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Monday
Nov302009

Sterling Boat: Session 10

Sterling Boat - DETAIL - work in progress
oil on panel

Sterling Boat - PREVIOUS DETAIL

The painting is coming down to the final stages, I'm hoping to be done in just a few more sessions. This is the stage of the painting when it gets hard to record the difference with a camera. I'm sorry to say the differences between the two above shots represents a solid 6 hours of work! The refinement is subtle but significant in real life, but almost impossible to see by the time the camera has degraded the images.

I was listening to one of my favorite podcasts today called "On the Media", and they were talking about the evolution of the book (OTM Episode: Book 2.0) now that we are crossing over into a digital era for reading. They interviewed writers and book publishers and future-thinkers who all had opinions, ranging from "it's not a book unless it has paper and glue and survives being dipped in the bathtub" to "the age of paper is dead and everyone will be reading in an entirely different way in 5 years."

One of the future-embracers was positing that the way writers WRITE will change in the new era, and floated his vision of a writer writing a novel live, online, with a real-time audience who will be intimately involved in the writing process, and that the whole process of creating a book with be collaborative and public. To which I though AAACK!!!

The interviewer suggested that many writers feel that solitude while working is integral to the process, and that some writers would not WANT to write if it had to be a public, collaborative process. The book-futurist (sorry I don't have his name, I don't take notes on my audio sources, unlike my husband who wisely documents everything he hears) said something to the point of "well, writers will just have to change they way they think about writing".

Writers will just have to change they way they think about writing. Wha????

As a an artist, I am probably on the leading edge of those who feel comfortable being public with my process - between my blog posts, my videos, and my teaching I try to make my process as transparent as possible, mostly for my own benefit of processing what I am learning, but also because some of you out there seem to enjoy seeing the thoughts behind the work. And yet, if I were forced to both share my process and allowed my visitors to comment on my decisions in real-time as I made them, and also modify my painting as the comments poured in, I would probably put down the brush and find something else to do!

I might be the extreme though, in that I shy away from collaboration, but some artists are more open to it. Personally, I need to be handled very carefully when I am in "work mode", as anyone who worked with me as a graphic designer can attest, I am not at all a "team player" when I am trying to be creative!

What do other artists think? Could you work with an audience? Even performing artists - could the musician practice with an interactive audience, could the actor rehearse with an interactive audience? Does it sound like a nightmare to you, or does it sound like a revolutionary frontier for artmaking?

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Reader Comments (4)

I think the guy is commenting on the idea of crowdsourcing, and how that might affect the medium writing. But in very few venues does this actually work. They've been talking about choosing your own ending for a film forever, and that hasn't happened yet. For live music, the collaborative style works pretty well. Tim Exile, a musical performer who opened for Imogen Heap at the Fillmore a few weeks ago would literally take a microphone into the audience, sample different audience members saying random things, and integrate them into his song. It was great! Though this type of collaborative art may grow, it's the the exception rather than the rule. Books have been around as long as paper has. It's not going away anytime soon. Same with paintings. If there's a vision it needs to be followed. As far as I know, Western culture still favors the individual. :-)

November 30, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterSymphonic Pictures

In a former life, I was a dancer and some of my best choreography came from collaborative, improve sessions that were done with other skilled and like minded dancers. But I can't imagine going thru that process in public. Or having public opinions decide my next move.

And now, as a fine artist and recent blogger, I tend to hold my progress even more closely. I don't want outside comments coming at me too soon. The process of developing a painting or series is so personal and revealing. I often start with one idea and it blooms into something quite different (hopefully better) as the painting continues. It wouldn't be so organic if other's were tossing their $.02 in every minute.

Maybe there is room for such experimentation (in both writting and art)though, and it does sound interesting. Just not a right fit for this hermit.

November 30, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterAlia El-Bermani

interesting topic Sadie. i play a couple of instruments, i write and i paint mostly. if i had to listen to everyone's tuppence worth while i tried to sort things out in my own head while i do these things, i would probably lose confidence and freeze up. btw, the differences are reasonably apparent in the photographs.

December 1, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterrahina q.h.

The wonder of painting is that it represents the thought and unique world view of an individual artist. That view enlightens me and opens up new possibilities in how I view the world. When I look at paintings, or read a book, I am not interested in what a community thinks. I can see that on TV and it usually reflects lazy old thought patterns and bland consensus - the result is boring, primarily vapid "entertainment."

There is nothing democrat about creating art. It is the anarchy of one. And that's why I love it so.

December 1, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterMichael Lynn Adams
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