Wednesday 20 March 2013

Essay Task: Digital Revolution 3000 words essay


Consider to what extent the digital revolution can be seen to have aided or diminished creativity

Defining creativity
Before considering the influence of the digital revolution it is essential to define creativity.  Creativity is mans innate desire to make, copy, represent and record his world.  This desire was first answered by prehistoric cave dwellers depicting the hunt.  These were probably instructional diagrams, but are beautiful in their own right and are therefore also decorative.  The Planet, Nature and Human beings are inextricably entwined so that much creativity is based on nature and its forms.  Creativity exists in 3D as sculptures, buildings and monuments as well as in 2D, in drawings paintings and graphics.  It extends further into everything that man does – he talks, writes, builds, gardens, designs – all are creative activities. 
“Let us suppose that the idea of Art can be expanded to embrace the whole range of man-made things, including all the tools and writing in addition to the useless, beautiful and poetic things of the world.  By this view the Universe of man-made things simply coincides with the history of art.  The oldest surviving things are stone tools.  A continuous series runs from them to today.”
 George Kubler (1912-1996) from The Shape of Time. 
Creativity is therefore evolutionary.

Why create? 
Man reacts to his senses, sight, smell, hearing, touch, and taste.  His experience is first stimulated by sight which is closely connected to light.  Everything is seen by light bouncing off objects.  The effects of light are massive.  The sun’s rays descending through clouds to highlight a patch of ground, the rainbow, the oppressive grey that descends before snow falls, the brightness of sun on flowers on a summer’s day.  All are spectacular and cause emotional reactions within each and every one of us. 
Sometimes these emotions are extremely strong.  They spur people to “talk” about their experiences and communicate. Man does not do well alone.  In some it spurs the desire to record their experience.  This too, is an innate desire, always present, which needs to be answered. 
The number of people who say “Oh I wish I could draw or paint” is legion.  The truth is they can.  They choose not to acknowledge that to reach a peak in any activity involves work.  A bricklayer learns to lay a straight neat wall.  He has to learn to mix cement, to load his bricks with mortar, to use string to keep his lines straight and so on.  He does not achieve perfection first time.  He needs guidance and practice. 
The artist learns to hone his ability and increase the effect he desires with years of practice, whether he works realistically or abstractly. 
Historical and emotional context
There is a famous story of the oriental master who takes on an apprentice but for years only lets him sweep floors.  Every morning the master creeps up behind the lad and hits him hard.  Finally the frustrated apprentice watches and listens carefully enough to fend off the blow.  The old master smiles and tells the boy to go and get his brushes.  The pupil is puzzled as to why he is not punished but rewarded by being allowed to paint but the tutor explains that as he is finally aware enough to stop the blow he is aware i.e. sensitive enough to learn to paint!  Across the World a child with a pencil sharpens it, breaks the point and learns that line can have infinite possibilities of depth and firmness.  He may then experiment and understand that a line is so subtle that its lack of presence allows the brain to fill it in.  This lesson that ‘less is more’ is one that occurs throughout the world and can be seen especially in line drawings of the human body. 
Artists speak much about “Truth” and “Seeing”.
Many members of the general public however pass through life with tunnel vision.  They do not “see” the world.  They enjoy sunny days but fail to see any beauty in rain, or cold, or fog. 
The artist is aware and experiences more deeply.  His work highlights everything from beauty to outrages so that his audience “see” with his perspective. 
We are all capable of seeing and experiencing our World but are all different in our perceptions.  An artist can produce an image which focuses our emotions and causes a response which may shock or please us.  We therefore “see” as the artist sees without the hard work which he has experienced to produce that image. 
We all have the same 5 senses but are lazy and don’t use them, and a sense not used becomes dulled, whereas a sense used and pushed to its limits will become more sensitive.  The majority may well prefer to sit comfortably and view the world through a television screen than walk along a rainy winter beach.
The television viewers will use their eyes and ears but the walkers will use eyes, ears, touch, smell, and even taste if the wind is salty!
The balance has to be weighed carefully, one is a second hand experience which may well be diluted, the other is a firsthand experience which may well be keener.   
To live well we should stimulate all our senses frequently.. 
The Digital Revolution
The digital revolution has brought an ease of access to creativity for everyone.  Previously only the few people who went to galleries saw art originals.  Books offered an extension of this with plates showing a replica image, .but size was lost and so was texture, and the aura of the original work.  However the majority of the population saw nothing because art was not accessible enough.  A mass of cultural richness was being ignored. 
What are artists looking for?
Artists have always questioned, regardless of which era they belong or movement they support.  They need to communicate.  Gaugin wrote many letters to Andre Fontainas, to Van Gogh, to his wife, and his friends.  Many other artists write letters or poems because communicating begets the desire to communicate and writing is another form of creativity.  Furthermore many artists feel unsure and seek companionship for verbal support or to forge emotional links.  Artists also react deeply.  For example between the ages of eleven and sixteen Gaugin was indoctrinated as a pupil by the Bishop of Orleans, Felix Antoine Philibert Dupanloup with the following questions.
“Whence do we come?”
“What are we?”
“Where are we going?”
These questions have nothing to do with the canvas, but extend to man’s position in the Universe. 
Perhaps we create to establish our own position in the Universe.  We could add the question: -
“Why are we here?” 
This document cannot consider every art style, but can attempt to identify what it is that artists search for.  Although every artist works within his own timescale and its influences they all search and question. They are all “driven” to create.
“An artist is given talent in order that he can give life to his share of creation and increase the flow of life”
Kasimir Malevich (1878 – 1935) in Cubism and Futurism to Supermatism: The new realism in painting.
Malevich’s quote rings true and extends beyond any particular era or genre.  Thus we see that there are core values which transcend eras, schools and timescales.
Creativity achieved through Imagination, Light, Truth, and Symbolism, being satisfied through Expression. 
These values echo down throughout the ages, satisfying those who value realism, those who see no value in realism, sculptors, designers, and architects alike.  Creativity is satisfied. 
Everyone can create in a way that satisfies their soul and to the best of their ability.  Some will produce a vast amount, others little.  Every creation should be valued and respected.  It is wrong to criticise, to replace or remove.  We need to share, and have a greater appreciation thus having a sound foundation from which we can build.  
We have been guilty of forgetting that creativity does not just involve the western world.  We have long ignored much of what the rest of the world has to offer.  Creation is all inclusive. 
We seek Enlightenment which encompasses all creation: - poetry, writing, building, drawing, painting, embroidery, tapestry, buildings, monuments, vehicles, machines, scientific discoveries, in fact everything! 
This leads us to the present day and the digital world.  Has it aided or diminished creativity?
Undeniably the digital revolution has had a profound effect on contemporary art and culture. 
        
Here are two examples where reality has been usurped through digital media
Born out of the electronic revolution, it has resulted in the globalisation of mass media and the birth of the internet.  It has more potential for change than anything that has gone before, catapulting us into an era of interaction.  The computer has enabled creation in every direction.  For artists it has allowed intricate images, repetitive images, sculptures formed on databases and interactive installations, not to mention a worldwide audience. 
We are now on the cusp of a further revolution as digital printing becomes established, allowing the creativity to be generated in 3D form.
The boundaries expanded in the mid 1990’s as museums and galleries could be accessed electronically.  Artwork began to use the computer as a primary tool, medium, or creative partner, communicating on 4 levels: -sensory, emotional, mental, and spiritual.
Traditionally art reached a limited audience, now it is communication available to all and has entered the home removing the need for the general public to go to it.  Creativity appeals to the synchronicity of body, heart, and mind – reactions are complex, but reactions improve the human state. 
Visual attraction is strong, as we react involuntarily.  Our vision and hearing are dominant senses yet digital art stimulates the other senses as well, it stimulates curiosity, making spiritual links and can be fun, inspirational, emotional, educational, or non intellectual, even non emotional.
Creativity touches the soul.  Artists have been involved with its process since time began, Critics with its results or value.  The digital revolution extends the boundaries, being linked to science and technology which were fundamental to its creation and physical substance.  It is an evolutionary development of the mechanical and electrical processes of photography, film and video.  (Photography having itself evolved from drawing and painting.). 
The technology has exploded with hardware, microcontrollers, sensors, and software packages that control machine routines, which allow for new art experiences.  There are interactive environments, robotics, and data driven installations that read real time information from the internet. 
Virtual reality allows the creation of an immense experience.  A new synthetic world is introduced. 
Char Davies; Forest Stream, 1998.  Digital still image captured during immersive performance of the virtual environment “Ephemere”
Digital animation has transformed traditional animation, formerly done entirely by hand with literally thousands of drawings, which meant collaborative work, can now be completed alone if desired. 
It has a new look and with it new forms of software, databases and game art. 
Now there is net art, with new freedoms.  It allows artists to bypass the traditional gallery and reach an immediate audience. 
The digital age has brought an ease of access to art for everyone.
The parent who didn’t allow paint at home because of the mess stifled their child’s creativity.  Now a computer runs software which will enable its owner to paint or draw with no mess.  I feel the machine has intervened and the sense of touch experience by a child with its fingers covered with paint is lost.  The computer software removes this personal contact. 
Consequently we have a situation where the ability to create is extended to all at all times but creativity is curtailed because of the machine. 
However the digital revolution has linked the world.  It has offered a fair playing field where every single person can create as and how they desire.  They have new tools to use which remove the need for years of practice.  They can manipulate programs to achieve any end.  Those growing up with computers are literate in this new modern medium and can use it well.  There is no end to the possibilities.  It is clear that the digital revolution has aided creativity by enabling everyone to create, to see that communication is important to the soul, and to communicate so that learning and education is facilitated.
The digital revolution has allowed disabled people a new extended access.  People who could not communicate can do so.  People who could not write because of arthritis can use touch screens easily.  Emails allow everyone to talk quickly and easily.  For these people the digital age has extended their senses.  The benefits are legion. 
All this disguises danger which McLuan saw. 
The digital revolution is open to fraud.  Tricks can be played by distorting images and vulnerable people will believe what they have seen.  Once that phrase “seeing is believing” was correct.  Today it is not.  Today we see what others want us to see and it may be all an illusion...
         
The two images on the left show the beautification .of the woman, and on the right the “transgenderisation” of Rowan Atkinson, both using “photoshop”,
“Reality can no longer be precisely determined.  Place, time, and matter have been liberated to an extent that could not have been predicted a short time ago.”
Paul Valery, (1871 – 1945) Reflections on the World Today.
The majority of the population will accept and use the new technology accessing all they can.  Few will see the dangers of a wholly un-policed global means of communication.  The digital revolution has opened a Pandora’s Box. 
“The fundamental cause of trouble in the world is that the stupid are cocksure while the intelligent are full of doubt”
Bertrand Russell (1872 – 1970)
“A lie gets half way around the world before the truth has a chance to get its pants on.”
Sir Winston Churchill (1874 – 1965)
Conclusion
It is obvious that the digital revolution has aided and extended creativity to a massive extent.  One day soon we will not just gaze at Van Gough’s Sunflowers, we will be able to step into the field, feel the sun on our skins, and smell the flowers.  Virtual reality already lets this occur in a few galleries, soon it will be in our own living rooms. 
Children in schools won’t look at a picture of a snake in a book they will enter virtual worlds where they believe they can hear, touch and smell the creature and virtually, safely handle it. 
“I began working with computers as compositional and performance tools in the late 1980’s and have been immersed in the digital arts ever since.  In addition to the excitement of working in such a rapidly evolving form, digital art is making an important aesthetic contribution through its breakdown of many impenetrable barriers between genres, disciplines, etc.  The evolution of new interactive digital video technologies has made it possible for my idea of integrating sound and vision to be realised on a much more advanced level.”
Ben Neill (1957 - )Writing in the section on Performance Music and Sound Art from The Art of the Digital Age by Bruce Wands (1945 - ) artist writer curator and teacher.
We are now at a position where the extensive use of the digital techniques allows the concept of dynamic creativity, exampled in modern advertising, where the effects are stunning, yet we have become inured to their excitement as we always know and recognise that behind their technical wizardry lies sophisticated software.  This is true creativity using the digital media.
2013 Anti-smoking advertisement: -The lesion on the cigarette growing representing the cancer growth, using digital media.
We cannot go back, only forward.  The dangers are there, but the benefits are legion. 
“We keep moving forward, opening new doors, and doing new things, because we’re curious and curiosity keeps leading us down new paths.” and “It’s kind of fun to do the impossible.”
Walt Disney (1901 – 1966)
Great words from a great man, but let us not forget the dangers.
“I think of the presence and the habits of mortals in this so fluid stream, and reflect that I was among them, striving to see all things, just as I see them at this very moment. I then placed Wisdom in the eternal station which now is ours. But from here all is unrecognizable. The truth is before us, and we no longer understand anything at all.”
Paul Valery (1871 – 1945) Reflections on the World Today.
“The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing.”
Albert Einstein (1879 – 1955)
In history art has run parallel to science.  These two have now merged and become the infrastructure on which the computer revolution is founded.
In 1834 Charles Babbage invented the first calculator, later came the telegraph, Morse, and the Binary code. The typewriter arrived with its first keyboard followed closely by the telephone in 1876. By 1888 George Eastman had produced the Kodak camera and film. The first computer arrived in the 1940s. Experimentation was at first within universities and research centres but by the 1960s artists were showing interest.  By 1968 Douglas Englebart produced the Mouse enabling everyday use of the new machines.  Interaction occurred between artists and engineers such as Andy Warhol, Robert Whitman and John Cage to name but a few.  In 1977 Apple gave artists their first machine with colour graphic capabilities.  After that there was an explosion of personal computers and specialist programs such as Paintbrush which allowed new creative frontiers. By 1980 computer animation was born.
It has all happened very quickly. No-one has stopped to take an over-view. The Web has taken off and the Global village is a reality. Sadly human nature still has its two sides, one good one bad. Will the vastly aided positive creativity be tarnished by criminal creativity?  Talking via the internet is exciting and good as long as we know to whom we are talking.
There could be many disasters waiting to happen.
“Whoever genuinely believes he knows how to save humanity from catastrophe has a job before him which is certainly not a part time one.”
Robert Motherwell (1915 – 1991) and Harold Rosenburg (1906 – 1978) The Question of what will Emerge is Left Open.
If we acknowledge the dangers but are as interactive as our new media to control it we are indeed on the brink of Utopia.  However we have to recognise that this is now a global issue not a local one.


Bibliography
Alexenberg, M.  (2006). The Future of Art. 1st ed. Bristol: Intellect Books.
Austin,T, & Doust,R. (2007). New Media Design. 1st ed. London: Lawrence King Publishing.
Harrison, C. & Wood,P. (2003). Art in Theory 1900-2000. New ed. Oxford: Blackwell.
de Meredieu,F. (2005). Digital & Video Art. English ed. Edinburgh: Chambers Harrap
Wands,B. (2006). Art of the Digital Age. 1st ed. London: Thames & Hudson



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