Matt,
Don't be modest.
Just because I'm well known in a community like this which is mainly a bunch of emo kids that try magic and quit within 3-5 months, doesn't mean I'm a legend at all.
Matt,
Don't be modest.
No offense but I've never heard of you except for seeing you post around.Just because I'm well known in a community like this which is mainly a bunch of emo kids that try magic and quit within 3-5 months, doesn't mean I'm a legend at all.
No offense but I've never heard of you except for seeing you post around.
Mitch
didnt we have a person from the forums become a T11 artist? He was called, Andrei.
Different story. Andrei wasn't a theory11 fanboy. He's been there since xcm started. Theory11 needs artists like that.
Yeah, someone like Matt, A.K.A. RichmanMatthew.
-Eugene
I'm not sure if you're being sarcastic or not. *confused*
I think it's time for everyone to calm down, relax, and just accept that I'm going to be the next artist.
Guys, to be a Theory 11 artist you HAVE to have a LOT of experience. Not only with magic itself, but with performing it, and creating it and mastering and perfecting your creations.
All of the T11 artists have years of experience. All of the great Chris Kenner 1 on 1s were created years ago and perfected over the years.
You might be able to execute the pass flawlessly, you might be able to execute perfect double lifts every time. That does not qualify you as an artist. It qualifies you as a magician. There is a big difference between artists and magicians. Chris Kenner, Aaron Fisher, Lee Asher. Those are artists. Then you see people like Jordan Lapping. Amazing magicians, yet not artists.
And maybe you've invented "a new theory in magic" that impresses people. Take a few years, perfect it, work with it, and develop it more. And then let that lead to other thing. (By this I don't mean your version of the pass or your amazing ACR.) In 8-10 years, if you're still developing your magic and creating new things, maybe you'll be qualified as an artist.
-Kevin
What's a RichmanMatthew
I can't be more agree with you.Guys, to be a Theory 11 artist you HAVE to have a LOT of experience. Not only with magic itself, but with performing it, and creating it and mastering and perfecting your creations.
All of the T11 artists have years of experience. All of the great Chris Kenner 1 on 1s were created years ago and perfected over the years.
You might be able to execute the pass flawlessly, you might be able to execute perfect double lifts every time. That does not qualify you as an artist. It qualifies you as a magician. There is a big difference between artists and magicians. Chris Kenner, Aaron Fisher, Lee Asher. Those are artists. Then you see people like Jordan Lapping. Amazing magicians, yet not artists.
And maybe you've invented "a new theory in magic" that impresses people. Take a few years, perfect it, work with it, and develop it more. And then let that lead to other thing. (By this I don't mean your version of the pass or your amazing ACR.) In 8-10 years, if you're still developing your magic and creating new things, maybe you'll be qualified as an artist.
-Kevin
I vote for BrianationX,I read some of his stuff and he would change magic in general.He also says that he has a lot of understanding and had some pretty good sandwich effects on his youtube.He said they were the crappy ones but they were innovative.specially the one about the vortex, I would pay 2.50$ to learn it. I have never seen that sleight before.
I vote for BrianationX,I read some of his stuff and he would change magic in general.He also says that he has a lot of understanding and had some pretty good sandwich effects on his youtube.He said they were the crappy ones but they were innovative.specially the one about the vortex, I would pay 2.50$ to learn it. I have never seen that sleight before.
And you're trying to convince people you aren't BrianationX...