Addressing Accusation of Lies and Insults
This morning I was mulling over a couple of ideas for a new blog post when I got distracted by and started responding to a Facebook comment on my previous post: ‘Can You Really 'Cheat' at Art?’. The comment reads:
“A lucida is not cheating. You can tell the difference when someone with talent and training uses it compared someone who doesnt/isn't. What I find reprehensible is your constant and flagrant lies about who used these. The Lucida was not invented until 1806.
None of the "old masters " used this.
Ingres did not use this. He had skills.
Please stop insulting talented people.”
As my mind started picking apart the comment, I realized I had found my next blog topic. Sometimes embracing a distraction is the most productive thing to do.
I have no argument with the first part of the comment, they are expressing their opinion on cheating in art—that is all fine and great. But then they abruptly transition to accusing me and/or my company of flagrant and reprehensible lies. Then self-contradictingly asserts that mentioning the tools an artist may have used is insulting them. This is what I would like to unpack and address.
In the same way my teenaged son constantly corrects his younger siblings on every trivial or perceived incorrect statement, this comment makes a fair point. The LUCY Drawing Tool is an improved camera lucida. The camera lucida was not invented until 1806. The term "Old Masters" generally refers to the most recognized European artists—working between the Renaissance and 1800. So by this logic none of the “Old Masters” could have used the camera lucida. That is technically true. And sometimes in advertising you can’t regress into the murky minutia of the past and tease out every nuance. But as my teenaged son will hopefully find out some day—the more you learn, the less you know.
The camera lucida was patented in 1806 by William Hyde Wollaston, but the optical principles involved were described nearly 200 years earlier in Johannes Kepler’s “Dioptrice”. When a thing is patented and when a thing is first used or known do not always coincide—especially when you are dealing with something as fundamental as reflecting light. No one knows if anyone built or used a reflective device like what became the camera lucida before Wollaston, but there is no reason they couldn’t have.
And of course, the knowledge of and use of the camera obscura goes even farther back and includes the entire “Old Master” Renaissance era when Leonardo da Vinci was sketching hundreds of diagrams of the camera obscura, including the one below. The camera obscura is a predecessor of the camera lucida. In both cases ‘camera’ means chamber or room. ‘Obscura’ means dark. ‘Lucida’ means light. The name camera lucida was chosen both to pay tribute to its forerunner and to juxtapose the way the two devices operate.
The point is there is not just one type of optical device that was used in art, but myriads of methods and tools made and used over the centuries. That is why we distinguish between device classes like camera lucidas and earlier predecessors like the camera obscuras when possible or [in order to avoid going in to confusing and unnecessary detail] use general terms such as ‘tools like this’ or ‘similar devices’. The LUCY drawing tool is not the camera lucida invented in 1806, nor is Wollaston’s lucida a camera obscura, nor is the obscura described by da Vinci the same as the one Vermeer would have used, but one cannot dismiss the evidence for the use of optics in art by conflating and quibbling about what tool was used when by who. The commenter may not like or agree with it, but our statement and belief that great artists of the past used tools like this is no less a lie than their insistence that they did not. A certain amount of evidence exists, and people make up their own mind about what may or may not have happened in the past. That's how historical science works.
Now quickly on the idea that talking about the history of optics in art is somehow “insulting talented people”. This commenter first acknowledges that they can tell the “difference when someone with talent and training uses” a camera lucida, inferring that even if an artist uses these sorts of tools, they still need talent and training to produce exceptional work. The commenter then turns around and infers that our stating that an artist with talent and training may have used an optical device to help create their exceptional work is “insulting talented people”. You can’t have it both ways. Of course, using any of these tools still requires talent and training, practice and patience. This accusation of insulting talented people is groundless. Giving people tools to help them achieve their full potential is not cheating and acknowledging the tools that help achieve greatness is not insulting.
I’ve spoken my piece. I have no problem with different opinions or beliefs. Read and research, wonder and walk around; think whatever thing you want. But if you accuse me of lying—you may get a wordy response 😉.
James Spicer am
Well said ! I think someone is just jealous of your exceptional business. In whatever one does, if someone invented a device to improve your trade , more power to ya! The old Hunters may have used knifes snd Bows but it was probably a Hunter who invented the Gun and not a Artist. JS
Barbara am
Thank you for taking this person on. Some great or even “not so great” artist didn’t sketch well but found their talent in their paint (medium used) and the opposite is also true. Who is to say one is more talented than the other
Believe me, if I could afford a tool to help me sketch or draw, I would definitely have one. I am a newbie at art, but have always loved to sketch or doodle since I was a young girl. I am now 70 yrs. And still working at it!❤️❤️❤️
martha oquendo am
Can i draw from a computer with this camara?
Cindy J Schuldt am
Don’t let the trolls rent space in your head!
I hear this kind of comment now and then at our pottery studio. Shrug it off and move on with a great product.
Richard Warrell am
If the Masters would have had these tools you better bet they would have used them. Just think of the computer. Where would art be without those? They take talent to use and create some great art. After all, man discovered the wheel and went from Rolling things on logs to what we have today. Just saying!!!¡
Daniel Feth am
I think the commentator feels threatened by a “less talented” artist making good art using the tools available to them. Does he think that using a ruler is also cheating to make a straight line? Intelligent people use whatever means are available to create whatever it is they are creating. Work smarter not harder. I’m sure this method will not diminish the beauty of a masterpiece. The artist still has to make the marks.
Christine am
Very well written.
Dennis Prah am
If I could afford a Lucida, I would have one. At 77 I can use all the help I can get. I use Graff’s , and all type of measuring tools. My oils are water soluble, and I use acrylic. I copy photos, illustrations , anything that looks good to me (I give credit to the initial creator) . I am neither a thief, nor a cheat ! I have only been sketching and painting about 5 years ! Lucida s just another aid !
Cristina V. am
I am a professional fine artist, and couldn’t agree more. Tools are just tools.
Frankie am
Amen. Well said and you’re absolutely correct, she can’t have it both ways. I purchased a Lucy Drawing Tool a few months ago, I am an accomplished pencil, watercolour and acrylic artist and I’ve used it three or four times. The Lucy tool is very helpful to me for outlining my “sketches” on paper directly onto canvas, and neither I nor many of my artist friends consider it “cheating” at art. I know Fine Art Degree holders who use Lucy and I myself had created my own “light box” before I found out about Lucy. The only reason I purchased Lucy was because it took up little space, my own contraption was considerably larger.
THUMBS UP FOR WORDY RESPONSES. Good on you !
Ivo am
I can draw without using optical devices. I can draw using optical devices. What I find is that the optical device silences those demons that would still my hand. When light is changing, it lets me sketch the outlines and get to shading while the light is still from the same direction. I also like to draw the impossible in convincing fashion. The lucida removes the tentativeness out of my lines and yields a more realistic final product. Is using a tool to draw cheating? Show me anyone who can draw without a tool and I’ll show you a blank canvas without pencil, pastel, charcoal or paint; or are we now distinguishing which tools are allowed and which are not. Maybe we need to pick a date and tools patented after that date are not allowed. (Kinda like being Amish)