Or the sake of unhampered personal development that young artists are
joining these new schools; it is because they are offered a short cut
to a kind of success. As there are no more laws and no more standards,
there
is nothing to learn.
The merest student is at once set upon a level with the most
experienced of his instructors, and boys
and girls in their teens are hailed as masters. Art is at last made
easy, and there are no longer any pupils, for all have become
teachers. To borrow Doctor Johnson's phrase, "many men, many women,
and many children" could produce art after this fashion;
and they do. So right are the practitioners of this puerile art in
their proclaimed belief that the public will never accept
it while anything else exists, that one might be willing to treat it
with the silent contempt it deserves were it not for the efforts of
certain critics and writers for the
press to convince us that
it ought to be accepted. Some of these men seem to be intimidated by
the blunders
of the past. Knowing that contemporary criticism has damned almost