You are viewing a single comment's thread from:

RE: That's REALLY Cool! But I Just Don't Think Anyone Will PAY That For It!

in #art7 years ago

I completely understand your point of view and the pitfalls of being perceived as winey, ungrateful etc....
This is an almost inconceivable reality in almost any other field of work and very difficult to truly get the ideas across.

I was thinking yesterday about how to raise awareness about just how much we rely on visual, musical, written forms of creativity each and everyday and how much we take it for granted. I was wondering if doing a story challenge here on steemit - asking people to share their stories about art that people love - The piece they bought and just love so much, the one that got away, the public art piece they make an effort to walk by on the way to work, favorite poem and the impact it's had for them etc.... It can be about a poem, a song, a piece of visual art, a garden etc....with these kinds of things there is always a story.

It seems to me that building an awareness of our personal relationship with evidence of creativity is a step in the right direction.

Do you have any ideas about how to build the value of art/creativity?

Sort:  

@natureofbeing, similar things do happen in other fields.

For example, writers face the hurdle of being told "We'd love to publish your article, but we're not paying for submissions at the moment-- but it will look GREAT on your resume to say that you were published by us!"

In the advertising design field, graphic designers are often expected to "spec" logos and designs for free, as a "goodwill gesture" in hopes of gaining a long term client... but often they just end up with nothing.

That said, I do like the idea of some community engagement challenges of some kind-- asking people (and artists) in general to share their impressions of "what matters" to them about art. Maybe even with rotating monthly topics. Definitely something I will give some thought.

I think central; to building "value" for creative fields is an effort to "personalize" art. That is... get people to stop thinking about art/creative expression as a "thing," and get them to think more about the person behind the creation. Once you humanize something, people are less likely to be dismissive of it. In a sense, it's a bit like the Internet... people are less likely to be rude and trollish with someone they have actually met IN PERSON, outside the virtual environment.

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.16
TRX 0.13
JST 0.027
BTC 57642.15
ETH 2578.06
USDT 1.00
SBD 2.49