![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjnB6sYqTMIx7udaXXb0ni0OpavKmSmwuePX7IQQz1miSKzYI2wCi0YCToY53nCdfvkwf6d7_tSf_2YIyz4AcuI00YVzsXoHrHedfIbGvNP9fqRnaGzcZ78dxCQ3FXgerqEQLKchaexWLo/s400/2+Studies.jpg)
Case in point. I am teaching a class at Kendall College of Art & Design and one of my students remarked that she was frustrated by not being able to "make the paint" do what she wanted it to. The frustration comes from a lack of "knowledge". Knowledge of the paint = time spent moving the paint around, observing what happens with different brushes, how the paint reacts in varying stages of drying (watercolor). I remember, especially when I was a less experienced painter, how often times the the materials would frustrate me as well. But painting is like anything else, in order to florish, it needs attention, it needs to be practiced. My advice to her may sound a little counter intuitive to my point, but in order to gain the "knowledge" of the paint she needed to let go and let the paint do what it wanted to do. Then, through the acts of observation, experimentation, & practice she gains the knowledge to "be the boss of the paint".