@zombie-rhythm Just tuning in with some random thoughts - you initiate some fascinating discussions!
I believe most of what you talk about is a matter of “intensity”. Actually, I sometimes feel this is the major stumbling block for many artists and aspiring artists who struggle with turning their vision into reality. Art is like sports or music in two ways:
- theory alone (be it attending courses, reading books, binge-watching YouTube videos, looking at other artists´work, etc...) while necessary in many ways will do very little to progress actual skills;
- the amount of single-minded practice and hands-on training that it takes to excel at art (as music and sports) is enormous - and consistently underestimated.
To keep the parallel, being good in the high-school sport team is by no means an indication that one will go on to become a professional athlete. Being able to play the guitar decently doesn’t make one a professional musician - let alone a successful composer.
A professional athlete trains every day, several hours a day, his/her whole life. A professional musician (talking about classical, not pop music, though I think this is true also of many pop musician) has not only spent decades practicing an instrument several hours a day, but keeps on practicing set pieces as well as new ones throughout his/her professional career. A composer probably lives and breathes music in every waking hour.
The “visualization” skill you mention is not an innate and mysterious talent: it´s the result of all the hours, days and years spent looking and drawing. First copying everything and anything, from reality, photos and images (and anatomy and perspective and all the other fundamentals are big helps in learning to really “see” what you´re looking at), and later - much later than many think - slowly developing the visual memory to draw without reference, and - later still - the design sensibility to imagine and draw what doesn’t exist. I know it took me four years of consistent daily practice to be able to draw a decent human figure without reference....and it was a thrilling moment, for sure!
Frazetta wasn’t a born talent - he started attending art school lessons at 8 years of age, started working in comics at 16 and only about 22 years later (think 22 years of drawing comics professionally every day) he started creating his masterpiece book covers. Kim Jung Gi, the Korean comic artist who can draw entire scenes out of his head directly in ink, mentioned in an interview that he has been drawing almost compulsively, every waking hour of the day, every day since he was a schoolchild, filling several sketchbooks a year. If you look at his sketchbooks even now, you will see not only fantasy scenes but also everyday people, buildings, etc... sketched from life: he is still practicing.
Winsor McCay - an illustrator and animator active in the early 1900 and endowed with a similarly ability - also drew all the time, doing often several dozen commissions per month. Same is true for another artist in the same league: Gustave Dore, who famously produced enough drawings to keep a team of 22 etchers busy with making printing plates.
And another recent example: Aaron Blaise, an exceptional draughtman who draws preferentially animals, has worked as animator for over 30 years...and still spends weeks studying the anatomy and making life studies of an animal before attempting to design a character based on it.
These people were not “different” in terms of artistic skills. They simply had the obsession, interest and opportunity to draw A LOT, from a very early age and kept or keep doing it with the same intensity throughout their life. You cannot compare yourself to such artists or aspire to become like them if you don´t have the same amount of drive, time and obsession that they demonstrate.
It´s like dreaming of being a world-level athlete but only jog around the block once a day...
Obviously I cannot guess how much time or discipline you dedicate to art. I know for myself that with a day job and two kids, the fact that I only got into art seriously with 39 and the fact that I also try to write, the level of draughtmanship demonstrated by these people is out of my league and will probably always be. Even if I draw on average 3-4 hours a day (some days more, some days less), it´s just not enough....