Training: This person has incredible natural, innate talent but no formal instruction or education in the art. They seem to be a whiz at reproducing and expressing themselves in the art form and everyone loves what they do. But they lack some of the formal refinement that comes with learning the skill and so some who are more refined do not appreciate their work. (Elton John, Jimmie Hendrix, Eric Clapton, the Beatles are considered in this category).
2. 50% Innate + 50% Training: This person is very well rounded and good in both the natural ability to express in the art form and the technical skill of it. But they are not exceptional, just good, solid, consistent, and appreciable performance in the art. (Most other musicians and artists fall in the category of natural ability mixed with training, some maybe have 25% natural and a lot more training, some may have 75% natural and more or less training, etc.)
3. 0% Innate + 100% Training: This person had to learn everything they know and they are very technically brilliant in the art form and have carved out a niche for themselves and by arduous practice have made themselves able to produce. (Norman Rockwell is said to have had no artistic ability when he began to train himself in graphic design and art and through years of arduous practice became a famous illustrator and artist, purely learned. Whitney Houston claims to have had very little natural talent and had to work hard to attain her skill and fame).
4. 100% Innate + 100% Training: An artistic genius. Not only pure natural ability but masterful learned skill too. (Musicians like Phil Collins and Brian May (of Queen) are considered to be brilliant in both categories).
These are just rough illustrations, but the point is, there will be some combination of natural ability and learned skill in everyone. And yes, people can become artists, poets, musicians by sheer willpower, practice and learning who have little natural ability, but if they don't pick up the "soul" or "heart" along the way, they may be like robots simply reproducing artistic expression with technical brilliance but little heart, soul, and passion.
Most very successful and famous people in all categories of art had some natural inclination toward their art but passionately drove themselves to learn all they could and to perfect their art. It's good to be a combination of both.
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I come from a strong line of poets and writers, C.J. Langenhoven and the like. I've been 'good' with words and phrasing since I could string sentences together. It's just as if that gift has always been there. My paternal grandmother was one of the people who created translation from English into Afrikaans for the national dictionary. Now, Afrikaans is a very entertaining language if one translates it directly. For instance, my gran, Lientjie, created a most peculiar translation for jumper cables, being skokspringkaan. Most trnaslators would just. translate it back into 'jumper cables', but in direct translation one sees the magic in it, being 'shock-grasshoppers'. There are numerous other Afrikaans words that have this peculiar beauty to them once directly translated, like the word for skunk is stinkmuishon which is directly translated into 'stink-mouse-dog'. Or even the word for giraffe, kameelperd has the direct translation of 'camel-horse'. It has always fascinated me, and I've always found the ineffable beauty in such instances of direct translation.
Having these genes in me, I didn't immediately realize that it was a gift I needed to nurture. I was always surprised when peers looked at my writing and commented something like "wow, you really have an incredible way of describing things", I'd always be like "what...why? Don't the other kids also write like that?". Even the most stern and stoic teachers found surprise and intrique in my papers.
So, in comparison to my classmates, I find that writing, especially poetry, is a art that is best mastered if there already exists an innate talent for it. It's about not only about how the poet sees or experiences something, but how they are able to bring that to life for the reader: poets and good writers are able to paint immersive pictures with words.