Category Archives: Practice Ideas

Ideas from many different settings describing ideas and activities about art as research with a particular focus on arts for health.

Post Factual

I’m just in the process of bringing some fiction writing to the site. It is partly started, I have a few episodes of a fictive theme on global warming and how to have a response by writing fiction about it and not going mad with fear or despair.

It developed a block, and I unblocked it last week, interestingly, about the time I committed to writing a poem or a post a day. Funny that! It will appear sometime soon as posts and I like the idea that it will be shared as posts and it will work in a post-factual way. We don’t have to get stuck in ‘facts’ but we may see what may follow after the fact, in fiction.

Anyway…

I found this below on Tumblr. It should link to the site.

No idea what ‘Periodic rent-lowering-gunshots:’ means. Maybe inform me.

But this just gets to what the power of fiction, especially fiction you write yourself FanFic, Pomes, stories, whatever.

This could be a bit like an arts/writing/reading manifesto.

I chose the picture ‘cos I like that you can close the book and the writing is still there, but in a closed book. I think that just as online life for many people took off, Harry Potter came out as a book. People found they could close the book, and the writing is still there, but in a closed book, but they cannot close off social media.

It controls sensory overload.

#dvolvd

A Working Model for Art as Research

Introduction

This article introduces a number of ideas I have explored as an attempt to develop a basic experiential learning model to become a model for art making as research of personal experience.

This is the model I developed to describe my own working practice. It draws on all sorts of sources that are generally not referenced in writing I have seen about experiential learning, but through my own practice research, I think are relevant to art making as experiential learning. Experiential learning is assumed to be a form of personal research, and references are made to work from post-graduate arts-based research in Fine Art and the Arts Therapies.

It has seven elements, which are presented as parts of a circular sequence that returns to itself. In practice, these elements often occur simultaneously.

It is a long read of about 7k words, taking about 25–30 minutes.

I present it as a long blog post, click page 2 below.

5 Assumptions About What Art Does

Writing and books about art abound. From experience, it tends to fall into a number of main categories. It is illustrated, descriptive, and often historical books about artists and art movements. It is technical ‘how-to’ books promising insight and guidance into the practice of making art. There are books offering insights into the psychological and cultural functions and processes involved in art. The diversity of these documents reflects the diversity of objects and practices that could be called art. In some ways, the same goes for the arts therapies. Jessica Kingsley Publishers has just under 400 books tagged ‘arts therapies’, see here. It is a lot to take in.

Ideas about what ‘art’ is abound. But there is a lot less written about what arts does. This website is about what art does and can do as research and as a form of learning.

Finding descriptions of what art does are rare things but I came across one which is very useful in terms of describing art in terms that might be useful to art as research.

It was written by an art historian named Irving Lavin. You can get the full document ‘The Crisis of Art History’ here . He wrote it in 1996 so some language sounds archaic, particularly around gender. Part of the underlying debate in art history revolves around being able to say if a thing is ‘art’. At the end, Lavin offers five tenets or assumptions about art, and the thing I found useful was that he describes art in terms of what it does. He describes art as a verb, not a noun. He writes…


“The credo consists of five tenets. I call them assumptions because I doubt whether, in the long run, any of them is demonstrably valid or invalid, underlying my conception of art history, which I defined as a “natural science of the spirit.”

Assumption 1: Anything manmade is a work of art, even the lowliest and most purely functional object. Man, indeed, might be defined as the art-making animal, and the fact that we choose to regard only some manmade things as works of art is a matter of conditioning.

Assumption 2: Everything in a work of art was intended by its creator to be there. A work of art represents a series of choices and is therefore a totally deliberate thing, no matter how unpremeditated it may seem, and even when “accidents” are built into it deliberately. We can never be sure that the artist did not know what he was doing or that he wanted to do something other than what he did-even when he declares himself dissatisfied with his creation.

Assumption 3: Every work of art is a self-contained whole. It includes within itself everything necessary for its own decipherment. Information gathered from outside the work may be useful, but it is not essential to the decipherment. On the other hand, outside information (which includes information from or about the artist himself) is essential if we want to explain how the work came to have its particular form and meaning.

Assumption 4: Every work of art is an absolute statement. It conveys as much as possible with as little as possible. The work of art is one hundred per cent efficient, and to paraphrase Leon Battista Alberti’s classic definition of Beauty, nothing could be added, taken away, or altered without changing its message. Alberti was referring simply to the relationship among the parts, whereas I mean to include the very substance of the work itself.

Assumption 5: Every work of art is a unique statement. It says something that has never been said before and will never be said again, by the artist himself or anyone else. Copies or imitations, insofar as they are recognisable as such, are no exception, since no man can quite suppress his individuality, no matter how hard he may try. Conversely, no matter how original he is, the artist to some extent reflects the work of others, and it is purely a matter of convention that we tend to evaluate works of art by the degree of difference from their models.

The chief virtue of these assumptions is that they help to assure each human creation its due. What it is due may be defined as the discovery of the reciprocity it embodies between expressive form and content. I do not pretend that my own work has ever met the criteria implicit in any of my assumptions. Yet they are much more to me than philosophical abstractions. They represent the obscure but persistent demons that prod me to think about a work in the first place. And, once the process begins, they are intellectual pangs of conscience that lead me to mistrust distinctions between conscious and unconscious creativity, between mechanical and conceptual function, between the artist’s goal and his achievement. Finally, they are what drive me from the work itself into archives, libraries, and classrooms, in search of illumination.”


There is a lot there in 555 words. So I pulled out about a third of them and made the statement more gender inclusive. Lavin says…


“Anything we make is a work of art. The fact that we choose to regard only some things we make as works of art is a matter of conditioning. Everything in a work of art was intended by its maker to be there. Every work of art is a self-contained whole. It includes within itself everything necessary for its own decipherment. Every work of art is an absolute statement. It conveys as much as possible with as little as possible. Every work of art is a unique statement. It says something that has never been said before and will never be said again, by the maker or anyone else. The chief virtue of these assumptions is that they help to assure each human creation its due. What it is due may be defined as the discovery of the reciprocity it embodies between expressive form and content.”


I present the summary on the basis that it defines art by what it does. We can make anything as art if we intend it to be art. As art, it works best if what you want to show is present in the thing you make, if the thing you make says this with the least effort and shows your unique subjective perspective. If these things happen (and they don’t always happen), it gives your work and your experience value, it’s due. It gives its maker their due. It values them. That value can be present if nobody sees the thing but you, the maker. This is one of the things that provide health benefits.

So. You are hungry. You look in the fridge. You don’t have much. But. You have things you like and know go well together that you bought. You choose the things you want and cook the meal just the way you like it. It looks and tastes great. As you eat it, you impress even yourself with how well you did with so little. You just ticked all those boxes above. It was just a sandwich, but it was art. You made art. But you are not an artist. So. Your partner comes in tired, and you do the same for them. They eat. They say, “Wow. Beetroot and spinach and leftover pasta, and bacon in a sauce made of tahini and mayonnaise. Who would have thought it! Carbs, proteins, fresh veg… It was delish. You are so clever.” And they give you a big kiss. Now you are a superstar artist. You have an audience. They are rapt.

The word art derives from the latin ars, meaning skill or craft. Here, the skill was in the choices you made with what you had, not a lot, and the craftiness was timing your cooking so you could feed your partner. Your reward was a kiss and two full bellies. Art can be very practical. It is art because you say it is, you made it so, but your skill was deployed with intention. Art making is a survival skill. It is the act of making some good thing, intentionally, with skill and with very little. But being practical takes practice. This is the reciprocity Lavin talked about, but with your own experience. You may have seen these things in other recipes, but you made this dish your own. That we don’t see this as art is the conditioning Lavin talked about. We may not tick all 5 boxes every time, but with practice, we learn to tick more each time

Why Art as Research?

This post is a brief discussion about the descriptor ‘Art as Research.’

Like ‘Art’, ‘Research’ has many notions attached to it. The most well known one would be the notion of research as a scientific activity to seek an objective truth or empirical data. This is useful to ‘Art as Research’ but as a supportive or adjunctive activity.

‘Art as Research’ here means using art making to research your personal experience. It is understood as the intentional act of an individual to attend to something or to seek some unknown thing. You make art and attend to what you make and what happens when you make it. Whatever you find in your research, what comes to your attention, will be entirely subjective.

This approach to research as a subjective phenomenon reflects its older pre-modern form. Etymology Online best sums it up thus…

research (v.) – 1590s, “to investigate or study (a matter) closely, search or examine with continued care,” from French recercher, from Old French recercher “to seek out, search closely,” from re-, here perhaps an intensive prefix (see re-), + cercher “to seek for,” from Latin circare “to go about, wander, traverse,” in Late Latin “to wander hither and thither,” from circus “circle” (see circus).

From Etymonline

Research in the sense described above is accessible by anyone with a pencil and a sketchbook. One does not need to be an ‘Artist’, or have a PhD, or access to the Large Hadron Collider. You just need to be curious, and willing to make art, and to attend to yourself making art.

It describes art as a verb, a doing thing. It supports the idea of art making as an intentional and concerted search or investigation. It supports the idea of it being a bit of an adventure, a wandering journey where we don’t know what we are going to find. It also supports the idea of it having a circular or recursive quality. What we find in our search feeds forward into the next act of searching and finding. It also has, through ‘circus’, connections to performance.

It supports the idea of art making as a way of researching personal experience. This emerges directly out of experiential learning and the arts therapies. It focuses on the process of making art rather than the product made. With art making as an activity learned through experience, you learn to make art by making art, so too you learn to find the outcomes of your art as research by making art as research.

Given that what you find will be subjective, I cannot tell you what you will find. But most importantly, No1 in my Top Ten, you learn to make art through your experience of art making, so your art making can be used to learn about your personal experience. You learn about yourself through yourself making art. This is where the benefits lie.