At what age is it ideal to start studying art?
>>2964344
30s when you have more experience in life
>>2964344
with 4 years under a good teacher if you want to make it
straight outta the womb
if you hit your second birthday and you're not painting at a rembrandt level you may as well just quit because you're ngmi
>>2964363
>he didn't paint inside the womb
NOT GONNA MAKE IT my friend. NOT GONNA MAKE IT
>>2964344
Ideal?
6, in my opinion. Old enough to be an actual person, but young enough to have years of your childhood to get comfortable with it.
>>2964344
now.
>>2964344
The best age is actually when you hit puberty. Before puberty you don't have the mental capacity to do something as complex as art at a professional level. That's why most people who start as kids don't really start improving till their teenage years.
>>2964408
this
>>2964408
Of course this is the only answer.
It took me 24 years of my life to realize it but I'm glad I stopped caring about talent and didn't fall for the 'too old to start drawing' meme.
>>2964344
early, but painters and suchlike tend to develop late, as your ability to convey ideas and what not isn't directly tied to your technical skill. so like if a guy can draw super well at 10 and another guy can't draw at all until he's 25 they'll probably be about the same at age 35, assuming same level of talent, drive, luck and all that jazz.
Guess starting early on is always better right?
>talent doesn't matter, maaaaan. It's all about discipline!
Therefore, the earlier you start, the more time you'll have the practice, and the better you'll be.
If you're starting at the age of, say, 20, then you're fucked. You can't even compete with someone who started at 5 years old.
Now. You're never too old to start unlike learning an instrument, you just have less time to practice.
>>2967794
>not selling your business and retiring at 25