The Art of Slowing Down
<p>Is creativity a fast or slow process? According to the idiom, ideas <em>strike</em>, just like lightning. And when I think of some of the great artists from history and today, it seems that speed is sometimes essential.</p>
<p>When Jackson Pollock prowled around his canvas, dripping paint from a pot, he did so in a spirit of headlong spontaneity. It couldn’t have been possible otherwise. If paint is going to be sloshed, flicked and splattered, it has to be done with an assertive, insistent hand.</p>
<p>Likewise, when Jack Kerouac typed furiously on a single, unbroken ream of paper 120-feet long, the resulting <em>On the Road</em> was a stream-of-consciousness eruption.</p>
<p><img alt="" src="https://miro.medium.com/v2/resize:fit:700/1*aQ9GGeWMIfqtCe81ReTKvg.jpeg" style="height:554px; width:700px" /></p>
<p>Cold Dark Matter (An Exploded View) (1991) by Cornelia Parker. Image source <a href="https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Cold_Dark_Matter_.jpg" rel="noopener ugc nofollow" target="_blank">Wikimedia Commons</a>, by <a href="https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=User%3ACaroliney76&action=edit&redlink=1" rel="noopener ugc nofollow" target="_blank">Caroliney76</a> <a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0" rel="noopener ugc nofollow" target="_blank">CC BY-SA 4.0</a></p>
<p>Sometimes the explosion can be literal: in the early 1990s, the conceptual artist Cornelia Parker asked the British Army to blow up a humble garden shed, which she then partially restored by hanging the remains from an art gallery ceiling, as if the suspended space occurred a fraction of a second after detonation. In a sense, the artwork, <em>Cold Dark Matter: An Exploded View, </em>took less than a second to make — followed by hours and hours of delicate reconstruction.</p>
<p><a href="https://christopherpjones.medium.com/the-art-of-slowing-down-5125bcc95a0"><strong>Read More</strong></a></p>