Showing posts with label Joseph Beuys. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joseph Beuys. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 27, 2018

No Such Thing As Art



It is important to understand a word.  Do we understand the word art?  Or artist?  As an artist, you begin to learn that ultimately you will be responsible to create and define your unique artistic practice, and so you begin chasing your tail.  Tailspinning is a good description for artmaking, as is: tumbling, turning, running, looking, discovering, seeking, making, breaking and ultimately—creating (or cracking).

Creating is a word that can be coasted on as an artist, for a while… until you run into the question of, is what I’m creating art? Is a painting art?  Is any type of painting art, made by any person, or machine?  Is a sculpture art?  What makes a sculpture a sculpture?  Can a garden hose be a sculpture, can a pillow be a sculpture?  Can walking be a performance, can talking be an art experience?  Can a word be art? Can anything be art?  If yes, why?  If no, why?

Then the questions. What does art do?  What is it supposed to do? What is it not supposed to do? Should art be purposeful?  Can it not be purposeful?  Should art inspire, delight, make new knowledge?  If yes, then why not call it education? 

There is a word that I love, haecciety, which means the discrete qualities, properties or characteristics of a thing that make it a particular thing.  What is the haecciety of art?  In my own quest to understand my pursuit of art making, I first think it is better said, my art being. I arrived to understand art as everything, in the footsteps of artists like Beuys, Kaprow and theorists like Dewey, but now understand there is actually no such thing as art.  Yes, I believe I am an artist even though I do not believe in art.

How can I be an artist, if there is no such thing as art?  Perhaps, there is art after all—but it is invisible.  Art could be recognized simply as the free impulse to create. Then, perhaps, what we do and make could be considered artful, full of art.  However, I think there are other words applied to what we imagine as artful, such as heart-full (holding the art in the heart) or careful (full of care, and separated out to be are-full) which might be better descriptors of the types of creation we could consider as art.  Is what we create done with heart, or with care?  I would argue that something could be made without those qualities and could be seen or experienced by the artist with heart and care, and then could be re-imagined and reconstructed as art, because of the participants artful lens.

I currently recognize in my own practice definite patterns, actions, and collections that create my body of work, and they include: relics of processes of thought and experiences, educational aids and ideas, re-purposed materials, functional and decorative objects, participatory learning experiences, chance, ritual and devised collaborative improvisation.  I could also say I recognize living as my art practice.  I recognize my studio to include: my bedroom, the kitchen, the woods, the city, my neighbor’s house, the classroom, and (my favorite) the wide barren landscapes of Iceland.

Why then be an artist, versus a sociologist, educator, explorer, activist, writer, cook, gardener and mother?  Because as an artist I am always all of these and all of what I want to be, do, say, and make.  Being an artist is the invitation to live my fullest potential, unrestricted by titles and disciplines.  

As I become more aware of my joy, I recognize my path as an artist will continue to be in pursuit of beauty, truth and interconnection.  Sometimes that will be found in the form of gathering acorns to make place based color, writing poetry, making sauerkraut, creating curriculum, researching, having community conversations, knitting a scarf, developing organizations, taking walks, or collaborating on interactive multi-media methods to translate color to sound.

Knowing that I am an artist creating artfully, the question is less important what am I making, but why am I making or doing it, and is the way I am engaging aligned with my values.  The questions we need to ask ourselves as artists are less about the formal qualities of what we do but rather we should ask, what are my values and principles, and how am I living and creating with integrity?

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Thursday, March 05, 2015

Dawn Breeze Artworking Away (Finding A Way)

Drowning, 2015, cement, rope, fabric, paint 
This is my most recent sculpture, almost complete--just need to get the block hanging above the ground and fix the rope for such.  But it is close enough to be considered finished--it is actualized and no longer in my mind, scribbled on to paper and various pieces in different rooms.  It is large, actually I would like the opportunity to display it in a space with higher ceilings than my studio, so that there is more space between the "gown" and the cement block.
Detail of Drowning

Detail of Drowning
I am about to hand in to my advisor/professor my first packet that illustrates and describes my work these past couple of weeks.  I am excited about the process of culling my work together in to a "packet".

I will say that I feel tremendously excited and in flow, and at the same time uncertain about having done "enough".   The ever elusive "enoughness" question that I tackle with daily--always relentlessly asking me for more.

I created a general syllabus for myself for this semester and a very specific one for the last couple of weeks--and I have completed that!  (This in itself is a new and wonderful way to think about goal planning.) Now I have even more questions to answer, which will be the starting point for the next detailed syllabus.

I have jumped in to a fully immersed study of the life and artwork of Joseph Beuys.  This has been INCREDIBLE!!!  It has given me a rich new language to better understand my own practice as an artist--both in my teaching practice and "studio" art.

I have completed the sculpture that I have been thinking about since the end of the summer.

I have started a daily image-journaling practice on instagram. You can follow me at dawnbreezeart.

Today in the office...



Today in the studio...
 You can also follow a new account on Instagram specific to Creativity & Courage at creatingcourage.
First Image for creatingcourage, Creativity & Courage's new Instagram account

I have sewn seeds for new creative opportunities and collaborations.

I have participated in study groups that are about 'Curating Self and Others' and 'Critical Compostition'.  We have read some very interesting essay's and shared complicated dialogue about erotics in learning and artwork, the artist studio, ethics in art making, and the real or imagined world.

I have read, and read some more, and wrote, and wrote some more.

To read some of my writings please visit 'Quidditity Is Not A Discipline'  
So far there are three posts:
For now I continue to scatter my work amongst these different places (facebook, instagram, blogger, website, studio, classroom, coffee dates, google hangout, etc.) with various content depending on the format...pick or choose, it all comes back to me, and I am so grateful for the opportunity to share it with you.  Your input is always super welcomed, appreciated and inspiring!