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I wonder about a parallel for paintings. What if there was an analysis stating exactly the brushes the painter used, the number of strokes, the exact pigments, etc? Would that, in your opinion, "suck the 'soul' out of a painting"?

I could see this as a brilliant learning tool. A tool to provide deep insight into something that would be very challenging to quantify personally. I think all this would make future authors better, not worse.



The cave paintings in France have been studied this way, starting with Leroi-Gourhan's work and then accelerating with the use of computers. It's defi itely shed some important light on the artists who made them tens of thousands of years ago, and I don't think it made the paintings any less wonderful.


> Would that, in your opinion, "suck the 'soul' out of a painting"?

Out of the analyzed painting, no.

> A tool to provide deep insight into something that would be very challenging to quantify personally.

Yeah, and will prevent the would be creator from developing a personal style. No matter what medium they create with.


Does an artist not see thousands of artworks as they develop their style? Do artists not experiment with hundreds of styles as they hone in on something they want to be theirs? Is the internet, a tool that lets them see even more artworks, preventing creators from developing their personal style?

As I understand it, we've seen an explosion of different dancing styles as various apps let users share their craft with others - a quicker evolution of a greater variety of dancing. And I'm confident dancers use technology like playing videos at slower speeds to analyze others' movements.


You're right, but there's a large difference between your brain doing the analysis and a template or computer wizard telling you what to "create".

[Link picked at random] https://www.studiobinder.com/blog/three-act-structure/

Do you really think this did wonders for movie originality?


I've heard the phrase "you have to know the rules to break them" (or something similar). The next generation of creators may look at that and choose to change their story telling on purpose, or exaggerate the curves, or something else ... that's what creativity is about - trying variations.

Just because Hollywood is pumping out movies you find unpleasant doesn't mean art is dead.

You and I probably agree more than this conversation suggests. You're right that people can and likely will stick to patterns that are successful, and that will mean there may be more copy-cat cookie-cutter stuff out there. But I strongly suspect that it will allow other creators to rocket past old mistakes or common tropes towards something novel.




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