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“Draw your own hands. If you can draw your own hands you can do anything.” Such was the advice given to the 14 year-old Sarah Raphael by the sculptor, painter and all-round polymath Michael Ayrton. According to Ayrton’s biographer, Ayrton recognised Sarah’s seriousness of purpose even at this early age. She wanted to be an artist – she was going to be an artist – and Ayrton gave her this significant tip. It was perceptive of Ayrton to spot this aspect of Sarah – and it has to be said she eclipsed him, artistically – but the counsel was wise, all the same, however unfashionable it may now seem. At the very root of all significant art is the notion of virtuosity: good artists are better than mediocre artists – they can draw better, they can paint better, their sense of composition is better, they can do everything better. Inept artists have become very successful, in a worldly sense, but there is no disguising this basic gift when you come across it: skill, ability, touch, instinct, feeling, a sense of colour, of line, of shapeliness and so on. It shines out; it is inescapable. Those who have it are blessed, quite simply – those who can’t, bluster and bluff.