Grand Moff David ([info]grandmoffdavid) wrote,
@ 2009-06-16 10:26:00
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Current mood:Crafty

The beads are done.
I'm hanging out at Zoka coffee waiting for my contact at Fusion Beads to come in so I can deliver my bead order. Oddly enough, I'm not freaked out. I may be when I get there and am actually handing the beads off, but oddly enough I don't think I will be. This is a huge change for me.

While I was cleaning, polishing up, and packing the beads last night a thought occurred to me. A few people have commented that my work with glass has made me some sort of artist, but that title has never sat well with me. Maybe it's because I was raised by, essentially, a family of engineers who considered artistic pursuits something you did as a hobby, but I think it's more because I believe that art requires intent. I have no statement with what I'm trying to do with glass. I'm not trying to get across a vision, I'm just trying to make something that looks neat. Perhaps I'm being naive about the artistic process, but I've always felt that art requires that the artist not only intend for their piece to be art, but also that they be trying to say something by the piece.

Craft, on the other hand exists for its own utility. Craft has function (even if that function is just to look pretty) and a craftsman is only trying to make something well made that fulfills its role well. That's what I'm trying to do, so I've decided that I'm a craftsman rather than an artist. Make a note of it. It should be noted that I appreciate the arrogance inherent in that proclamation, but I will say that I didn't say I was a good craftsman. And, at least technically, a professional one.

I also want to note that this is a personal statement and what I said above was medium neutral. That is to say, I work with glass and think of myself as a craftsman while someone else who works with glass is an artist. The same is true with wood, paint, or mechanical parts. Intent is the key in my mind.

Anyway, I'm not sure why this makes me content, but it does. The notion that I was being an artist without trying to create art rankled me. Somehow being a craftsman takes a lot of pressure off. Actually, I think I know why. I've spoken in the past about the difficulty of switching from science to art because science is all about self doubt, peer review, and margins of error while art is all about the confidence to proclaim, "This is art and it means something." Craftsmanship, though, requires neither of those. The object is created and stands or falls on its own merits, and really, that's how I like to work.




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[info]deirdremoon
2009-06-16 06:04 pm UTC (link)
You make a very interesting point. I don't know why, but I also associate the specific word "artist" with someone who has the intent to create art for a message. Technically, I guess I'm an artist in that I'm a singer/songwriter. Technically, all of DoD are artists because we're writers similar to screenwriters. But we never use those words. I'm a singer. Or I'm a writer. My dad is a photographer and a painter, but never calls himself an artist either, that I'm aware. I'd feel pretentious to say otherwise for myself.

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[info]palecur
2009-06-16 06:06 pm UTC (link)
That distinction makes a lot of sense, and agrees very well with my own opinions on art, specifically the role of intent.

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[info]lunesse
2009-06-16 06:41 pm UTC (link)
I don't think my beads always mean something. I do consider myself an artist, well, an artisan, really...however, because my work evolves, and is not standard, i.e., after many years I have my own style and voice, I consider it art.

I think your definition is a good one. Did you take a pic of them all for us to see?

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[info]grandmoffdavid
2009-06-16 07:08 pm UTC (link)
My own style is evolving as well, but in order to develop my skills and technique as opposed to a particular voice. Our two paths are a great example of how two people can use the same medium for different goals.

Unfortunately, I didn't take a picture of them all. It wouldn't have meant much except to see the sheer bulk of them all. Maybe I'll stop by when they have them in the store display and take a cellphone picture of them. At the Gargoyles shop our work is scattered amongst all the other things there, here we'll have our own little display. It's kinda exciting.

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[info]pirateseneschal
2009-06-17 03:16 am UTC (link)
Ah hah, definition noted.

Most laypersons do not really see a distinction between art and craft. They can tell you what isn't art, and it's usually artwork that they don't like. Appreciation of craft as "craft" isn't in most people's vocabulary, so simplifying it as "art" just sounds complimentary.

Interestingly, the Art (note capitalization) world holds itself quite separate not only from the genre of craft-work, but considers illustration works to be in the same bracket. I've seen works put down by Art professors because the work was "too influenced by illustration techniques." Bah to that, I say. Bah.

Incidentally, I found something you might find worth your while:

Deadline September 25: Ornament Extravaganza.
Kittrell/Riffkind Art Glass
invites entries for their "Ornament Extravaganza." Unique, one-of-a-kind and limited edition contemporary glass ornaments wanted. Deadline for entries is September 25th. The exhibit will run November 21st- December 31st. No entry fee. Insurance. Send a SASE for more details to
Kittrell/Riffkind Art Glass
5100 Beltline Roade Suite 820
Dallas, TX
75254
Questions: Barbara Kittrell, artglass@kitrellriffkind.com, 888-865-2228 or 972-239-7957, www.kittrellriffkind.com

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[info]grandmoffdavid
2009-06-17 06:39 pm UTC (link)
The contest sounds interesting, but it looks like they're looking for a different style of glass than I normally do. It does give me a thought that I might want to start looking into that kind of thing, though.

I also agree with your point that everyday people have forgotten that craft work is more than just basket-weaving and flower arranging. Craftsmanship means something and is a goal worth pursuing. It reminds me of Johnathan Gash's Lovejoy books (and the TV show) and how he'd go on and on about the skills and labor that it took to make a single item.

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