Detail from "In the Carpenter's Shop"
A painting by the Swedish artist Carl Larsson (1853-1919)
The term "Useful Arts" went out of fashion over a hundred years ago, along with the skills that it encompassed. Engineering and carpentry are two of those skills, and they are the ones that I practice along with my work as a painter and sculptor.
You will not find a college or art school offering a course in the useful arts. Their remit falls under the titles, Fine Arts, Visual Arts, Applied Arts, Decorative Arts, etc. That's a pity, because only one in a thousand students with a degree in the arts end up actually working as artists. At best they finish up teaching something they cannot do themselves. Had they acquired a skill their lives would have been more productive and rewarding.
But skills are learnt via apprenticeships and alas they went out of fashion along with the concept of useful arts. It was by virtue of my apprenticeships in engineering and carpentry that yesterday I was able to make a tuning hammer (wrench for the uninitiated) for the piano I'm restoring. I doubt if there's an art student in the world able to fashion the 1/4" square hole in the head of the hammer.
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