>>3723473imo drawing is closer to 90% talent, you can train your fundies to oblivion and it will not yield memorable/relatable art. Blink182 isn't the most technically advanced group of musicians, but they had something others didn't at the time, a spark, feeling, something you could relate to in their music. Do you think anyone could reproduce that same feeling that made blink182 who they are?
The thing that separates artists isn't time spent and technical skill, it's the vision the artist had and it's relatablility to the viewer. Musicians get worse with time despite their technical skill level increasing because they lose their spark, they lose their drive to say anything. They have it all now, what could they possible have to prove or say to the world?
On a basic level the girl you always had a crush on, the girl with the spark, she doesn't like you, she likes another guy that makes her laugh, what are you going to do about it? get in shape, get wealthy, get status, change your personality? she'll never love you, she'll just love your things.
My favorite artists aren't the most technically advanced, they are the artists with something that resonates with me.
In conclusion, you can learn to draw anything, but there's no point if you can't make anything cool with it.