Creative activities at the confluence of art and communication (science
and technology) have an increasingly important role in cultural and social
dynamics. The territory mapped by these activities, especially their impact
on evolving social structures and networked systems, is an area of rich
possibility and chaotic flows. As an artist, it is my interest to occupy
the dynamic field of that intersection and, while exploring its fundamental
characteristics, develop a deeper awareness of the process of human connection,
exchange, and be-ing. Presence, as it may be variously manifest through
mediation, is my primary "material," and "genuine dialogue," as Martin
Buber expressed it, is my primary method. My research often explores the
spontaneous unscripted abilities of the self to concentrate and focus
energies and establish dialectic connection across more than just material
gaps. In a space of indeterminate momentary outcomes, creativity finds
a fundamental source.
The formation of material artifacts is for me an inspired activity
and a specifically directed flow of energy in support of creative activities. However, I subscribe to a post-materialist worldview
which transcends the mechanistic and cartesian linkages between object and subject and instead looks at the energy content and configuration of a 'work.' One current area of exploration of this energy is the creation and constellation of ordered systems -- archives or dataspaces -- which I subsequently employ as sources in performative events and situations.
These situations sometime incorporate artifacts, sometime rely solely on the momentary ambient environmental conditions, sometime cull the ordered space of archive; they all seek to establish a flow of the spontaneous and improbable.
While I regard the material art-making process
an important aspect of being -- an aspect that allows for significant
concentrations of personal energy and expression -- I do like to approach
it as an open-ended element of a wider practice where there is no defined
ending point and change is the guiding principle.
TEACHING
As an artist, I am committed to the dynamics of the learning environment
as a critical and important facet of my work. Teaching is a special case of the
more general open situations referred to previously. I seek to create vital learning spaces -- conceptual and physical zones where the exercise
of free expression and spontaneous dialogue takes place -- an environment
that is both practical and experimental, realistic and fantastic, personally
relevant and socially sensitized. I frequently build on my own explorations
as an artist -- using my personal creative experience as a referent and
bringing my current creative energies and directions directly into the
learning process. Personal rapport, dialogue, and humane contact are important
factors in my conduct as an arts educator.
With the goal of defining fundamental conditions for personal
and social evolution, my workshops are based in critical and dynamic
dialogue over a wide variety of issues and concepts. I am against drawing
arbitrary
divisions between various concepts, cultures, disciplines, creative sources,
and mediums of expression, but rather focus on weaving different ideological,
conceptual, and especially personal energies into creative juxtaposition.
The synergy of disparate trans-disciplinary energies and ideas through
active
communication
and
creative collaboration is a necessary element of inspired and relevant learning.
Two specific roles that I take on is that of facilitator -- to encourage
open-ness -- and information-source --
to pass on to participants significant threads that I receive from my own substantial
international network of collaborative connections working across the
spectrum of art and technology.
I teach my students to accept and trust their own sensory
experience in the world. In this process, they gain an inexhaustible
energy source and free up their creative possibilities. I accomplish
this by facilitating a trusting environment and stimulating connected
collaboration. At any point in the dialogue between myself and the
student, I would seek to engage at a level that is beyond institutionalized
formality. My significant experience in second-language and cross-cultural
situations
provides my teaching activities with a certain independence from
ideology-based systems and protocols. This makes the learning more
transparent, participative, flexible,
and spontaneous.
Any emphasis on language-based (and thus abstracted) theory needs to
be balanced by intimate, practical, and principled exploration of the
(materialized) actions of creativity to establish a lived practice. A
student needs to be able to construct a finite methodology for approaching
a new medium or idea -- how to test
the limits of a medium, how to stimulate experimentation without stifling
spontaneous creation, how to build up discipline, concentration, and
attention
when working, and how to see critically and creatively while in vital
interaction with the noumenal world and, finally, how to package their
own human energies within carriers most appropriate to their expressive
needs. Ways of working may and should be informed by theoretical understandings,
historical precedent, critical viewpoints, but, most importantly, the
establishment of this centered life-practice. It is extremely important
that the student
experience and identify specific life-long sources of energy where they
might root their creative impulses. The creative oscillation between
word and action must always be linked; and both, considered and
used in concert, become an inexhaustible energy source and basis of a
powerful practice.
As the writings of Paolo Friere discuss in detail, the teacher-student
relationship should be characterized by a dynamic and balanced dialectic.
Teaching is a truly human activity. Teacher and student are both the
educators and the educated -- learning is sharing. The measure of a successful
learning experience may be drawn from how the shared wisdom comes into
being in the life-practice of both the student and the teacher.
Outside formal classrooms, I am always interested in working with other artists and educators in creating new learning situations both on- and off-line, especially those that explore the rich textures of inter-disciplinary awareness. Being supportive of and supported by the academic community is crucial to the survival and growth of diversity. I am interested in a sustained dialogue around the principle issues of higher education and am especially interested in the creation of projects and programs with international participation.
The past two decades of teaching
and working as an artist in 20 countries has given me a great deal
of insight into cross-cultural education and the flexibility it demands.
This experience leads me to understand
cross-(cultural, social, disciplinary, media, ideological, and linguistic)
boundaries not as hindrances but as stimulations to a deepening of vision
and understanding. There are great personal and social rewards in cross-border
dialogues that foster open and sustained contact. In closing, I can say
that my teaching and my art practice is not simply an avocation, but
a broad and inclusive expression of my own personal creative energies.