From craft to art

What changes a simple item into a work of art? Is it the special care in production? Is it a question of quality of materials and manual skills or does the vision of the finished object alone make the difference? At which point does a manufacturing technique turn into true passion?

"From craft to art" is about creative dreams that you can touch. It is about people, who pushed their profession or hobby into an art form, by eliciting unexpected forms and features out of their material of choice. It's about striving for uniqueness and the individual stages each product has to go through on its way from concept to completion.

Am I an artist?

on Saturday, 16 April 2011. Posted in From craft to art

Or what else am I?

Reanimation

Janin tells a tale:

As long as I can remember books and pictures have had a grand significance on my life. Bent over a piece of paper, I always spent many happy hours creating colourful worlds. I remember very clearly one day in kindergarden when my best friend taught me to draw the head of a horse properly. And what was only a circle with an attached snout and some ears before, suddenly became fluent lines and an almost realistic image. I kept on drawing horses for weeks.

What a success!

When I got older I attended drawing lessons and discovered some difficulties with wet paints, like oil or watercolour. I played around with clay, soap stone and wood, bringing out no more than tolerable results. Every now and again I tried new creative variations but got back to pencil and paper in the end. A certain affection for perfection polluted many of my projects. A bit spoiled by the admiration friends and family gave me as a child, I wasn't able to comprehend why my work would not pass my own judgement. My talent was attested to me so often that I was under the impression the according skills should be accessible to me without any problem.
Instead I experienced the same perplexity again and again when the material in my hands would not mould into the shapes I had in my mind. So, slowly, the trust in my abilities began to crumble. The fear of the white sheet of paper I confronted with grim determination at first. Tensely I tried to maintain my beloved hobby and produce a few presentable results at least. Each time I was relieved to finish a project and file it away afterwards. Long gone was the excitement I felt before when indulging in that sort of work.

What a disappointment!

I turned to other things. The ever assumed study of art no longer was an option but life got on nevertheless. I let luck decide what to do with my future. It brought me a job I took on with verve and elation, a move from Hamburg to Munich and many new friends who made me forget about my creative failures. I worked, organised and coordinated, used my creativity for other stuff. And still there always was the feeling something would be missing. After a while my office job became dreadful routine. I quit and went travelling, came back after 2 years and found myself confronted with the same question again: What to do with my life? A retraining later I sat in another office. And the story repeated itself. As much as I tried to fit into my role, I never was able to silence this voice that urged me to just create something. In the small hours of the night I allowed myself to tinker - collages and Origami-flowers, birthday cards and sofa cushions. Hesitatingly I pulled out my old drawings and began to digitally enhance them. Photoshop became my new tool of choice and suddenly they were there again - those happy hours full of colorful worlds.

What a discovery!

When the images I made 10 years before were all used up I had developed a rather peculiar Photoshop-style that would probably only earn bewildered incomprehension by any professional digital media designer. As draft I always use handmade drawings, mostly single figures with strong contrasts. I take photographs, download them into the computer and start to edit the pictures. At this point the images have a horrible quality. Pencil smudges and rubber traces stand out clearly and every irregularity is visible in fringed edges and broken outlines. So I cut out the character and repaint every streak with digital colours, erase, adjust, correct and expand it. Then I add a couple of effects, a hint of threedimensionality , an adventurous filter, a patterned background in the end - and then I lean back, astounded, wondering how this great image managed to flow out of myself. And the result excites me so much I want to start a new project straight away. Finally this nagging feeling of emtiness is gone. In this moment, nothing is missing.

What a relief!

I may not be an exceptionally gifted artist but I came to the conclusion that I need not be afraid of neither a white sheet of paper nor my own judgement. I might not have studied art or learned a creative craft but grasping beauty with my hands and my eyes, that I can do perfectly well. I probably will remain the harshest critic to my own work but by now I know the difference between perfection and quality.
So many years I spent with denying, restraining and fighting my inner creative flow. And I ask myself: Why?
I depredated myself of so much joy and fulfillment! I now am able to see that I must never do that again. The little artist in me will never be silenced. Many small and big projects lie ahead of me. I can hardly wait.

What a revelation!

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