Archive for Art

The Art of Storytelling

Posted in philosophy with tags , , on April 6, 2010 by Jack

All communication is storytelling. I recently had this revelation that all acts of communication whether they be profound or mundane are all forms of storytelling. The goal of communication is to impart information to someone else. Most communication strives to correlate itself with reality. Let me tell you what happened today. Let me tell you how to work this program. But all language can ever hope to do is point towards the truth of reality; it can never be reality itself, it can never be truth in and of itself. It is the most powerful guide to the truth that we as a species have, but all communication is ultimately a story told by one person to another.

For all the knowledge a mind can acquire, it has difficulty explaining that which is beyond words. The perception of any experience is made up of sights, smells, sounds, emotions, thoughts and memory. As time passes between the mind’s attention to an experience and the actual experience itself, the mind creates more and more thoughts, commentary and judgements on the original experience. When this person then relates this experience to someone else, the explanation is wrapped in that person’s own critique of the event. Therefore, one is never given the truth of an event but rather an impression of it based on a person’s reinterpretation of that original moment. One can only hope the story is accurately portraying the event.

Some people are excellent storytellers. Each anecdote passed along is pleasurable for the way it was told as much as for the actual knowledge shared. Many people have difficulty expressing themselves and their lack of communication skills can often hide the truth they so desperately want to share. The limitations of communication creates the boundary between two people truly understanding each other. In rare occassions, we are fortunate enough to meet someone with a similar outlook and mental framework as ourselves, and these relationships provide us with small amounts of the understanding we, as social creatures, crave. But for the most part, communication is diluted by the limits of language and context on the speaker’s side and the ability to truly listen without prejudice on the listener’s side.

The art of communication is the ability to open one’s self to the listener, to understand where he or she is at, and then to carefully use words or pictures or art to reach out and connect to him or her. The burden of communication is on the person speaking, even though the listener stands an impenetrable wall of preconceived thoughts and beliefs. Many people are unable to listen, they can only hear what is comfortable to them, what is palatable, the rest is blocked out as if it had never been spoken. In these cases, it is important to understand that communication is just storytelling: telling a story that strives to create a bridge of understanding between two people.

The Art of Integration: A Proposal

Posted in Blogroll with tags , , , , , , , on May 10, 2009 by Jack

Is there a purpose to art? Is the act of expression strictly one of self-obsession, the purging of one’s own neurotic indulgences? Or, perhaps, is there an underlying piece of information, unknown even to the artist himself, through which the artist is but a conduit?
Art has many functions:  from the historic storytelling on the walls of pre-historic caves to the expression of ideals in Greek mythology; from the reverential masterpieces of the Renaissance to the explosions of the sub-conscious in the 20th century. Art, at its core, is a form of communication. But, from an evolutionist’s viewpoint, what purpose has art served to the development of human culture? Creativity exists within all of us. Human’s are not the biggest, strongest nor fastest of the creatures, and yet we have conquered them all. The Neanderthal and Cro-Magnon are but bones in a museum. It is our human creative instinct that has allowed us to conquer and thrive.

But art, art is a focusing of creativity. But to what end? We have passed through all the platforms of historical development: classical, Romantic, modern, post-modern, deconstructionist, and ultimately each artistic reach finds a nihilistic wall waiting for it. Art itself must evolve or it becomes a fossil on a wall, wasting away as the hushed crowds queue past, reading their pamphlets explaining to them that this ancient work is IMPORTANT.

We have put art on a pedestal and in doing so we have detached, as a culture, from the act of creativity. Each piece is destined to be slowly eaten by the tired teeth of time. Perhaps it is still communicating, like a Rumi poem, its life still ripe upon our lips. But for most art, in another 10,000 years, will it still be communicating?

I would like to propose that there is another path. A path that is built upon the supposition that art has a very distinct evolutionary purpose. We have reached the point, technologically, where we can easily begin to integrate all the various forms of art – visual, aural, tactile. Opera was perhaps the first medium, followed by theater and then most recently by film (which, currently, is art’s most powerful incarnation.) But what is the new form and to what purpose will this form serve? Technology has divined that we have but scratched the surface of what is possible. We have yet to really grasp the tools available to us and to harness their potential.

My theory is this: What if the purpose of art is to guide humanity to its next evolutionary step – the ignition of consciousness. But even more than guide, to be an actual tool that is part of the process in the activation of conscious awareness. Oh, you say, we are not ready for this! People will resist, people aren’t ready. This is true. But enough people are ready for us to begin experimenting with the possibility that together we can create a world of authenticity, rather than projections of our egoic illusions.

I will attempt to lay out my blueprint, piece by piece, so as to illuminate the details of what I have proposed. But I realize that each artist and each individual is but a thread in this beautiful tapestry. Therefore, it is my intention to generate attention and ultimately input, so that each piece of the puzzle can be put into place. It is time to create the new mythology, a story that cannot exist without the observer; a story that evolves by the very act of observing. An event that can only exist in the present, and can only communicate when the observer has aligned him or her self in the now, in the act, in the unfolding. The audience will become the art itself, and in that process, will begin to take the next step in human evolution: the integrated conscious being.

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