The creative act is something that is not consensual because in one hand there are people that recognize the creative act as something almost divine and others that consider it as a result of hard work and a considerable amount of pain. These two positions that in some way are generalised are in fact lacking several other factors that contribute to the creative act. Marina Abramovic¹ presents a humorous but efficient formula that involves the creative act: “My Secret Formula on How to Become a Genius: 1 tablespoon of talent; 5 drops of Popularity; 1 drop of Luck; 10 Kilograms of discipline; 6 glasses of self-sacrifice; 3 grams of spirituality. Mix all ingredients and leave them overnight to cool down, drink the substance early in the morning when the sun is rising and facing east”
Marina Abramovic presents us with a formula that gives us a rough idea of what it takes to create something inside creative parameters.
Nevertheless when do we know that the creator reached his/her own limit and trespassed to other limits!
Apparently we can’t know that kind of information because it also overlaps our knowledge.
The creator is best described as far as I am concerned as a sponge that absorbs everything that makes part of his/her daily life. However I wouldn’t like to focuses so much in the creative process but instead what I would like to discuss this week is what leads someone before that creative act!
As far as I am concerned what surrounds us has a major role in how we perform and even how we are touched by something. It is relevant to mention here that all of us have different sensibilities and that implies that when two people are faced with the same reality or same context they react differently. The post-war artistic movements are good examples to demonstrate that kind of environment when people even though are joined in artistic movements have individual responses to the same problems.
It is also important to mention that our background such as our family, knowledge, or such other experiences that involved us in dramatic and intense drawbacks are relevant. However not only the bad experiences are relevant, the good ones are also very important. All of these factors have a considerable amount of weight when comparing the factors that influence someone.
Not only the creator is more sensible to these facts but perhaps it is in the way they express where these kinds of factors reveal themselves is determinant to the understanding of a work independently of its media or context. The context is also very determinant and very variable between men and women because the entire social background constitutes a major influence to their understanding of the practise of each one. Examples are determinant when you consider artists in a Diaspora context, civil wars, outside western culture among many other specific contexts. In addition the artist list would be endless because more or less there is always something that should be taken in account.
The creator became what can be called of a living statement not so much of what he/she does but instead what he/she represents to other people and what backgrounds they bring along with themselves to their practise.
1 Obrist, Hans-Ulrich. Formulas for now, London: Thames & Hudson, 2008
"The ideal is nothing else than the material world reflected by the human mind, and translated into forms of thought."
ReplyDeleteKarl Marx, Das Kapital, Vol. 1.