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RE: Rojo fori ti - (Scribble Drawing).
Whatever turns out to be, maybe it's best to let it develop organically and then follow the grain so to speak. Provide the platform, take a step back and see what happens. Personally I'm not skilled enough to provide technical feedback anyhow, but I appreciate folks who try things (even if they fail at it). Keep it nice and comfy, encourage people to play around and don't micromanage it too much.
Also having a bit of overlap would be nice. I like the idea of connecting the freewriters with the visual artists, or the more conventional photographs. This sound a bit like art fascism, but one twig breaks and a bundle of sticks doesn't.
Hi @grebmot
Wow! my dear friend
For "not giving technical comments" you do it very well, because yours come from common sense, a crucial skill.
I think you have provided very good lines to start the work.
And I loved this one:
** Could you please elaborate on this point, do you mean trans-community work? Integrate several communities? or different types of art?
Great to read you friend 🤗
I mean, it could happen through overlapping contests and sharing materials. Write a poem, use the poem as an inspiration for a piece of visual art, get someone to review the art. I figure that way artists get more eyeballs and you're being incentivized to explore topics you usually don't.
Alternatively, or additionally I guess, someone could write a little recap of what has been going on across different communities. Contest winners, interesting stuff, you name it. Hell, maybe you could make a contest out of that, too. That way Kitty could get some sleep and users invest into the larger network. Potentially with a pathway to them modding themselves, if the idea pans out.
Just spitballing.
This is more like what I was thinking actually.
That is´t great friend
I love your view on this.
Personally, I also think to make it more fun an engaging, we could have a collaborative contest, where an artist and a write come together to combine their artistic prowess in creating a piece that could consist of both a visual art and a literature rendition.