The concept is to gather sketchpads into a collective which is then sent on tour, digitalized and recorded for posterity. I imagine that somewhere in the inner workings there is some money, perhaps a grant which funds the project. However, the focus of the project is not on making money (as far as I can tell). The focus seems to be on collective creativity and empowerment of the people. All those folks who didn't go to art school (or haven't yet). I have been around long enough to see the rise of popular and the fall. In the end, is it really all about how much money you make or how many cheap toys you amass? Don't we, as a society, want to make a place for art for its own sake? We can make the internet a vast emporium of cheep t-shirts and toys or a rich library of many voices.
This is a very good point, Grace, and one that we are in fact going to be addressing. Anderson takes up the issue of amateur production, as do some of our other readings. To preview: much as the discussion today about whether rap is "music" or not shows how these definitions are contested in our culture, so are the positions about amateurs vs. professionals (and who "should" be creating "art") very much contested.
ReplyDeleteI love the site and the idea! I am thinking that the money aspect shows up in ads and other revenue sources. If we are about to make a book from collective thoughts of others...who stops us from selling those books
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