Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Artistic process

ArtLog is a project that is attempting to record the history of a residential artists centre by documenting the artistic work that the artists carry out there. Software has been created so that artists can document or log their thoughts on the work as they do it. The project grew out of a concern that the trace or record of process is being lost in the modern age. Artists have always kept diaries, sketchbooks, written long letters to friends but now everybody uses email, digital cameras, blogs, twitter and other forms of mobile communication. This is fine except it can all disappear overnight! Paper is surprisingly robust and will survive neglect. Digital files are not by any manner of means robust and unless carefully managed they will decay and very, very quickly become obsolete. Unless we try hard to record our history, it might disappear and future generations will have no insights into what our world was like.
This history of a work of art is important. Non-artists are always fascinated by how an artist produces a work whether it is a picture, poem, musical composition. Those of us who can't envy those who can and want to have a little window into the world of the creative person. Perhaps artists dont think they should tell the rest of us how they do it? Is it important for artists to maintain a sense of mystery about what they do?. Do artists want to portray themselves as mere conduits for divine inspiration? ?The old romantic notion of the mad genius in the garret!
Well, I expect some do but most of the artists I have met are seriously intelligent people who work and practice at their art. People who enjoy the problems their work presents them with and actively seek out more problems not to solve. There is definitely an unknown factor in Art that can be inspiration or flash of insight that is hard to explain but a lot of art is technique and mastery of that technique.

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