Invention
July 14, 2000
Dear Artist,
A creative device that keeps us off the streets is our innate tendency
to invent. The mind wanders to the possibilities of what might happen
when we try something different. Like Edison or Burbank it's based
on curiosity and dissatisfaction. It's been said there are two main
kinds of inventors: those who find a need and try to fill it, and
those who discover something and try to find a use for it. Every
day we artists enact both of these archetypes.
These are the times for the making of Leonardos:
Dreamtime: The luxury to dream and the
understanding that if something can be properly
visualized--it's relatively easy to make it
happen.
Lazytime: Outward indolence is an artesian well
where undiscovered knowledge bubbles up from the
great subconscious.
Playtime: Permission to play is a state of grace.
More things are wrought by fooling with the
materials than this world dreams of.
Worktime: Ah yes. Add the dynamite of workmanlike
habits and discipline. Nothing much was ever
accomplished without perseverance and steady
application.
A friend said to me; "This is an inventive
business and it's best to be a solid flake."
Right--note the word "solid." My next
letter will suggest a few simple but often
overlooked ideas about improving discipline.
Best regards,
Robert
PS: "Inspiration arrived as a result of profound indolence.
...I awoke with a start and witnessed, as from a seat in a theatre,
three acts of a potentially awesome play." (Jean Cocteau)
Esoterica: Edgar Degas (1834-1917) was a great
experimenter. Born into wealth, he eschewed sales
and dedicated his life to innovation. Sound
academic technique led to a life of multi-media:
watercolor, spirit-thinned oil, gouache, etching,
monotype, sculpture, found objects, pastel and
many others, as well as compositional daring
including snapshot photo happenstance.
The following are
selected correspondence relating to the above
letter. If you find value in any of this please
feel free to copy to a friend or fellow artist.
We have no other motivation than to give creative
people an opportunity to share ideas and possibly
broaden their capabilities. Thank you for writing
rgenn@saraphina.com
Dreams tuppence a dozen
As a matter of fact dreams are the easy part.
There are lots of people with dreams. Perhaps too
many. Dreams are tuppence a dozen. The big shift
is to take those dreams, sort out the best and
most profitablenot merely in the monetary
sense--and make them happen with work.
Hardy Wilson, UK
Special people
Invention requires the heavy crossover between
the right brain and the left brain. It is a
condition which artists are familiar with. When
people find they have this ability they often
make the mistake of thinking everybody has it.
Probably less than 30 percent of the population
are truly bicameral, and an even smaller
proportion have it in abundance.
Moses Z Lister, Israel
In praise of snoozing
Snoozing is the thing I do best. Even if ideas
don't bubble up--they sometimes do,
it's still pleasant.
Bert, Los Angeles, USA
As seen on TV
Your thoughts on playtime are brilliant. I
printed it out in big letters and posted it on
the studio wall. Just a cautionary note: Some
artists never stop playing with the materials.
Textures and layerings and blobbbing and
googeling don't add up to great art.
Anything that Martha Stewart can do is probably
not worth much. An artist is a person who can
take these effects and turn them into something
that is layered in other ways.
Helen K Beck,
Wonderworks
Loves fooling
I have always loved fooling with the materials
but felt guilty about ityou have vindicated
me and sent me back to the playroom.
A Zoroneckiy, Bucharest
Lucky hunches
I thought the remark of Beryl Markham, the
aviatrix, is appropriate here: "I could
never tell where inspiration begins and impulse
leaves off. I suppose the answer is in the
outcome. If your hunch proves a good one, you
were inspired; if it proves bad, you are guilty
of yielding to thoughtless impulse."
Edith Henderson
More play
For us artists work is play, and play is work.
Julia Cameron says; "Creativity lives in
paradox: serious art is born from serious
play."
Peter
The King seen in
Germany
Right. We live in extraordinary times. Leonardo
is today everywhere.
Henry Kosoka, Germany
Learn by failing
I live on an Island of 45 square miles called Jersey, in the Channel
Islands. Having retired 18 months ago to live with my imagination
in a room I call my studio, I find your letters facinating. If anyone
had told me that this life was going to be so difficult I may have
not taken the decision. There are no boundaries to guide one, no
walls to hide behind. Every work I finish (that fleeting moment
of achievement) is quickly lost when the realization sets in that
there is so much more that I have to learn and understand. The so-called
finished piece pales into insignificance. I work in any media and
on all sorts of backgrounds, the latest being a quilted surface.
My favourite is canvas. I do use hardboard quite often, when primed
properly acrylics seem to settle quite well. I have had no formal
training and so I learn as I fail to progress!
Jean Clapham, Jersey
The urge to communicate
I am now in Barcelona, Spain, but since much of
my activity is based on intuitive movement, I use
the internet for communication. I have been
showing my paintings and sculptures in many
galleries and have invented things in relation to
music, costumes, gardening, baking, games, and
more. My themes are movements and colors,
flowering, humane and abstract relationships, and
forcing or letting remote concepts combine. I am
also fond of corresponding and writing in
general. I know what we artists go through in the
world, and I am not looking for an excuse, but
rather a chance to cry out loud.
Joseph Yama, Spain
Creation and recreation
I am sorry to contradict you, but Degas which I
know well never created anything, he did only
what thousands did before and after himhe
arranged like a good shoe-maker.
Let us look at rather at
the work of Edouard Manet whom I know well and
have seen closely. Manet is one who innovates and
invents at the end of the declining Romanticism
and still reigns as a Master with the
"French Artists." When Delacroix and
Ingres are lost in formalism, when Corot is soild
in "painting the station," was not
"Olympia" an incredible scoop? The art
of Manet is solid in creation and technique. It
radiated on the history of painting, as Pasteur
illuminated science, it deranged the
establishment and stripped and pasted by the hour
the frivilous ones who smoothed and glazed
without heart or talent. To make the choice of
creation and innovation, as Manet did, invention
is the hard path, the exception and the
excellence, but is also an incomparable pleasure.
Daniel Toublanc, Paris
(RG note) Any errors in translation are solely
mine, Daniel, and I thank you, as you said, for
writing in the language of Voltaire and
Lafontaine.
In this together
You are an ongoing source of comfort to me, in that your opinions
and thoughts on the art process are so similar to mine and so frequently
validate my own hard-learned conclusions about the life of the artist.
Either we're both in trouble or both right on the mark!
I have taken the liberty of forwarding your site
to my equine art group. Almost every letter
lately has something I feel would be useful to
this interesting and dynamic group of artists. It
finally occurred to me (sometimes the obvious
takes time) to send your URL to the group at
large rather than forwarding individual letters
to individual artists. I trust this is OK.
Judy Wood, Saskatoon, Sask
(RG note) Thanks Judy
þ
If you would like to see selected correspondence
relating to the previous letter "Serious
artist" please click here http://painterskeys.com/clickbacks/serious.htm
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