artists & the internet

“Artists, Musicians and the Internet: They have embraced the internet as a tool that helps them create, promote, and sell their work. However, they are divided about the impact and importance of free file-sharing and other copyright issues.” This is from the first large-scale surveys done by PEW Internet and American Life Project. It is interesting evidence of the importance of the internet, though it mostly focuses on musicians.
Thanks to Lenny at DC Art News and today’s Arts Journal.
UPDATE: PEW surveys on blogging made the news today at SocalTECH, CoolTechZone and Mediapost.(via GoogleNews)

Weekend

Apples.jpg

We were away this weekend on a pleasant little trip. Some family stuff was happening, so we took a drive up to the Kamloops area of BC. We enjoyed the scenic Coquihalla Highway route through mountains that were already partly covered in snow at the higher elevations. Our trip took about four hours to the eastern area beyond Kamloops.

We stayed in a lovely bed & breakfast in the village of Chase on Little Shuswap Lake, run by a very friendly recently immigrated German family. The best Greek food ever was had in a big new Greek restaurant in Kamloops (sorry I did not note down the name). Oh, and we picked loads of delicious McIntosh apples off a tree at the family members’ property, so will have to cut and freeze some for pies and apple crisps!

It is always good to get away, and it is great to be home again! The only unpleasant thing was to find 68 comment spam when I went to check my emails and comments! Have you noticed that I recently upgraded to Movable Type 3.11? This has comment approval by me, so those spam comments do not make it directly into the blog, and a new MT anti-spam plug-in just got installed to allow me to easily add the spammers to a blacklist and delete in one step! Begone, scum!

an artist’s blog

Anna sent me an email suggesting I read and comment on Rachael’s post of Thursday about artists blogging. Go read Rachael’s first, including the comments, then come back here for my response, which I decided to post here:

I’ve been an artist all my life, and professionally for half that life. Artmaking is an important part of my life along with my family, home, friends and many interests. I started blogging almost nine months ago to show my art work, talk about my favourite medium of printmaking and to write about the many things that interest and influence me and make me the person, and therefore, the artist that I am. The blog is a way of recording all these things, somewhat like in a journal but more so because of the joys of linking to other sites. It is a way of sharing these with any readers that care to read them. I really did not know fully at the beginning how passionate I was to become about blogging.

It’s gratifying to note the statistics show that the numbers of readers have been growing and growing. Yet I receive few comments, mostly from a few faithful who have become friends. Sometimes, like Rachael, I wonder how readers feel about my site. I’ve thought about asking “Who are you, dear readers and how did you find me?”, especially those who are scattered around the world, (many in Finland!). Maybe I don’t want to know and really, I’m not about to change, since I’m doing the blog for me as another creative project, as a form of self-publishing. Anyway, if the readers are still there, I must be providing something of interest for them, and so I am very very thankful for this silent encouragement.

Because this blog is in part a professional site about my work and might sometimes be viewed by a gallery or collector (I can hope!), I’ve been keeping really personal stuff out of it, as well as to maintain its focus on art and those interests and influences that I mentioned. I do believe we should feel free to let our blogs be what we want them to be (as long as no one is being hurt by what we say of course).

Rachel, Anna, and readers: Have you noticed that there are not very many blogs by artists about their own art, at least that I have found? Is blogging still such a new phenomenon for visual artists, and why? There are quite a few blogs about art shows and art criticism, and numerous literary blogs.

As I was writing and thinking about this, I was catching up on reading some blogs I like. Synchronicity struck as Keri at Wish Jar Journal mentions Rachel’s blog too and presents this perfect quote:

There is a vitality, a life-force, an energy, a quickening that is translated through you into action, and because there is only one of you in all of time this expression is unique. and if you block it, it will never exist through any other medium and be lost. The world will not have it! It is not your business to determine how good it is nor how it compares with other expressions. It is your business to keep it yours clearly and directly, to keep the channel open… -Martha Graham

the artist in a gift economy

I am really going to have to get my hands on this book: The Gift – Imagination and the Erotic Life of Property by Lewis Hyde**. I am very intrigued and find the quotes really resonate with me as a lifelong artist who creates because of an inner need, rather than a need to sell (although of course I am happy when I do), and as an artist who blogs to share my thoughts and passions.

Chris Corrigan has been reading and writing about this book periodically since July 20th. On July 26th Chris refers to the introduction of The Gift where Lewis Hyde is writing about how we receive the fruits of artistic gifts:

The spirit of the artist’s gifts can wake our own. The work appeals, as Joseph Conrad says, to a part of our being which is itself a gift and not an acquisition. Our sense of harmony can hear the harmonies that Mozart heard. We may not have the power to proffer our gifts as the artist does, and yet we come to recognize, and in a sense receive, the endowments of our being through the agency of his creation…When we are moved by art we are grateful that the artist lived, grateful that he labored in the service of his gifts.

On August 5th, Chris writes also about bloggers’ gifts:

Bloggers offer immense gifts of time, reflection, engagement with each other’s ideas. My own thinking gets continually pushed and stretched by reading others and trying to respond to them. This quality of gift exchange provides a beautiful and powerful foundation for the community of people who share ideas freely on a myriad of subject areas. When bloggers form communities, it is around the cohesion of those who contribute to each other’s thinking. Don’t miss reading the thoughtful comments to this post.

Read more for yourself about Chris’ analysis of “The Gift” in the posts of July 21st, July 23rd, July25th, and July 29th.

Anna L. Conti also wrote about and highly recommended this book along with another one by Hyde called Trickster Makes This World: Mischief, Myth and Art** (Aug 10th entry). Here are some excerpts:

A few years ago Margaret Atwood wrote a terrific review of these books for the LA Times […]: ‘The artist belongs primarily to the gift economy; without that element of creation which arrives uncommanded and cannot be bought, the work is unlikely to be alive. The Gift is the best book I know of for the aspiring young, for talented but unacknowledged creators, or even for those who have achieved material success and are worried that this means they’ve sold out. It gets at the core of their dilemma: how to maintain yourself alive in the world of money, when the essential part of what you do cannot be bought or sold.’ (Read Atwood’s full review)

Lewis Hyde starts with the premise that a work of art is a gift and not a commodity, and goes on to explain the uneasy nature of the artist’s position in a marketplace economy. He leads the reader slowly and carefully to his surprising conclusion that “gift exchange and the market need not be wholly separate spheres.

Thanks to both Chris and Anna!
(**Available through Abe Books )

A Work in Progress

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(Detail of a deeply etched copperplate)

This weblog has been online for just over three months and what an exciting time it has been for me. I have learned a great deal and met many great bloggers and readers and had very positive feedback, thanks everyone! The writing has helped me focus my thoughts about my work and the many things that interest me and therefore influence the work. It provides a place to keep all the fascinating information that I have gathered over the years, and still keep finding.

The site design has been undergoing some improvements as I go along and understand the process more and how best to arrange my information. I wished to separate some of the “professional” area from the blog themes or categories, so those interested in viewing my work can access it more quickly. To that end the contact link, cv, and recent exhibitions are now under “Marja-Leena” and my prints, and the statements about them that I hope to add soon, can be viewed under “Printworks” within their series. Also I can now access my links list and add a few of my favourite blogs over time. Let me know what you think, or if you discover any errors in navigation (sorry!) …I’m still fine tuning.

A big thank you to Jonathan for suggesting I do a blog, teaching me so patiently, for designing the site, and rearranging things everytime I change my mind!

Horkay’s digital collages

mr.h at Giornale Nuovo writes a fascinating blog with numerous entries about unusual art.

Recently he wrote about Istvan Horkay’s work and posted several of his images. Lee Spiro was quoted as saying: [his work] combines original drawn and painted images, appropriated masterpieces, photographs, artists’ signatures and commercial logos. These elements are digitally assembled, i.e., collaged, to create a single, layered moment reflecting different places and times.

I am always interested in how other artists do their work, particularly in the still new area of digital printmaking that I am exploring myself, and Horkay’s work is certainly inspiring! Thanks, mr.h.