Nobody Likes Perfect Art

For a long time I struggled with creating any sort of artwork that went beyond just basic, average stuff. Only after I listened to the advice of an art teacher that “nobody likes perfect art” did I start feeling more free to create and make lots of mistakes in the process. In one art class a fellow student remarked to me how much she liked the style of my drawings, to which I replied it was “very messy,” but she enthusiastically insisted this was “STYLE!” Eventually I began to embrace this.

After dabbling in watercolor, pencil, and Chinese ink, I finally came upon the paper arts, specifically botanical paper art in my thirties. This was an art form where adding imperfections was welcomed! Crumpling petals, puncturing holes into leaves to make them look bug bitten, adding freckles, asymmetry, decay  - these are all things done to make otherwise uniform paper look like reality.

One of my favourite techniques is to always have some form of asymmetry in my work. If you closely look at real leaves you will see that the left side does not match the right side. The same goes for petals and all sorts of things in the natural world. 

If you observe the petals of the paper lily below, you will see that none of them are perfectly symmetrical - partly due to the fact that I cut and ruffled each side separately. Furthermore, I added patterns of random spots in different colors, while looking at reference photos of real lilies for inspiration. I try to make each petal have it’s own personality. 

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In arrangements, I like to have flowers facing all sort of different directions like they would if they were growing wild. Think about group of people having various conversations with each other - they would not all be facing the same direction or sitting at uniform distances from each other. You can see in the arrangement below that this is true. In addition, I’ve highlighted all the brown spots and bug bites throughout the leaves. While these may seem like small details, they really help add complexity and interest.

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You can try experimenting for yourself by either incorporating a mistake into the final work or by adding imperfections intentionally. Allow yourself to explore and see where the journey takes you. 

Yang LiuComment