RE: Contest | 25-Word Comment - Monkey Business | Drawing - 6 Steem
Simply put, drawing is an embodiment of creativity. It is the use of lines, forms and even shapes to communicate visually. It is usually done on surfaces like paper, walls etc. using pencils, charcoals, markers, pens etc.
Through drawings, one can visually express thoughts, emotions, ideas, scenes etc. Drawings can be both animate and inanimate.
Drawing is as old as the ancient men and their writings which were called "hieroglyphics"
I believe in the acronym I call ABCD, where
A= Any
B = Body
C= Can
D= Draw
This simply means that everyone and anyone can draw. A person's drawing skills improve over time and over various practices. While some may be gifted artisans other could become artists through learning it as a skill
Over the years, I have learned that one of the ways a learner can learn speedily and have a long-lasting memory through drawing. I literally have to scribble drawings as illustrations for my learners in school, and they can pick them no matter how crowded it is, even with a stronger memory than mine.
The act and skill of Drawing is really beautiful 😍
I'll invite @atimisaac @kafio @usherray
Penjelasan yang sangat memuaskan, gambar itu buah pikiran dan karya seni yang mendunia. Kita juga bisa menghasilkan uang dengan berkarya melalui sebuah seni gambar ini.
Bisa jadi kita akan termasuk kedalam katagori seniman besar di bidang gambar, serta akan terkenal di seluruh penjuru dunia.
I also believe in the ABCD acronym. And I tell you, it takes a lot of time, just like any other skill. But how does drawing improve one's memory? And what if someone is an auditory or kinesthetic learner?
@bluelavender Some learners learn faster when they see or have an imagination of what they are learning. So I tend to scribble some look-alike drawings to aid their imaginations, (this is usually an interesting session of my class, and it comes with lots of giggles with me pretending I can't draw). They never forget such learning, even for a moment!
I remember teaching age 3-4 about classes of plants where we had creepers, climbers, trees, flowers etc. They remember every bit of it because of the look-alike pictures drawn that they even pick it out on the TV with lots of shouts.
Auditory or kinesthetic learners are not missing out on learning as well, because what they listen to and want to feel while learning Drawing goes further to make the teaching much more alive so that it cannot be easily erased or forgotten from their memory.
It's interesting to hear that your drawings make teaching easier but drawings are also important to express feelings. Strange I haven't heard anyone mention that.
If you can't talk you can still make a drawing and there's no need to draw very well for that.
Teachers even label children because of what they draw and let parents show up. An interesting thing about drawings is also that everyone sees what he likes/wants to see influenced by?
It reminds me of a drawing a child made about the vacation. The teacher saw the parents and children hanging with a rope on their necks. The parents were ordered to come for a chat (or perhaps only the mother) who smiled and said the child had drawn very well what they did in their past vacation.the family had gone snorkelling in the sea.
I am still curious how that teacher felt. It also reminds me of psychiatrists asking patients what they see if pictures with dots on it are shown...
Just like @bluelavender, I like to know what you mean that through drawings one can learn speedily and have a long-lasting memory. A long-lasting memory for what? If that is the case it should work the other way around as well.
If it comes to the ABCD and anybody can draw there's no need for skills or improving of it. The only thing that's in the way it how we label what we see. Good, bad, art, no art.
There are plenty of artists who can't draw at all and they are famous because of? Perhaps the skill of someone who promoted them?
Thanks for giving me something to think about. I wait for your answer.
As humans one of the ways we tend to learn is through visuals which drawing
is a part of so through drawings one can give form to what one learns. Imagine having an idea of what a plant cell looks like on a drawing book even without viewing it yet under a microscope, it is very possible to give a description of it based on the image seen
Everyone can draw relatively, but then some people major in lt and this involves learning certain skills to aim at perfection.
Those artists who are only famous from other people's drawing skills can become better if they allow themselves to. Remember, while some are gifted artists, some can become good artists through practice.
Autodidacts learn by vision, no one taught them to draw. I believe skills will always improve if we practise and keep doing it.
Thank you for your comment 👍
Thank you for upvoting my post @steemcurator05