Mark Kemp wrote:watershed wrote:
I don't think that people really want to know how things are done, the same way they don't want to know that they are paying for all that slag that you had to make, before you could make that really spiff piece.
That's not to say you shouldn't tell them, just that they might not want to know.
Greg
I find some people are very curious about how the art is made, some mildly curious, and some don't want to know at all. When I start telling the latter sort, I can see their eyes glaze over. With this type, I think it's better not to tell them the facts behind the art -- they just like what they see in front of them.
Because of my museum location, there's a lot of public comes through my studio, family groups most times.
Most kids are especially curious and (rarely) some have a pre-concieved idea that nothing I say is worth anything. Talking to the parents, I can see why. It underlines my theory that attitudes and prejudice is taught from an early age, nobody is born with it.
Anyhow, the interested ones are fascinated to know that how I make the glass is exactly the same technique as that made in Mesopotamia, thousands of years ago, just that I have some fancy equipment to do it with. It's great prompting them to figure out how glass would have been made with just charcoal as a source of energy.
It's great following the thought process, then we get onto what glass would look like if it was made in a zero-gravity environment, and how in thousands of years time, an archaeologist would know this pot-melt was done in the northern hemisphere because of the direction of the curl.
Fascinating.
The interested ones make up for the dummies.